Showing posts with label Geography and Geosciences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geography and Geosciences. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 November 2016

Inaugural Lecture: Prof. Nina Laurie, "Geographies of return, identity and development"

Professor Nina Laurie of the Department of Geography and Sustainable Development, School of Geography and Geosciences, will deliver her Inaugural Lecture "Geographies of return, identity and development" in School III, St Salvator's Quadrangle on Wednesday 23 November 2016, 5.15pm. All are welcome.

Geographies of return, identity and development 

We are all ‘returnees’. Across our lifetimes we return at different moments to places, homes, communities, friendships, families, value sets and ways of being. Such movements change us. We carry into new spaces where and what has gone before. These geographical echoes help frame our understandings of where we arrive and what we feel we can do when we get there. This lecture explores how the experiences and knowledges of those who return influences the form and success of sustainable development in diverse settings. It draws on three decades of fieldwork in the global South and new research in coastal Scotland in order to emphasize the need for development policy makers to value the common experience of return. I highlight research on some of the globe’s most marginalised groups, indigenous people and women who have experienced trafficking, and examine how their experiences of return have shaped their rights based development demands. I explore how return can involve valuing traditional ways of knowing and doing, generating new collective group identities as development actors. As an example, I use this framework to introduce a new research agenda on sustainable development in Scotland through a new project ‘Rowing the Waves’ being conducted in partnership with St Andrews Coastal Rowing Club and the Scottish Coastal Rowing Association.

List of inaugural lectures for the academic year 2016-17

Friday, 7 November 2014

IMAGINE … could a non-party Scottish Parliament work?

The Centre for Housing Research (CHR), School of Geography and Geosciences, will be hosting a Café Politique (format – café style public debate in an informal setting with a licensed bar, tea, coffee and cakes), entitled "IMAGINE … could a non-party Scottish Parliament work?" at the Byre Theatre in St Andrews on Wednesday, 19th November from 5:45-7:45pm as part of Parliament Week.


Pre Scottish independence referendum, as the chair of the Scottish Youth Parliament (SYP), Louise Cameron was invited to talk to the Law Society of Scotland about the work of the SYP. The lawyers asked her the above question (that forms the title of the talk). At the time, Louise didn’t answer in detail. After some reflection, this informal talk is her response.

The style of the discussion will be that the speaker will introduces her 20 minutes informal talk in an accessible and challenging way. The floor will then be opened up for comment, debate and discussion. The idea is not to follow a strict Q&A but to invite audience members to offer thoughts (facilitated by Kim McKee, the Director of CHR). The idea is to create an atmosphere where people can talk openly, with passion and keeping minds open to new ideas (after Newcastle Café Culture format). For more information please email Fionagh Thomson (fionagh.thomson@st-andrews.ac.uk).


Parliament Week is a programme of events and activities that connect people across the UK with Parliament and democracy.

Friday, 5 September 2014

New research centre at St Andrews: CATCH

The Centre for Archaeology, Technology and Cultural Heritage (CATCH) is a multi-disciplinary centre that brings together researchers from across the University of St Andrews. The Centre promotes research into all aspects of past human activity from across the globe, with the aim of making our research accessible to the widest audience as possible. The Centre brings together arts and sciences in order to investigate how humans have been influenced by, and changed, their environment.

The Schools, Departments and Units involved in CATCH are: Art History, Classics, Computer Science, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Geography & Sustainable Development, History, Museum Collections Unit and Social Anthropology.
"Digitising cave art will prevent it being lost forever"
New Scientist, April 2014

Monday, 10 March 2014

Inaugural Lecture: Prof. Elspeth Graham

Professor Elspeth Graham, of the Department of Geography and Sustainable Development, School of Geography and Geosciences, will deliver her Inaugural Lecture "Population Change in South-East Asia: Questions of Scale and Difference" in School III, St Salvator's Quadrangle on Wednesday 12 March, 5.15pm – 6.30pm.
All are welcome.

In the last few decades there have been important population changes in South-East Asia, which are influencing many other aspects of society. Fertility has declined, life expectancy has increased and new mobilities are impacting on families in ways that are poorly understood. In this lecture, Elspeth Graham uses two case studies that link data at different geographic scales – fertility decline in Singapore and transnational migration from Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam – to explore the determinants and consequences of contemporary population change in the region.

Monday, 20 May 2013

Prof. Fotheringham elected member of the National Academy of Science

The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) announced on 30th April the election of 84 new members and 21 foreign associates from 14 countries in recognition of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research. Professor Stewart Fotheringham, Director of the Centre for Geoinformatics, School of Geography and Geosciences, is among the newly elected members. Those elected bring the total number of active members to 2,179 and the total number of foreign associates to 437. There are currently 77  members from United Kingdom and Prof. Fotheringham is the only member from the University of St Andrews.

The National Academy of Sciences is a US private, non-profit society of distinguished scholars. Established by an Act of Congress signed by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863, the NAS is charged with providing independent, objective advice to the nation on matters related to science and technology. Scientists are elected by their peers to membership in the NAS for outstanding contributions to research.

