NSF Appoints Daniel Sui as Division Director, Social and Economic Sciences

The National Science Foundation has announced the appointment of Dr. Daniel Sui as Division Director, Social and Economic Sciences, Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences (SBE), effective as of July 25, 2016.

Sui is currently Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor and Professor of Geography at The Ohio State University, where he served for four years as the Department Chair of Geography. Sui also has courtesy appointments in OSU’s College of Public Affairs, College of Public Health, and City and Regional Planning in the School of Architecture. He has directed OSU’s Geographic Analysis Core in the Institute of Population Research and previously directed the Center for Urban and Regional Analysis at OSU.

Prior to joining Ohio State in 2009, Sui was a faculty member at Texas A&M in the Geography Department, inaugural holder of the Reta A. Haynes Endowed Chair in the College of Geosciences, and an administrator, serving as Assistant VP for Research and Director for Geospatial Information Science and Technology.

Professor Sui has authored approximately 120 books, monographs, articles, reviews, and reports. On numerous occasions he has been an NSF reviewer—in the SaTC, Geography, and IBSS programs, among others—and has been awarded four NSF grants. Additionally, he has provided service to international and association communities from the German Research Foundation to AAAS. He was a Woodrow Wilson Center Public Policy Scholar in 2015, and a Guggenheim Fellow in 2009. He also has served as visiting senior research scientist at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2007, and at the United Nations’ Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) from 2000-2001. Daniel earned his doctorate in Geography at the University of Georgia, after receiving his master’s from Beijing University’s Institute of Remote Sensing and GIS.

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Tarek Rashed Announced as New Director of GeoInformatics at The Polis Center at IUPUI

The Polis Center at Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) has announced that Tarek Rashed has joined the Center to direct and further develop the GeoInformatics project portfolio of partners in the fields of emergency management, hazard risk analysis, disaster mitigation, land-use planning, and economic development. The Polis Center at IUPUI specializes in providing place-based research tools to transform data into usable information for more effective local decision-making.

Rashed earned his Ph.D. through the joint doctoral program of San Diego State University and the University of California, Santa Barbara. He spent the past six years at Geospatial Applied Research Experts House (GSAREH), where he was instrumental in helping the company become recognized as a premier provider of geospatial innovation. Prior to that, he served as a faculty member at the Universities of Redlands, Oklahoma, and Southern California. Rashed has been a member of the American Association of Geographers since 1999.

Rashed commented, “I am excited to join The Polis Center and look forward to working with the GeoInformatics team to further develop and diversify our innovative applications of GIS and GIScience to serve the communities of Indiana and our various constituencies within the state and beyond. I am fortunate to be joining a well-recognized academic institution that prides itself on utilizing technologies to strengthen community resilience and civic capabilities.”

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Three Prominent Geographers Honored with Guggenheim Awards

Mei-Po Kwan, Katharyne Mitchell and Laura Pulido have been named 2016 fellows by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

Mei-Po Kwan, a professor of geography and geographic information science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, was selected for her ground-breaking contributions to the discipline of geography in fields spanning environmental health, sustainable cities, human mobility, socio-economic issues in cities, and GIScience. As noted in a recent award citation: “One of the defining characteristics of her research is that it transcends and eschews boundaries” both within geography and beyond.

Kwan plans to use the Guggenheim fellowship to deepen understanding of the uncertain geographic context problem (UGCoP) and to conceive possible methods for mitigating the problem in social science and health research. Read more information about Kwan’s Guggenheim fellowship.

Katharyne Mitchell, a professor of geography at the University of Washington, was selected for her research on xenophobia, citizenship, and the meaning and practices of belonging.

In her time as a Guggenheim Fellow Mitchell will look at the nature of sanctuary and the role of faith-based movements in migration policy and human rights discourse in Europe. Read more information about Mitchell’s Guggenheim fellowship.

 

Laura Pulido, a professor of American studies and ethnicity at the University of Southern California: Sangre en la Tierra: Towards a Methodology for Engaging with Foundational Racial Violence.

As a Guggenheim Fellow, Pulido will work on a project called, Sangre en la Tierra (Blood in the Soil), which attempts to develop a methodology for encouraging cities to grapple with their histories of foundational racial violence. Read more information about Pulido’s Guggenheim fellowship.

