FRIDAY COLLOQUIUM!
So anyway, the Geography Department has an ongoing colloquium series, and the latest installment hits Sarkeys this Friday at 3:30pm. This week's speaker is Dr. Morgan Robertson. Here's a brief bio of Dr. Robertson (facts, figures, and most of the phrasing courtesy of the University of Kentucky website):
Morgan Robertson studies the intersection of market economics, environmental science and environmental politics and philosophy in North America and Australia. As a political ecologist with a background in social theory and wetland biogeography, he explores current attempts to create "markets in nature", such as wetland credit markets, habitat and biodiversity offset markets, and carbon credit markets. Morgan worked for two-and-a-half years at the headquarters of the US Environmental Protection Agency developing federal wetlands rules, and maintains an active role and interest in American wetlands conservation policy and the Clean Water Act. His research extends to the social constitution of "nature" as an object of desire, commodification, and scientific knowledge, and he is particularly interested in current theoretical work on the relationship between political power and scientific concepts of ecology and nature. He is also interested in the growth and economy of the restoration ecology movement in the United States and elsewhere.
Peep the bona fides: Our man got his PhD from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in aught-four, and is currently droppin' knowledge at the University of Kentucky, where he is an Assistant Professor. For those that don't know, this gives the good doctor a top-shelf cultural lineage as well, not to mention academic connections within our own stable of esteemed profs.
Check the 'search: Here's a few of Dr. Robertson's publications, for those that have a spare minute and a touch of curiosity (OU folks should be able to access these through the Bizzell Library portal; other scholars should be able to do the same through their own institution):
"Discussing price in all the wrong places: Commodity definition and price under neoliberal environmental policy", Antipode, vol.39, no.3 (2007) pp500-526
"Performing environmental governance", Geoforum, vol.41, no.1 (2010) pp7-10
"Emerging markets in ecosystem services: Trends in a decade of entrepreneurial wetland banking", Frontiers in Ecology and Environmental Science, vol.6, no.4 (2006) pp297-302
"The nature that capital can see: Science, state and market in the commodification of ecosystem services", Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, vol.24, no.3 (2006) pp367-387
Once again, everyone is invited to this colloquium, so come on down if you're interested in sustainability, money, greed, enviropolitics, shady dealings, the light of scholarship, or even just ducks. Oh, and snacks. We always have snacks.
Stay tuned for more info on our top-notch colloquium series...