Thursday, 24 January 2013

GeoBus on a roll - 1 year on

One year on from the launch of the GeoBus on 18th January 2012, it has been hailed a 'tremendous success' with close to 10,000 pupils now having participated in practical hands-on Earth science on offer by the mobile science unit. To date, the GeoBus has visited 88 secondary schools, including 17 repeat visits, across Scotland, including those in remote and disadvantaged regions. It has travelled to  the Western Isles and Skye and are further visits are planned for Orkney and Shetland in the spring. The GeoBus project was presented at the British Science Festival in Aberdeen and the Earth Science Teaching Association conference last September.
The GeoBus is an educational outreach project, developed by the Department of Earth Sciences, which visits mostly secondary schools (year groups S1–S6). All teaching involves hands-on practical work which is mostly conducted in class sizes of 25 or less, working in small groups (of 5 or less). For more information, contact co-ordinator Kathryn Roper. [press story]

Thursday, 24 May 2012

New 'Centre for Geoinformatics' established

Prof Stewart Fotheringham,
Director, CGI

The University is pleased to announce the formation of a new Centre for Geoinfomatics (CGI). The Centre will act as a focus for research into geoinformatics across both the School of Geography and Geosciences and across the University.  Geoinformatics or Geographic Information Science (GIScience) involves the collection, processing, analysis and display of large spatial data sets. This includes any kind of spatial data, i.e. data with specific geographic location, or, if time is considered as well, spatio-temporal data. Researchers at CGI have teamed up with researchers in SACHI (St Andrews’ Computer Human Interaction Research Group), to generate some exciting visualisations using FatFonts, a topographic visualisation technique developed by SACHI.

EPSRC Workshop, 27 June 2012
Geoinformatics: extending ICT research across academic disciplines

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

World Series Seminar: An update on the Global Warming Debate

Wednesday 25th April, 2-5pm, Irvine Lecture Theatre, Irvine Building,
School of Geography and Geosciences
Hosted by the Environmental Change Research Group (ECRG)

2012: An update on the Global Warming Debate
Professor Tom Crowley, Palaeoclimatologist – University of Edinburgh (retired)

The global warming debate after Climategate
Andrew Montford, Blogger (Bishop Hill) and Author (The Hockey Stick Illusion)


The presentations will be followed by a questions/answers session (15:00 to 16:00), open to the floor.
All are welcome!

Monday, 26 March 2012

Best of Scottish Science from St Andrews

University of St Andrews will be exhibiting three of the exciting seven exhibits presented at the Best of Scottish Science at Dynamic Earth 1-4 April 2012 as part of the Edinburgh International Science Festival. Try out the interactive exhibits and question the scientists themselves about your discoveries.

Culture Evolves
Does culture really separate humans from the rest of nature? No! Discover the roots of culture in apes, meerkats and other animals, and how human cultures themselves evolve. Try your hand at learning a chimp tradition, contributing to the evolution of 'spaghetti towers' or shaping a new language! [more...]


Arctica Islandica: The Longest Lived Animal on Earth
Living to over 400 years old, the marine clam Arctica islandica is helping scientists investigate climate change and ageing processes. Like tree rings, the annual layers forming the clam's shell can be used to measure its age as well as acting as a natural archive of changes in its environment. [more...]

Invisibility Science: Geometry & Light
Invisibility has been a subject of fiction for millennia, from the myths of the ancient Greeks and Germans to modern novels and films. Now fascinating new developments in optics have resulted in a new science of invisibility - although it will still be a long time before you can get a real invisibility cloak from your nearest shop. Meet some of the scientists doing the research and see things disappear right in front of your eyes. [more...]

Meet the minds behind seven of Scotland’s most exciting scientific advances, selected for the Royal Society’s prestigious annual summer science exhibitions in London.

Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Beacon Lecture Thurs 27th Oct

The new series of lectures, the Beacon lectures are free and open to all, and take place on Thursday evenings from 6-7pm in Physics Lecture Theatre C in the Physics building at the North Haugh. The lectures highlight post-doctoral researchers from various departments showcasing the cutting edge research being undertaken at the University. [Complete lecture series list]

27th October 2011
Unravelling seawater temperatures from fossil skeletons: a tale of corals, crystals and cells
Dr Nicky Allison, School of Geography and Geoscience
Knowledge of past global temperatures is critical for understanding how and why past climates varied and for predicting 21st century climate change. However temperature measurements are restricted to the last ~150 years or less. Climate proxies are natural sources of climate information which extend beyond this period. The chemistry of the carbonate skeletons of marine organisms is affected by local environmental conditions and the analysis of fossil specimens can provide estimates of past seawater temperatures. However skeletal chemistry is also affected by biological and chemical processes and the extent of these influences needs to be resolved if the climate information recorded in fossil skeletons is to be accurately interpreted.

Next week's lecture: 
3rd November 2011
Neapolitan cinema, old and new: an overview of regional cinema from Naples, Italy
Dr Alexander Marlow-Mann, School of Philosophical, Anthropological and Film Studies