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Girls-only cybersecurity event attracts hundreds

November 20, 2019

2 Girls at computersASU’s CybersecurityDay4Girls attracted hundreds of middle school students to Arizona State University's West campus. The event was hosted in partnership with IBM to introduce young girls to the field of cybersecurity. Middle school girls are the focus of this program because women are typically underrepresented in cybersecurity roles.

CybersecurityDay4Girls covers topics to help middle school students and their families stay safe online in an ever more connected world. The program also introduces more advanced concepts like cryptography and blockchain. This exposure provides students with a better understanding of cybersecurity as a career and encourages them to consider pursuing it further.

“It’s important to make a specific reach to girls because they don’t see themselves in these roles yet,” said Jamie Winterton, director of strategy for ASU's Global Security Initiative. Winterton moderated a panel discussion between students and female cybersecurity professionals.

WE Empower partner The Female Quotient interviews Amanda Ellis

November 13, 2019

Amanda Ellis giving presentationWE Empower UN SDG Challenge Partner, The Female Quotient (FQ), is a “female-owned business committed to advancing quality” via four innovative sections of their business: FQ Media, FQ Lounge, FQ Practice and the FQ Marketplace. This interview with Amanda Ellis — WE Empower co-chair and executive director, Hawaii & Asia-Pacific for the ASU Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability — was conducted by FQ Lounge (their signature pop-up experience) and featured in the FQ magazine.

Question: In The Equality Lounge at Davos, you noted that “women are so often seen as victims, and there is a need for justice.” Can you expand upon this, and how programs like WE Empower help change the narrative?

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Meet sustainability sophomore Jackson Schiefelbein

November 12, 2019

Jackson SchiefelbeinA native of Columbus, Ohio, Arizona State University sophomore Jackson Schiefelbein has always been driven to help others. So when he discovered the School of sustainability and ASU invited him to visit, he jumped at the chance and the rest is history.

"Upon learning of the School of Sustainability and the diversity of its offerings beyond environmental science, I knew this was the place for me," Schiefelbein said. "Thanks to ASU's generosity in inviting me to visit and providing significant support through scholarships and other resources, I was able to commit to making the move to ASU."

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Healthy Urban Environments hosts Urban Heat and Air Quality Solutions Workshop

November 12, 2019

HUE Network members share ideas on how to advance urban heat and air quality solutions.
HUE Network members share ideas on how to advance urban heat and air quality solutions

On October 28, 2019 the Healthy Urban Environments (HUE) initiative held its Fall 2019 Solutions Workshop. This workshop served to formally convene the HUE Network of Concerned Parties — a diverse working group focused on collaboratively working towards advancing urban heat and air quality mitigation solutions. Going forward, the Network will support working groups engaged in planning and action around specific intervention opportunities, communicating best practices, and training future practitioners.

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Retired Air Force general describes how climate change impacts national security

ASU Now | November 8, 2019

highway bridge flooding after hurricane katrinaWhen we talk about climate change, we usually discuss its impact on the environment and our food supply. It is too often considered “just an environmental issue,” and so most people don’t realize it has other wide ranging effects — like the compromise of our national security.

In a lecture cosponsored by the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability, the American Security Project and senior business leaders concerned about long-term planning of our national security interests, retired Air Force leader Lt. Gen. Dirk Jameson shed light on the connection between these two seemingly unrelated concepts. Jameson, who previously served as deputy commander in chief and chief of U.S. Strategic Command and retired after more than three decades of active service, mentioned that the military sees two main threats in climate change: the fact that it is an “accelerant of instability” and the fact that it puts 500 installations (about 300,000 buildings) worldwide at risk.

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Swette Center Selected for Whole Foods Market 5% Day

November 8, 2019

Kathleen Yetman working at the Prescott Farmers Market

By Kathleen Merrigan, executive director of the Swette Center for Sustainable Food Systems at Arizona State University

We’re thrilled to share that on Wednesday, Dec, 4, the brand-new Whole Foods Market Tempe store’s 5% Community Giving Day will benefit the Swette Center for Sustainable Food Systems. The funds will support our inaugural food policy and sustainability leadership class tour across Arizona.

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Rethinking corporate value with the Global KAITEKI Center

ASU Now | November 8, 2019

Yoshimitsu Kobayashi Chairman of the Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings CorporationYoshimitsu Kobayashi, Chairman of the Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corporation, visited Arizona State University on Oct. 24 to kick off the Global KAITEKI Center's activities. This center is a partnership between ASU and the KAITEKI Institute, MCHC’s think tank and research institute. Kaiteki is “the sustainable well-being of people, society and planet Earth."

At the launch event, Kobayashi and ASU President Michael Crow shared their visions for a sustainable future, and the two organizations pledged to work together to advance these goals. In a new Q&A in ASU Now, Kobayashi explained how kaiteki became a driving principle for MCHC, how kaiteki can be applied in business management and why partnerships between industry and academia are essential to achieving this ambitious vision.

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Jennifer Vanos awarded 2019 Climate and Health Champion Award

November 7, 2019

Dr. Jenni Vanos leading Tempe Heat Walk researchSchool of Sustainability assistant professor Jennifer Vanos was recently awarded Maricopa County's 2019 Climate and Health Champion award in the research category for her outstanding work in understanding the hazards and health outcomes associated with children's playspaces. Her work, which is supported by the Healthy Urban Environments (HUE) initiative, evaluates how playspace design mediates exposure to heat, radiation and air pollution impacts.

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Meet Master of Sustainability Solutions student Kiana Mays

November 7, 2019

Kiana Mays“I’m passionate about the intersection of food and sustainability, as well as the beauty and fashion industries,” said Arizona State University student Kiana Mays. “The way we care for our bodies, on the inside and out, is truly a reflection of how we view and treat the outer world.”

