NSF to present EJB’s Arctic Planning Studio Project, July 25

July 24, 2013

On Thursday, July 25, the National Science Foundation will host Sustainable Arctic Villages and Oil Development: Planning to Avoid the Natural Resources Curse, a presentation of the Bloustein School’s recent Arctic Planning Studio project, “Community Impact of Moving Oil to Market.” The presentation will be available online by webcast. Instructions for viewing the webcast are included below. The event begins at 12:00 p.m. EDT.

Bloustein School graduate students worked with the Ocean Conservancy (OC) to develop planning scenarios for Wainwright, Alaska. The primary objective of the studio was to address the question of how villages like Wainwright can leverage off-shore oil development to support long-term planning. To answer this question, the graduate studio developed four development planning scenarios for Wainwright to leverage the potential benefits from development—both for economic development and to address climate hazards (e.g., erosion and partial village relocation)—while minimizing negative social impacts of natural resources development known as the “natural resources curse.” The scenarios are intended to be tools the community can use in a community-driven planning process.

The course was led by Bloustein professor Hal Salzman, who is the principal investigator on a National Science Foundation Polar Social Science Program grant examining socio-economic impacts and sustainability of arctic Alaska villages. The studio was assisted by Tony Nelessen, Bloustein School professor of planning and a leading practitioner in the fields of visioning, planning, and urban design.

The students presenting will be Mary Martha Gaiennie, Sujee Jung, and Michael Brady. Mary Martha Gaiennie is a second-year student in the Bloustein School’s Master in City and Regional Planning (MCRP) program, concentrating on Environmental and Physical Planning with a focus on urban design and land-use planning. She earned her undergraduate degree from the University of Georgia with a major in Real Estate Finance. Sujee (Suzy) Jung is a second-year student in the MCRP program and her interest focuses on measuring the dynamic impacts of urban development on the community by utilizing a community-oriented mapping tool (Mappler) and geographic information systems (GIS). As an undergraduate she studied urban sociology at University of Seoul, Korea as well as la Universidad de Granada, Spain, where her academic interests were shaped by issues ranging from the local conflicts of ethnic clustering areas and urban segregation to the neighborhood effects. Michael Brady is a geography Ph.D. student and School of Arts and Sciences Graduate Fellow at Rutgers University and a research assistant for The Rutgers Initiative on Climate and Society. His research focuses on hazard risk governance, mainstreaming disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation strategies into local planning, and integrating GIS with remote sensor data for spatially-explicit vulnerability mapping. , Mike previously served as a marine science technician in the U.S. Coast Guard, with experiences ranging from sea duty in the Bering Sea to responding to the 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

The presentation will be available by live webcast. To join follow the instructions below. For more information in advance of the presentation contact Mike Brady at michael.brady@rutgers.edu.

Instructions for watching live webcast Thursday, July 25, 12:00 p.m. EDT:
1. Go to https://nsf.webex.com/nsf/j.php?ED=216370072&UID=0&PW=NMDdkYTkxNThm&RT=MiMxMQ%3D%3D(will not be active until a few minutes before start of event)
2. If requested, enter your name and email address.
3. If a password is required, enter the meeting password: arctic
4. Click “Join.”

For assistance with the webcast, go to https://nsf.webex.com/nsf/mc and on the left navigation bar, click “Support” or contact
alydon@nsf.gov.

 

Recent Posts

Molloy Discusses Criteria for Healthiest Cities

Location matters when it comes to health. Some places promote wellness by expanding access to nutritious food and recreational facilities. Others strive to keep healthcare costs affordable for everyone or keep parks clean and well-maintained. When a city doesn’t take...

McGlynn & Payne Explore the Relational Reprojection Platform

Counter-GIS Experiments in Distance Interpolation with the Relational Reprojection Platform Abstract In this paper, we discuss the cartographic genealogy and prospective uses of the Relational Reprojection Platform (RRP), an interactive tool that we built to create...

Clint Andrews–The Critical Role of University Research

The Critical Role of University Research: Funding, Challenges, and Impact This week on EJB Talks dean Stuart Shapiro and Associate Dean of Research Clint Andrews discuss the vital role federal-funded university research plays in complementing education, driving...

Payne Investigates City Digital Twins Concepts

Expanding the city digital twin in the context of crisis, cartography and computation Abstract This commentary responds to Gillian Rose's ‘Visualising human life in volumetric cities: city digital twins and other disasters’ as a framework for thinking about crisis and...

Nashia Basit (MPP/MCRP ’24) on Women’s Leadership

This week, alumna and current Governor's Fellow Nashia Basit (MPP/MCRP '24) discussed women's leadership in state government and cultivating spaces for women to be successful with Allison Chris Myers, Esq., CEO of the New Jersey Civil Service Commission....