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Environmenal Policy & Natural Resource Management

Sunday. 31 March, 2024 - Saturday. 06 April, 2024
Week 14
Wednesday. 03 April, 2024
6:00 PM - 7:30 PM

WSSA Welcoming Reception

Garden Terrace

All Attendees Invited

 

WSSA Recepción del presidente

 

Se invita a todos los asistentes

Thursday. 04 April, 2024
11:30 AM - 12:50 PM

EPN-01 Climate and Energy

Frio

Coordinator: Chelsea Schelly
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Affiliation: Department of Social Sciences, Michigan Technical University

 

Moderator: Beatriz Adriana Venegas Sahagún, Universidad de Guadalajara

 

Exploring the justice dimensions of energy transition in a reluctant petrostate - are renewables the saviour?
    - Lorelei Hanson, Athabasca University
Energy Transitions and Residential Well-Being
    - Chris Messer, Colorado State University-Pueblo
Impact Assessment of Global Warming and Climate Change in Nepal: Challenges, Consequences, and Solutions
    - Puran Prasad Adhikari, Valmiki Shiksha Sadan
Unraveling Corruption within the context of Climate Vulnerability: A Study on Four Coastal Villages in Southwestern Bangladesh
    - Arup Ratan Paul, Graduate Teaching Assistant, Department of Sociology, Texas Tech University

1:00 PM - 2:30 PM

EPN-02 Management of Lands and Waters

Frio

Coordinator: Chelsea Schelly
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Affiliation: Department of Social Sciences, Michigan Technical University

 

Moderator: Erika Allen Wolters, Oregon State University

 

San Antonio Water Conservation Social Survey
    - Joseph Simpson, Texas A&M University-San Antonio
Public Lands or Private Hands? An exploration of public preferences for Kelly Parcel, Wyoming
    - Erika Allen Wolters, Oregon State University
    - Kevin Pirch, Eastern Washington University
Intermunicipal associations, an advance in environmental policy in Mexico
    - Beatriz Adriana Venegas Sahagún, Universidad de Guadalajara
How do Local Water Management Adaptate to Climate Change in the Papaloapan River Basin Mexico (2018-2022)? Challenges for Public Policies
    - Maria Griselda Gunther, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana - Xochimilco
    - Alejandra Toscana Aparicio, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana - Xochimilco

Friday. 05 April, 2024
7:00 AM - 9:00 AM

WSSA Breakfast & Give Back

Garden Terrace

During this break we will be asking for donations to the local food bank.

11:15 AM - 1:00 PM

WSSA President's Luncheon

Garden Terrace

This is a ticketed event.

During this break we will be asking for donations to the local food bank.

2:30 PM - 5:30 PM

RAS-03 San Antonio Food Bank's Urban Farm Fieldtrip

Field Trip to the San Antonio Food Bank's Urban Farm at Mission San Juan


Please join us for an amazing local experience on Friday afternoon from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m.


Sign up at the Registration Desk by 1:00 p.m. to guarantee a spot on this local trip.

 

 

The San Antonio Food Bank’s farm at Mission San Juan is actually on a National Park site. All of the San Antonio Missions, besides the Alamo, are run by the National Park System, and ours is an unusual land use agreement where we’re able to cultivate on some of its land. When the Spanish colonists arrived and established the missions almost 300 years ago, they started farming that land using acequias, which were diversion ditches inspired by Roman and Moorish irrigation techniques. We continue the same tradition by farming this land, where a portion is irrigated using the historic methods of the Spanish and the indigenous. We also focus on cultivating more drought tolerant crops that can withstand rising temperatures. What food we grow ends up going to the community in South Texas that needs it through our Food Bank distribution programs.

2:45 PM - 4:15 PM

WSSA Business Meeting

Frio

Attendees

WSSA Executive Council

5:00 PM - 7:00 PM

AFIT - Keynote Speaker Dr. James Galbraith

Pecos

Dr. James K. Galbraith, Ph.D.

 

Inflation, Sanctions, Demography: Some practical applications of evolutionary and institutional economics.

 

Lloyd M. Bentsen Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations and Professor of Government
University of Texas at Austin
Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs

 

Click Here for Dr. Galbraith's Bio

8:00 PM - 9:00 PM

A Facebook Concert

Presidential Suite

Coordinator: Lisa Ossian
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Affiliation: Indian Hills Community College

 

The Kinkaider's Song:  A Homesteader Ballad from the Nebraska Sandhills

 

   - Tom Isern, North Dakota State University

 

The family of prairie folksong tracing lineage to the gospel hymn, “Beulah Land,” is prolific. “Beulah Land” is about a place, the blissful afterlife. Prairie singers borrowed its melody and motifs to localize them to their own places on the plains, sometimes as joyful paeans to a bountiful country, other times as sardonic commentaries on a hard land. “The Kinkaider’s Song” is exceptional in that it is traceable to a particular time and place: the Kinkaider picnic of 16 August 1911, a gathering of homesteaders at the Will Davis grove, a seven-year-old tree claim near Anselmo, in northern Custer County, Nebraska. Fourteen-year-old Matilda Matthews was there and wrote for a regional newspaper, the Atkinson Graphic, “We composed a song, ‘The Kinkaider’s Song,’ and sang it.” The song resounding through the Davis grove in 1911 arose from the historical circumstances of the Kinkaid Act of 1904, which allowed homesteads of a full section, 640 acres, rather than a quarter-section, 160 acres. Its sponsor and heroic proponent, Congressman Moses P. Kinkaid, was present when the Kinkaiders sang their anthem in his honor. From there the song passed into oral tradition and the mysterious canon of Great Plains balladry. Recently discovered, the original text and circumstances of “The Kinkaider’s Song” illustrate the capacity of digitized source materials to move ballads previously anonymous into the realm of known authorship and context--an important development in the interpretation of Great Plains folksong.

Saturday. 06 April, 2024
6:30 PM - 8:00 PM

WSSA President’s Reception

Garden Terrace

All Attendees Invited

 

WSSA Recepción del presidente

 

Se invita a todos los asistentes