Kwan, Mitchell and Pulido were among 178 scholars, artists, and scientists selected to receive a 2016 Guggenheim fellowship. Guggenheim Fellows are chosen from more than 3,000 highly accomplished applicants “on the basis of prior achievement and exceptional promise.” Guggenheim Fellows “represent the best of the best.”

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Scott Carlin of LIU Post to Co-Chair UN Conference

Dr. Scott Carlin, an associate professor of geography at Long Island University Post, has been named Co-Chair of the 66th United Nations Department of Public Information/Non-Governmental Organization Conference to be held in the city of Gyeongju, Republic of Korea from May 30 – June 1, 2016. The theme of this year’s conference is “Education for Global Citizenship: Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals Together.” This will be the first UN DPI/NGO Conference held in Asia.

The Conference will take place in the first year of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by the United Nations Member States in September 2015 to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure human rights and prosperous and fulfilling lives for all, as part of a new sustainable development agenda to be achieved by 2030.

About his Co-Chair responsibilities, Dr. Carlin feels that his lifelong work in education, with a focus on geography and climate change, has prepared him to serve: “My sense of this conference is that we have reached a critical threshold, where global citizenship has transitioned from something we might do as individuals to something that we must do as individuals. In this new era of climate change what happens to one, happens to all. The SDGs are a natural extension of this new perspective. With the SDGs, the world affirms that we are all safer and more prosperous when we attend to the wellbeing of all citizens and the planet. The Republic of Korea, the conference setting, highly values education and its transformative impact on individuals, communities and sustainable development. While in 1945, the literacy rate in ROK was 22%, today it is 98%. Education has played a vital role in creating economic development and stability in this country. Education partnered with global citizenship offers the clearest path toward a world of greater economic equality, gender empowerment, sustainability and the peaceful resolution of conflicts.”

Dr. Carlin added: “This Conference will provide an opportunity for non-governmental organizations, governments, educational institutions, business leaders and lay institutions to come together to develop partnerships and more sustainable institutions. Education is a human right, a shared global value, one that we can all improve to help create a world that is more prosperous, peaceful and sustainable, where everyone can fulfill his or her dreams of education.”

Dr. Carlin was chosen as Conference Co-Chair through a global online nomination process. He teaches at LIU Post’s new master’s program in environmental sustainability and coordinates their Campus Sustainability Committee. He has been active in civil society initiatives at the UN for nearly a decade. For the past two decades, Dr. Carlin has worked on a variety of sustainable development projects on Long Island, including breast cancer and environmental mapping, green buildings, wastewater management, climate change and renewable energy. Dr. Carlin is also national advisor to the Graduation Pledge Alliance (of Social and Environmental Responsibility) which is offered at colleges and universities around the world.

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AAG Invites Members to Join Mentoring Network for Women in Geography

A Special Kickoff Event is Planned for the AAG Annual Meeting

The AAG Committee on the Status of Women in Geography will hold a special session at the AAG Annual Meeting to help launch the Mentoring Network for Women in Geography.

The CSWG also invites faculty, staff, and professionals to serve as mentors in the newly established mentoring group. A previous call for participants yielded an unprecedented number of requests for mentors. Participation is not limited to those with senior positions, tenure, or who identify as female. Anyone who feels they can provide guidance on the early stages of academic careers is highly encouraged to participate.

Mentors are asked to commit to regular mentoring sessions (via call or Skype) with their mentee for one year, commencing with the 2016 Annual Meeting and concluding at the 2017 Annual Meeting. It is recommended that mentoring sessions occur once every six weeks but ultimately the mentor and their mentee should decide upon an appropriate interval.

The CSWG would like for mentors to meet their mentees in person at the 2016 Annual Meeting at a session scheduled for Thursday, March 31. The session will begin at 7:10 p.m. in Franciscan A on the Ballroom Level at the Hilton Hotel.

If you are willing to serve as a mentor to a woman geographer, please e-mail Lisa Davis (CSWG Chair), lisa [dot] davis [at] ua [dot] edu, as soon as possible.

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AAG Member and First Female Pakistani Geomorphologist Khalida Khan Honored as ISDR Researcher of the Year

Dr. Khalida M. Khan has been honored as ISDR Researcher of the Year at the U.S. National Postdoctoral Association (NPA) by the Inter-regional Directors’ Board of the SAARC-ASEAN Post-doc Academia.

