![A member of the Bureau of Land Management Mojave Engine Crew reduces the heat around hot areas of the Antelope Fire in Northeast California.](/sites/default/files/styles/390x260/public/2021-11/hrice-fire-woods.jpg?itok=EeDpgVVY)
![A member of the Bureau of Land Management Mojave Engine Crew reduces the heat around hot areas of the Antelope Fire in Northeast California.](/sites/default/files/styles/390x260/public/2021-11/hrice-fire-woods.jpg?itok=EeDpgVVY)
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FOCUS ON FLINT: The Water Crisis
A TWO-PART SERIES ON ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE The Ann Arbor premiere of Nor Any Drop to Drink, an award-winning documentary by filmmaker Cedric Taylor. Feat. panel discussion with Taylor, Pamela Pugh...
![Arlin Wasserman](/sites/default/files/styles/390x260/public/2023-10/Arlin%20Headshot%20copy.jpg?itok=mw7GWeC2)
Food Sustainability and Changing Tastes
SEAS graduate Arlin Wasserman (MS ’90, MPH ’91) makes it his business to study and understand changes in the food industry, given his role as the founder and partner of Changing Tastes, “a strategy, culinary, and sustainability consultancy creating successful ventures and meaningful change in the food sector.”
![Landinfo demo video](/sites/default/files/styles/390x260/public/2021-08/Landinfo.png?itok=wvqZ273_)
Game ON: Designing high-performing novel landscapes to tackle climate change
What if designing sustainable greenspace in your own neighborhood was a game—with points won for carbon sequestration, stormwater management, and heat relief? What if you could see your ideas take shape—and know how much they would likely cost—in a friendly competition with people in your community? Turning those “what ifs” into reality is the vision of SEAS Assistant Professors Mark Lindquist and Derek Van Berkel.
![Burt Barnes and Chuck Olson at SNRE Campfire](/sites/default/files/styles/390x260/public/2023-10/14607311955_8f4451a970_o%20copy_0.jpg?itok=pipKrzm5)
In Memoriam
Remembering those from SEAS who have died.
![Jonathan Bulkley](/sites/default/files/styles/390x260/public/2023-10/Jonathan_Bulkley%20copy.jpg?itok=bpr3hPG1)
In Memoriam
![Julie Carter](/sites/default/files/styles/390x260/public/2023-10/JulieCarter%20copy.jpg?itok=4_TSwiks)
Incoming master’s student Julie Carter publishes study on public health and climate change in Michigan
Transforming an undergraduate honors thesis into a published paper is a praiseworthy—but seldom realized—ambition in academia, but that’s exactly what incoming master’s student Julie Carter (BS ’19) accomplished. The Program in the Environment grad is the lead author of “Assessing perceptions and priorities for health impacts of climate,” published in the Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences in April 2021.
![Eva Roos’ visual conception for one quadrant, Zhaawanong (the south region), of the Izhi-Minoging Mashkikiwan project. Images courtesy of Eva Roos](/sites/default/files/styles/390x260/public/2021-11/roos-image10%20copy.jpg?itok=s1RQ8YB7)
Izhi-Minoging Mashkikiwan: Place Where Medicines Grow Well
Recent graduate Eva Roos (MS/MLA ’21) collaborated with the Cheboiganing Burt Lake Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians for her master’s practicum, “Izhi-Minoging Mashkikiwan // Place Where Medicines Grow Well.” She credits this collaboration to her time as a teaching assistant with Great Lakes Arts, Cultures, and Environments, the U-M Biological Station humanities program.