14 news posts from January 2012

Return to News

New oral history of William Ruckelshaus, key figure in environmental policy, now online – UW News

An oral history of the career of William D. Ruckelshaus, the first and fifth administrator of the federal Environmental Protection Agency, whose career parallels the growth of the environmental movement in the United States, is now available in three locations in the state of Washington.  Ruckelshaus is an Advisory Board member for the College of the Environment.  Read more here. 

Read more »

Top fifty answers to Science Magazine question: "how will the practice of science change in your lifetime?"

At the end of 2011, Science Magazine invited essays to answer the question, “how will the practice of science change in your lifetime?” The purpose was, apparently, two-fold: to kick off a new section in Science Magazine, called NextGen VOICES, and to explore “how can we promote the wide-ranging conversations that will be necessary to meet [the] critical challenges [of a crowded and resource-limited world]?”  

Read more »

Crab fisheries' wild fluctuations give insights into the challenge of "sustainable fisheries" - UW News

In the first lecture of the 2012 Bevans Series on Sustainable Fisheries, SAFS’ David Armstrong shared “crab sagas” from around the region.  He illustrated the challenge of defining or achieving sustainability in fisheries when they fluctuate with multiple drivers at many scales of space and time.  Read the UW News coverage here.  The next lecture is this Thursday, and focuses on global dynamics in recreational fisheries.  

Read more »