Monday, February 23, 2009

Spatial thinkers across campus...

The Association of American Geographers annual meeting goes beyond attracting presenters from geography departments and certainly beyond just those of the American persuasion. The conference attracts international scholars from all over the world, and additionally from many parts of our campus.

While perusing our calendar of UCSB presenters, you may notice that we have added presenters from Crustal Studi
es, Psychology, Black Studies, and Art History.

First in the mix is G. Burch Fisher, scheduled to present on Tuesday morning. He'll be presenting his work on sediments, large woody debris, and cosmogenic Beryllium-7. On target to complete his Ph.D. in 2011, you’ll find quite of bit of interesting reading on Burch’s website: http://www.crustal.ucsb.edu/~burch/index.html


Next up you'll find Dr. Mary Hegarty scheduled to present on Wednesday morning. Mary is a professor in the Psychology Department and director of the Spatial Thinking Lab located on the 2nd floor of the main psychology building. To find the lab, Drew Dara-Abrams will gladly provide you with the location of a preferred stairwell and cardinal directions. Mary is also one of the executive committee members of the Center for Spatial Studies (spatial@ucsb) directed by Mike Goodchild and Don Janelle. Mary’s talk at AAG addresses the effects extraneous cartographic information on maps has on a map reader’s response time for various tasks.


On Thursday morning, Clyde Woods from Black Studies will be the discussant for a session addressing regional differences in racial subjectivity. Talks in this session explore the experiences of U.S. Latinos and Latinas in North Carolina, Missouri, Mid-Century Southern California, and southern U.S. cities and towns.

He's also a panelist in session that reflects upon Neil Smith's 1984 publication Uneven Development – Nature, Capital, and the Production of Space.

From the publisher:

In Uneven Development, a classic in its field, Neil Smith offers the first full theory of uneven geographical development, entwining theories of space and nature with a critique of capitalist development. Featuring pathbreaking analyses of the production of nature and the politics of scale, Smith anticipated many of the uneven contours that now mark neoliberal globalization. This third edition features an afterword updating the analysis for the present day.
Clyde has a background in urban and regional planning and his research focuses on the regional organization of poverty, power, race, and culture in the United States.

http://www.blackstudies.ucsb.edu/people/woods.html


You can find Swati Chattopadhyay presenting on Thursday evening. She is a professor in the History of Art and Architecture department. Her research interests include modern architecture, the cultural landscape of British colonialism, and Post-colonial and critical theory. Swati’s talk at AAG focuses on the changing landscape of Calcutta during Durga Puja; a Hindu festival celebrated all over India.

Swati’s book Representing Calcutta – Modernity, Nationalism and the Colonial Uncanny “is a spatial history of the colonial city, and addresses the questions of modernity that haunts our perception of Calcutta.” – publisher Routledge Taylor & Francis Group.

Follow this link to find out more about Swati's work: UCSB History of Art and Architecture



We look forward to seeing you on campus and in Las Vegas this year at the Association of American Geographers Annual meeting!

Monday, February 16, 2009

UCSB Geography to be well represented at the AAG Awards Luncheon...

If you are able to attend the AAG Awards Luncheon scheduled for Friday March 27th, you will have an opportunity to applaud two of our very own scholars: Dr. Don Janelle, and Dr. Reg Gollege.

Dr. Janelle will be receiving the Ronald F. Abler Honors for Distinguished Service. You can find Dr. Janelle in Phelps 3512 most days busily writing papers, proposals, and orchestrating various events and activities associated with the Center for Spatial Studies (spatial@ucsb) and the Center for Spatially Integrated Social Science (CSISS). Looking for an interesting array of research specializations? Follow the link to visit Dr. Janelle's website: http://www.spatial.ucsb.edu/janelle/

Dr. Gollege will be receiving the Enhancing Diversity Award. From the AAG website, "the AAG Enhancing Diversity Award honors those geographers who have pioneered efforts towards or actively participated in efforts towards enhancing a more diverse discipline over the course of several years." Dr. Gollege has a long history of supporting and mentoring underrepresented students, and he continues to promote diversity today. You can find Dr. Gollege in Ellison 3616A. Interested in Dr. Gollege's most recent publications? Follow the link to see his list: http://www.geog.ucsb.edu/people/faculty/reg-golledge.html

Tickets for the AAG Awards Luncheon run $55 a person, or $495 a table. These high prices for high honors definitely inspired us to put on our own event. For those who won't be staying in Vegas until Friday, student attendees on a tight budget, and just everyone else ready for a blast; clear your Wednesday night schedule (March 25th) to attend our very own AAG UCSB Geography Event at the Peppermill Fireside Lounge. Food and drinks will be at the ready for you to toast our award winning scholars!

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Bake Sale Today at the Arbor!

Come on down to the Arbor today between 10:00am and 2:00pm to secure yourself a tasty treat! Several volunteers from the geography department will be selling an array of baked goods to raise funds for our special event next month at the Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting in Las Vegas.


If sugar is not on your approved list of acceptable consumables, there will also be an opportunity for you to come down and get your photo taken in the Cookie Monster Jacket. Check back to see these photos later today!

The bake sale was a great success! We had students and faculty from all over campus stop by to support our efforts. Special thanks to Edward Pultar, Nate Isbell, Sean Haney, and their juggling crew for coming by to divert the crowd right to our table!


We also had several donations just to get a photo taken in the Cookie Monster Jacket!

