• ReVista Launch Agriculture and the Rural Environment

    CGIS South S216 1730 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

    Join the launch of the Winter issue of ReVista, “Agriculture and the Rural Environment”. This issue covers topics ranging from agribusiness to climate change to new alternative crops. It explores the challenges and accomplishments of agriculture in Latin America and the Caribbean today.

  • Conversation with Claudia López, former Mayor of Botogá

    Claudia López Hernández, former Mayor of Bogotá and Harvard 2024 ALI Fellow, talks about her career, what it meant to be Bogota’s first female Mayor and the future of her country Colombia. This event is co-sponsored by the Harvard Colombian Student Society.

  • Toast to MethaneSAT: Tackling Methane Emissions from Orbit

    Join us for a historic moment as we celebrate MethaneSAT, a groundbreaking satellite that will track methane emissions on a global scale. Food and beverages will be served as we toast to MethaneSAT’s upcoming launch.

    MethaneSAT is the result of a collaborative effort between the Environmental Defense Fund, space technology experts, and faculty and researchers at the Harvard Paulson School of Engineering & Applied Sciences and the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. The cutting-edge satellite will play a pivotal role in addressing one of the most pressing climate change challenges of our time – methane emissions. For the first time, MethaneSAT will provide corporations and governments around the world with both granular and global data on methane leaks.

    All members of the Harvard community are welcome to join! Registration required.

  • Religion in Times of Earth Crisis: The Practice of Wild Mercy: Something Deeper Than Hope

    Religion in Times of Earth Crisis
    Zoom

    Can personhood be granted to mountains, lakes, and rivers? What does it mean to be met by another species? How do we extend our notion of power to include all life forms? And what does a different kind of power look like and feel like? Wild Mercy is in our hands. Practices of attention in the field with compassion and grace deepen our kinship with life, allowing us to touch something deeper than hope. Great Salt Lake offers us a reflection into our own nature: Are we shrinking or expanding?

    Speaker: Terry Tempest Williams, HDS Writer-in-Residence
    Moderator: Diane L. Moore, Diane L. Moore, Associate Dean of Religion and Public Life

  • Climate and Sustainability Translational Fund Info Session

    Pierce Hall 29 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

    Join for an info session about the 2024 Climate and Sustainability Translational Fund. Learn about the fund's benefits and important deadlines. Open to Harvard affiliates only. Pizza and refreshments provided.

  • Atmospheric Greenhouse Gases and Pollutants, and the Link to Environmental Justice

    Climate Research Workshop Series

    Hear from Steven C. Wofsy, Professor of Atmospheric and Environmental Chemistry in the John A. Paulsen School of Engineering and Applied Science at Harvard University. He has degrees in Chemistry from University of Chicago (BS, 1966) and Harvard (Ph.D., 1971). His scientific work spans the broad range of processes affecting the chemistry of the atmosphere, including measurements and inverse modeling of regional and global emissions of carbon dioxide and methane from ground based, aircraft, and remote sensing measurements. His studies aim to understand underlying causes for change in atmospheric composition, in order to mitigate human impacts and to help provide scientific information for societal decisions. He is the science lead for the MethaneSAT (satellite) and MethaneAIR (aircraft) imaging spectrometers to measure methane enhancements and determine emissions from sources worldwide. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and recipient of the Macelwane Award and the Revelle Medal of the American Geophysical Union, and NASA’s Distinguished Public Service Medal.

  • Climate and Interdisciplinary Health at Harvard, Part 2: A Focus on Translation of Research into Policy

    Please register to join us on March 7th from 5:30-8pm for an interdisciplinary climate & health networking session and dinner. The event is the second in a three-part series sponsored by the Salata Institute. Each has a specific focus for guided discussion, and the topic for this event is Translation of Research into Policy. We have a panel of three incredible speakers lined up, who will share their insights on this topic from the vantages of academia, nonprofit organizations, government, and industry. The 45-minute panel discussion will be followed by a dinner and networking session for all attendees. The panel will have a virtual option for those who cannot attend the event in person.

  • Salata Institute Climate Research Cluster Info Session III

    Harvard University Center for the Environment 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

    The Salata Institute is committed to supporting research that promises to make a real-world impact on the climate crisis. The Climate Research Clusters Program delivers on that commitment by funding research about complex climate problems that produces useful and practical solutions. Clusters comprise interdisciplinary, cross-School teams of researchers, whose varied expertise is required to address the complexity of the problems that they seek to solve. The problems are broad enough that their solutions represent significant progress in meeting the world’s climate challenge. As part of the program, a consultative process was created to facilitate the development of strong proposals to the Climate Research Clusters Program. This process includes Q&A sessions, a networking reception, presentations of proposed projects, and consultations with prospective project teams. While we encourage engagement in this process, participation in these events is optional. Join us for the first information session by registering below.

  • Landscape Sketching

    Zoom

    Landscapes are an appealing subject for drawings, but it can be difficult to know where to start. In this program we will learn how to select a landscape, create a sense of depth and volume, and use a variety of marks to capture a dynamic variety of textures.

  • Science Spotlights: How to Help a Scientist Find a New Species

    Harvard Museum of Natural History 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA, United States

    Meet up-and-coming scientists and learn about questions at the forefront of research today in this series of short talks.

    How to Help a Scientist Find a New Species

    Speaker: Thalles P. Lavinscky Pereira, PhD. Farrell Lab

    Scientists estimate that there are over 7.5 million species of plants and animals that have yet to be discovered and described. But in a world where extinction may outpace discovery, how can citizen scientists get involved? Join me as I share how residents in Alaska helped me discover and describe a new species of snakeworm gnat and learn how you, too, can participate in the scientific process.