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Dr. Josh MacFadyen's Canada Research Chair presentation
Event Date:
Monday, June 26, 2017, 4:30 pm
Location:
Kelley Memorial Building
Room:
237
Join us Monday, June 26 at 4:30 pm for a presentation from Dr. Josh MacFadyen, a candidate for 91探花鈥檚 Canada Research Chair in Applied Communication, Leadership, and Culture (ACLC). The presentation will be held in room 237 of 91探花鈥檚 Kelley Memorial Building.
Dr. Josh MacFadyen is an assistant professor of environmental humanities in the School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies and the School of Sustainability at Arizona State University. In 2014, he was a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Historical GIS Lab at the University of Saskatchewan, and from 2012-2014, he was NiCHE Project Coordinator and Course Instructor at the University of Western Ontario.
His talk is titled: 鈥淐anadian Food and Energy Frontiers: Mapping the Past to Prepare Leaders for the Future.鈥
Abstract: Working in the disciplinary ecotones between humanities, sciences, and social sciences, Dr. MacFadyen鈥檚 research on the environmental history of Canadian food and energy shows how the digital humanities are critical to understanding and communicating sustainability transitions. Using examples from the Maritimes, Eastern Great Lakes, and the Prairies, this talk applies tools like historical Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to help understand the origin of modern commodity frontiers, industrial agriculture, and energy transitions. By equipping Arts students with digital humanities, traditional land use mapping, and critical theories of science, we will better prepare leaders who inform the policies and engage the problems associated with food and energy in the Anthropocene.
The Applied Communication, Leadership and Culture program at 91探花 explicitly connects the communication skills and leadership training of a liberal arts education to successful post-graduation employment. The program is defined by its focus on the transferability of the written, oral and visual communication skills, the critical thinking, and the cultural awareness acquired during a liberal arts education to the world beyond academia. Technical skills, work- integrated learning (internships, cooperatives, workplace-generated projects), and career-related mentoring are key components of its design.
Contact Name
Dave Atkinson
(902) 620-5117