Meinig Lecture: Global Geographies of Weather Modification in an Era of Climate Change
Eggers Hall, 220
Add to: Outlook, ICal, Google Calendar
Emily Yeh of the University of Colorado Boulder will present this year's Donald W. Meinig Lecture, “Global Geographies of Weather Modification in an Era of Climate Change."
As climate change impacts intensify, interest in the practice of cloud seeding to induce precipitation and otherwise modify the weather is on the rise around the world. Geography offers powerful analytical tools for understanding the practice of cloud seeding and the controversies it has created — including thinking geographically about the hydrosocial cycle, culture-nature binaries, volumetric geopolitics, and the need to take indigenous world-making practices seriously. The talk compares weather modification in the United States, the United Arab Emirates, and China, showing that their practices and rationales are shaped quite differently by political economic, institutional and socio-cultural contexts.
The Professor Donald W. Meinig Undergraduate Lecture honors the pivotal geographical work of Maxwell Professor Emeritus Donald W. Meinig, a member of the Syracuse University Geography Department from 1959 until his retirement in 2005.
Category
Social Science and Public Policy
Type
Lectures and Seminars
Region
Campus
Open to
Alumni
Faculty
Staff
Students, Graduate and Professional
Students, Undergraduate
Organizer
MAX-Geography and the Environment
Accessibility
Contact Kelly Montague to request accommodations
We’re Turning 100!
To mark our centennial in the fall of 2024, the Maxwell School will hold special events and engagement opportunities to celebrate the many ways—across disciplines and borders—our community ever strives to, as the Oath says, “transmit this city not only not less, but greater, better and more beautiful than it was transmitted to us.”
Throughout the year leading up to the centennial, engagement opportunities will be held for our diverse, highly accomplished community that now boasts more than 38,500 alumni across the globe.