Khan is an Associate Professor in Geology and Mountain Research at the University of Punjab. She also founded the Centre for Integrated Mountain Research (CIMR) at the Univeristy of Punjab in 1987 and has served as the Centre’s director since its inception. Dr. Khan is a former UNESCO chair holder whose research interests include geomorphology, sustainable development education, watershed conservation and management, socio-cultural and economic studies, women/gender and mountain studies, impact assessment of mountainous areas analytical studies, eco-tourism, hazard investigations, and strategic rural areas studies.

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AAG Archivist Geoffrey Martin Provides Rare Glimpses into the History of Geography

A near-capacity crowd gathered on January 21, 2016, in the Geography and Map Division at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., to hear a talk by the doyen of the history of geography, Dr. Geoffrey J. Martin, Professor Emeritus at Southern Connecticut State University and the official archivist of the American Association of Geographers (AAG) for more than 30 years.

Martin was invited to speak about his new book, American Geography and Geographers: Toward Geographical Science, which was published in 2015 by Oxford University Press. However, his talk was as much an account of his own career-long journey to collect material and write about the history of American geography as about the book itself.

As a young academic, Martin was drawn to three figures in American geography, who had shaped the discipline in the first half of the twentieth century: Mark Jefferson, Ellsworth Huntington and Isaiah Bowman. All studied at Harvard under William Morris Davis, the man who played a founding role in the establishment of the academic discipline in America. While Davis’s work focused on ‘physiograhy,’ his three disciples pursued new directions in geography which examined the physical earth as the home of man: Jefferson with anthropography; Huntington with physical climatology; and Bowman with the concept of region.

Over the years, Martin systematically collected archival information on the life and work of these three geographers which was published respectively as Mark Jefferson: Geographer (1968), Ellsworth Huntington: His life and thought (1973), and The life and thought of Isaiah Bowman (1980).

Following the publication of this trilogy, Martin then set out on a grander project: to tell the larger story of American geography and geographers. The recently published title covering the period from 1870 to 1970 took 17 years to research and write. It is a testament to Martin’s meticulous attention to detail — pursuing every lead, uncovering every possible manuscript, and tracking down every living person to interview.

Martin is an archivist extraordinaire. In the course of more than five decades of research, he visited 17 countries, consulted 300 archival holdings, accumulated 115,000 manuscripts, and personally corresponded with more than 100 people.

What came across during his presentation was Martin’s sense of sheer pleasure and privilege at being able to work with the living relatives of the key scholars in the book, including weekly lunches with Ellsworth Huntington’s wife and four successive summers spent in the basement of Isaiah Bowman’s son, Bob. He also told stories about some of the challenges and frustrations of working with archival material, from a will that prevented access for 50 years (which he negotiated with the family down to 25 years) to a son who ceremonially burned manuscripts from his father’s archive from time to time. During the Cold War, he also had to defend himself during the McCarthy investigations after a colleague turned him in for allegedly being a Communist sympathizer. The unjustified evidence was a small set of Russian books on chess strategies from when he was a world-class champion of the game.

Martin, now in his early 80s, is truly of the old school. He has not embraced modern technology, which makes one respect his research and writing even more — from his correspondence carried out by hand-written letter to his dedication in answering geography questions via telephone at any time of day or night.

Martin’s expansive and in-depth knowledge of the history of geography and geographers is unparalleled. Through his exposition of the main characters in American geography, one feels to have actually met them personally. The joy of listening to Geoffrey Martin is the combination of hearing an authoritative scholar, as well as an entertaining raconteur.

Sadly, these days the history of geography is not a particularly popular sub-discipline, but geographers of all ages and all nations ought to pay heed to Geoffrey Martin’s landmark text, American Geography and Geographers.

Ralph Ehrenberg, Chief of the Geography and Map Division at the Library of Congress, and Douglas Richardson, Executive Director of the AAG, took the opportunity to not only honor Martin at Thursday’s event, but also to introduce the recent agreement of the consolidation of the AAG’s century-plus old archives to the Library of Congress. Collections are currently being moved from several scattered locations to this central place, which will make many important and rare materials available to scholars and historians worldwide. In celebration of this, and to complement Martin’s talk, the Geography and Map Division displayed unique and rare historic maps, documents and other artifacts.

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Kirstin Dow Named Among First Leshner Leadership Institute Public Engagement Fellows at AAAS

Fellows to focus on climate change issues in first year of program

Kirstin Dow, a University of South Carolina geography professor and former AAG National Councillor, has been named an inaugural fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s (AAAS) Leshner Leadership Institute.