The Cookie Monster ensemble can now return home to the closet where it keeps my skeletons warm....

We still have quite a few hand decorated sugar cookies. You may just find us out at The Arbor again tomorrow. Tremendous thanks to all of our fabulous bakers who donated treats for the sale, and all of the volunteers that worked the table today.

Not much gets by the news crew of the Geography Department. Guylene Gadal and Bill Norrington were two of the first on the scene taking photos which ended up on the department website. Follow the link to read their story and ours: UCSB Department of Geography News.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Auction Announcement: Hike to Tangerine Falls with Mike Goodchild.

Due to the recent rains, Santa Barbara front country hikes have been spectacular. In an effort to generate funds for our UCSB Geography 2009 AAG event, we are auctioning a hike with Dr. Mike Goodchild.


Link: Tangerine Falls

Dr. Goodchild has graciously agreed to take the highest bidders on a special hike up to Tangerine Falls.

Details
:
Hike Date: Saturday March 14th
Time: Leaving campus at 7:00am
Destination:
Tangerine Falls.
Auction ends Friday March 13th, at 3:00pm.


If you are inter
ested in bidding on this hike, please leave a comment for this post with your bid amount and email address. Bidding starts at $5.00, bids will be accepted in a minimum of $1.00 increments. Again, the auction closes on Friday March 13th at 3:00pm, and the winning bidder will be contacted via email.

During a visit to his class, the following photograph was taken. Here you can see Dr. Goodchild raising his right hand while giving the oath not to leave anyone behind in the wilderness during the aforementioned hike.


Let the bidding begin!

Thanks for the overwhelming interest. I'm doing my best to keep up with your email requests for more information about this hike. Here are the answers to the FAQs:
  1. The winning bidders can pay with any form of payment. Credit or debit can be paid via our donation button located near the top left of this blog. Paypal hosts that account. Check, cash (paper or coin collection) will be collected right before the hike at UCSB.
  2. Yes, more than one bidder can win. Dr. Goodchild graciously makes this provision to keep this opportunity in reach for some of his students taking his course this quarter.
  3. You can subscribe to the the comments. You'll get an email any time someone posts.
Thanks to all for making this fundraiser a success!

Friday, February 6, 2009

Pre-AAG Field Trip offered by Dr John Cloud

Dr Cloud writes:

And by the way, for anyone from UCSB who gets to the AAG early, with time and inclination for something besides Boulder Dam and death valley, I'll be leading an AAG fieldtrip, the oasis Tour:

Friday, March 20
2. The Oasis Tour

Friday, March 20, 9:00am – Saturday, March 21, 5:30pm
Organizers/Leaders: John Cloud, NOAA Central Library
Trip Capacity: 24
Cost/person: $125 (includes transportation, accommodations, dinner, breakfast, lunch, entrance fees)


Few places are as compelling as those with abundant water in a desert. This tour will make a 2-day, 300 mile circle tour of historic oases in Nevada and California, staying overnight at the legendary Zzyzx, the desert study center. We'll leave Las Vegas in mini-vans, driving to Tecopa Hot Springs oasis, for a soak and lunch in a desert bistro.

Then, we travel on to the nearby historic China Ranch date palm plantation. We'll then travel on to Zzyzx, arriving in time for a catered dinner on the Boulevard of Dreams, and a walk by the restoring wetlands. Travelers will stay overnight at the Zzyzx Desert Studies Center, in historic bungalow rooms, double occupancy, on beds furnished with sleeping bag liners sufficient for the spring temperatures. Zzyzx accommodations include catered dinner, breakfast, and bag lunch. The next morning, we'll visit a 19th century railroad oasis, the historic Kelso Depot. We'll eat our catered lunches at a vista point in the botanical oasis of the New York Mountains. We'll then return to Las Vegas refreshed, with a nuanced perspective on water in the desert.


I haven't met Dr Cloud, but I certainly look forward to seeing him at this year's UCSB Geography 70's theme AAG Event at the Peppermill Fireside Lounge. He's already out checking Las Vegas thrift stores for leisure suits. He also attached the following image to his RSVP so that I can easily recognize him in Vegas:


John Cloud, a graduate of our department, completed his Ph.D. in the summer of 2000.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

CaGIS is looking for volunteers...

Keith Clarke found this great opportunity:


Dear Cartography and Geographic Information Society (CaGIS) member –

CaGIS will be sponsoring an exhibit booth at the annual conference of the Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada, from March 23-27, 2009. If you are planning to attend AAG this year, the officers and board of direction of CaGIS would appreciate your help in staffing the CaGIS booth for limited periods of time during the conference. This is an excellent opportunity to discuss the activities of CaGIS with other AAG attendees and with other current (and prospective) CaGIS members. If you are not currently planning to attend the AAG meeting, but live in the Las Vegas area or will be visiting the Las Vegas area during the conference, a complimentary conference registration will be provided to you if you volunteer to help to staff the CaGIS booth at AAG. This registration ($390/$435 for nonmember full registration before/after February 10) will enable you to experience a conference of a kindred geospatial information and technology organization, to provide a valuable service to CaGIS, and to help provide information about CaGIS to AAG conference attendees. There are a very limited number of AAG exhibit staff complimentary registrations available to CaGIS, so please contact Alan Mikuni, CaGIS President, before Friday March 6 if you are interested. Alan can be reached at amikuni@usgs.gov or 650-329-4250. Thank you in advance for your consideration.

Sincerely, the Officers and Board of Direction of CaGIS