Michelle Richmond is author of No One You Know, the New York Times bestseller The Year of Fog, award-winning story collection The Girl in the Fall-Away Dress, and the novel Dream of the Blue Room, a finalist for the Northern California Book Award. She is the recipient of the 2009 Hillsdale Award for Fiction from the Fellowship of Southern Writers, the Mississippi Review Fiction Prize, and the Associated Writing Programs Award. Her work has appeared in Glimmer Train, Playboy, Oxford American, Salon, The Kenyon Review, and The Missouri Review. Michelle holds an MFA from the University of Miami, where she was a James Michener Fellow. She taught in MFA programs at University of San Francisco, California College of the Arts, St. Marys College, and Bowling Green State University. A native of Mobile, Alabama, Michelle lives in San Francisco and writes full time.
PACS 164B: Introduction to Nonviolence - Spring 2007. An introduction to the science of nonviolence, mainly as seen through the life and work of Mahatma Gandhi. Historical overview of nonviolence East and the West up to the American Civil Rights movement and Martin Luther King, Jr., with emphasis on the ideal of principled nonviolence and the reality of mixed or strategic nonviolence in practice, especially as applied to problems of social justice and defense.
Organizer:
Robert Lue, Director, HarvardX, and Professor, Practice of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University
Panelists:
Chris Dellarocas, Professor and Chair, Information Systems, Boston University
Mitchell Stevens, Director, Digital Research and Planning, and Associate Professor, Education, Business and Sociology, Stanford University
This is Part 3 of UC Berkeley's 4 part mini-series: The Role of Green Chemistry in Circular Economy Supply Chains.
The Berkeley Center for Green Chemistry (BCGC) and the Laboratory for Manufacturing and Sustainability (LMAS) will how to influence positive change within the supply chain using green chemistry. The session will consist of a 5-min explanatory video followed by a panel discussion with experts from the UC Berkeley ecosystem. Join us to learn how to think through decisions from a chemist's perspective!
https://www.thinkdif.co/big-top-tent-sessions/the-role-of-green-chemistry-in-circular-economy-supply-chains-3