The Holloway Series in Poetry - Martin Corless-Smith
Martin Corless-Smith was born and raised in Worcestershire, England. He is the author of English Fragments: A Brief History of the Soul, Swallows, Nota, Complete Travels, and Of Piscator. A limited edition chapbook, Roman and Moscow Poems, was published in 2011. He was Truman Capote Fellow at the Iowa Writers Workshop, and holds an MFA in Fine Arts and Printmaking from SMU and a Ph.D. in Creative Writing from the University at Utah. He is currently the director of the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Boise State University.
Introduction: NEPA and the Power of Information
Instructor Holly Doremus. This introductory course is designed to explore fundamental legal and policy issues in environmental law. Through examination of environmental common law and key federal environmental statutes, including the National Environmental Policy Act, Clean Air Act, and Clean Water Act, it exposes students to the major challenges to environmental law and the principal approaches to meeting those challenges, including litigation, command and control regulation, technology forcing, market incentives, and information disclosure requirements. With the addition of cross-cutting topics such as risk assessment and environmental federalism, it also gives students a grounding in how choices about regulatory standards and levels of regulatory authority are made.
http://www.law.berkeley.edu/students/curricularprograms/envirolaw/index.html
Physics 10: Physics for Future Presidents. Spring 2006. Professor Richard A. Muller. The most interesting and important topics in physics, stressing conceptual understanding rather than math, with applications to current events. Topics covered may vary and may include energy and conservation, radioactivity, nuclear physics, the Theory of Relativity, lasers, explosions, earthquakes, superconductors, and quantum physics. [courses] [physics10] [spring2006] Credits: lecturer:Professor Richard A. Muller, producers:Educational Technology Services
For students interested in learning more about the Civil and Environmental Engineering undergraduate program at UC Berkeley, join this information session where the CEE faculty members, student advisors, and current students talk about being an undergraduate in CEE and answer frequently asked questions from admitted students.
Public Health 241, 001 - Spring 2015
Statistical Analysis of Categorical Data - Nicholas P. Jewell
Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
The Responsible Conduct of Research Seminar Series gives graduate students, postdoctoral scholars, faculty, and staff the knowledge and tools to guide them through the increasingly complex ethical issues that they will face during their careers. Topical experts lead each session, using case studies and leaving time for Q&A.
Monday, April 9, 2012
The Scientist and Society
David Winickoff, Associate Professor of Bioethics and Society
Attendees who participate in at least 8 of 12 sessions will receive a Certificate of Completion at the end of the year. Sponsored by the UC Berkeley Vice Chancellor for Research, Research Enterprise Services (RES), California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences (QB3), and the Center for Computational Biology (CCB). For more information, visit http://res.berkeley.edu/res/rcr.cfm.
3:10 pm:
Plenary: “Protecting National Parks from Air Pollution Effects: Making Sausage from Science and Policy”
Jill Baron, Professor, U.S.G.S. and Colorado State University
3:35 pm:
Strategic Conversation: “Stewardship of Parks in a Changing World”
Moderator: David Ackerly, Professor of Integrative Biology, UC Berkeley
David Graber, retired Ecologist and Science Manager, National Park Service
Josh Donlan, Director, Advanced Conservation Strategies
Stephanie Carlson, Associate Professor, UC Berkeley
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