All members in this first cohort of 15 fellows are climate scientists with an interest in promoting dialogue between science and society.

“AAAS is encouraged by the interest in this new Public Engagement Fellowship opportunity. The 15 Fellows selected, and the many others who applied, demonstrate clear commitment in the climate science community to engage the public on this critical issue,” said Tiffany Lohwater, Director of Meetings and Public Engagement at AAAS. “The fellowship program is focusing on climate with its first scientist cohort, building on the long-standing commitment of AAAS to science communication and public engagement.”

Leshner Fellows will spend a week in Washington, DC, during June at the AAAS headquarters to focus on “public engagement and science communication training, networking and plan development.”

According to a statement from the University of South Carolina, “Dow is principal investigator of the Carolinas Integrated Sciences and Assessments, an interdisciplinary research team that bridges climate science and decision-making. She has also engaged public concerns as a lead author on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fifth Assessment, Working Group 2 report and author on the U.S. National Climate Assessment (2014).”

The Leshner Leadership Institute was established in 2015 with support from more than 130 philanthropic gifts. It is managed by the AAAS Center for Public Engagement with Science and Technology, established by former AAAS Chief Executive Officer Alan I. Leshner in 2004.

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Kavita Pandit Named Associate Provost at Georgia State U.

Georgia State University recently announced the appointment of Kavita Pandit as Associate Provost for Faculty Affairs, effective March 1, 2016. Pandit was AAG President in 2006 and currently serves as associate provost for international education at the University of Georgia.

Her previous academic administrative positions include senior vice provost for the State University of New York, as well as associate dean of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and head of the department of geography at the University of Georgia.

Pandit’s academic interests are in the areas of population geography, migration and economic development, and she has a strong record of publications and funded research. She has served on the NSF Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences’ Committee of Visitors and senior review panel and on the editorial boards of several top ranked journals. She is the recipient of the Ronald F. Abler Distinguished Service Award from the AAG and the Sandy Beaver Award for Outstanding Teaching, Sarah Moss Fellow and Lilly Teaching Fellow at the University of Georgia.

Pandit is a native of Mumbai, India with a bachelor of architecture degree from Bombay University, a master of city and regional planning from The Ohio State University, and master’s and doctorate degrees in geography from The Ohio State University.

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Richardson Elected as AAAS Fellow

Douglas Richardson, Executive Director of the Association of American Geographers (AAG), has been named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Election as a AAAS Fellow is an honor bestowed upon AAAS members by their peers.

Richardson was elected as an AAAS Fellow for “distinguished contributions to the field of Geographic Information Science and Technology, and for tireless service as Executive Director of the Association of American Geographers.”

During the past fifteen years, Richardson has led a highly successful organizational renewal of the AAG, developing dynamic research and international initiatives, and building strong academic, publishing, diversity, and financial foundations for the AAG and for geography’s future. Prior to joining the AAG, Dr. Richardson founded and was the president of GeoResearch, Inc., a scientific research firm that developed and patented the world’s first real-time space-time interactive GPS/GIS functionality, which has transformed the ways in which geographic information is now collected, experienced, mapped, and used within geography and other disciplines, and in society at large. The concepts, technologies and innovations pioneered by Richardson and GeoResearch are now ubiquitous and at the heart of a wide array of real-time interactive mapping, navigation, mobile computing, consumer devices such as cell phones, and location-based web services. They also have become central to global economic development and planning programs, interdisciplinary research platforms, and the management of day-to-day core operations of most large-scale governmental entities, corporations, and international NGOs.

Richardson continues to develop the field of real-time space-time integration in geography and GIScience through interdisciplinary geographic research in areas such as human rights, health, sustainable environmental and economic development, coupled human-natural systems, and most recently in the humanities.

AAAS members are awarded this honor because of their scientifically or socially distinguished efforts to advance science or its applications. AAAS steering groups review the nominations of individuals within their respective science sections and a final list is forwarded to the AAAS Council, which votes on the nominees. The AAAS Council is the policymaking body of the Association, chaired by the AAAS president, and consisting of the members of the board of directors, the retiring section chairs, delegates from each electorate and each regional division, and two delegates from the National Association of Academies of Science. The tradition of AAAS Fellows began in 1874.

New Fellows will be honored during a ceremony at the AAAS Fellows Forum on February 13, at the 2016 AAAS Annual Meeting Washington, DC. This year’s AAAS Fellows were formally announced in the journal Science on November 27, 2015.

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