Mays has manifested her interests in social responsibility, restaurants, food waste and wellness in a number of ways during her tenure at ASU, including a stint as a report writing assistant for the Project Cities program in the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability. As a former restaurant employee, she became aware of numerous social, environmental and economic issues that the industry faces on a daily basis.

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Women are macro-critical

November 7, 2019

“Women’s equal economic participation in advanced economies can increase GDP by 10% and in developed countries by as much as 30%.” Egypt’s Minister for Tourism and former IMF official Her Excellency Rania Al-Mashat opened the high-level panel “When Women Lead” at the United Nations SDG Action Zone on September 25 by emphasizing the positive macro-economic impact of women’s economic engagement. “GDP growth leads to productivity growth and when productivity grows pay increases among both men and women. Egypt was the first country in 2017 to launch a national strategy for women for 2030,” Al-Mashat pointed out.

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Vital Voices celebrates 25 new fellows in political leadership program

November 5, 2019

By Darcy Nelson, Master’s student at Thunderbird School of Global Management

WE Empower UN SDG Challenge lead partner Vital Voices is in Phoenix this week to celebrate the 25 new fellows in their political leadership program VV Engage. The fellowship is geared to advance women’s public leadership and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The program is supported by Vital Voices' partnership with Freeport-McMoRan, the global mining company based here in Phoenix.

Tuesday evening, at ASU downtown Beus Center for Law and Society, Vital Voices hosted a public panel discussion featuring women political leaders from around the world. Included in the panel was VV Engage Fellows and politicians Isata Kabia of Sierra Leone and Seni Nabuou of Fiji, former Presidents Dalia Grybauskaitė of Lithuania and Laura Chinchilla Miranda of Costa Rica, and Freeport-McMoRan’s Tracy Bame, moderated by Vital Voices President and CEO Alyse Nelson, and introductions by Executive Director, Thunderbird for Good, ASU Kellie Kreiser.

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The Natural Capital Commitment

November 5, 2019

Farmers working the land on green pasturesASU Center for Biodiversity Outcomes’ partner The Natural Capital Coalition has recently released The Natural Capital Commitment, which asks businesses to commit to conservation and sustainable decision-making within their organization.

In the past, our partnership with them led to the development of The Natural Capital Protocol for the Ocean. This protocol is a decision-making framework that helps organizations identify their direct impacts and dependencies on natural capital.

This commitment aims to enable businesses to act on their impacts, which will sufficiently restore their relationship with nature.

For more information, click here.

Future cities episode episode 24: Solid waste buildup and the threats to flood resilience

November 1, 2019

UREx Podcast LogoWe're not the Mob but we here at Future Cities still care a lot about waste management! Co-host Jason Sauer talks with Dr. Erin Rivers (@soilandthecity) about how solid waste, AKA trash, is potentially exacerbating flood risk in cities by clogging up green and gray drainage infrastructure. We discuss trash reduction and removal efforts in Baltimore (Mr. Trash Wheel!) and beyond, and how a reframing of who is responsible for trash has benefits far beyond our work on green infrastructure and urban resilience. Apologies for in advance for the cuts at the beginning: I (Jason Sauer) was sick when I recorded this and had to cut out a lot of noise my sinuses were creating. TMI!

If you have questions, comments, or suggestions for future episodes, e-mail us at futurecitiespodcast@gmail.com or find us on Twitter @FutureCitiesPod. Learn more about the Urban Resilience to Extremes Sustainability Research Network (UREx SRN) at www.sustainability.asu.edu/urbanresilience.

Listen on iTunesStitcher or Buzzsprout.

Recovery of the white abalone

October 30, 2019

A white abalone reaches its flexible body out its shellASU Center for Biodiversity Outcomes Founding Director Leah Gerber helped make strides in the recovery of the white abalone species through the White Abalone Restoration Consortium.

White abalones are sea snail herbivores. They were the first marine invertebrates added to the Endangered Species Act. Poaching, overfishing and disease have been the main threats to the species, causing them to become one of the most at-risk species in the world in 2001.

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WE Empower helps launch Target Gender Equality at UN General Assembly

October 29, 2019

UN Global Compact Launch: WE Empower Challenge Awardees
The WE Empower UN SDG Challenge and Arizona State University Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability and helped launch Target Gender Equality during the United Nations General Assembly in September 2019. Target Gender Equality is a program for companies participating in the UN Global Compact that is designed to accelerate gender equality by setting and reaching corporate targets for women’s representation and leadership in business.

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Tackling plastic pollution in the Philippines

October 29, 2019

Three people on a canoe floating on clear waterBeth Polidoro, ASU New College professor and Center for Biodiversity Outcomes associate center director of biodiversity valuation and assessments, was featured in an Arizona PBS special about her research on plastics in seafood.

Plastic pollution has been a trending topic in the news for its ecological impact and health implications for humans and animals. Within only the last couple of decades, scientists have discovered microplastics being retained by organisms.

“Plastics have been found in pretty much all types of fishes, oysters, mollusks, phytoplankton and zooplankton —the primary producers of the ocean— and many of it is coming from large amounts of garbage that’s coming into the oceans from river systems around the world,” said Polidoro.

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Marine wildlife conservation in Galapagos

October 28, 2019

Dr. Cardenas Diaz delivering talk in front of room filled with students and facultyOn October 24, 2019, the ASU Center for Biodiversity Outcomes partnered with the School of Life Sciences to host a Hugh Hanson Seminar by Professor Susana Cárdenas Díaz from the Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador.

Cárdenas Díaz directs the university’s Institute of Applied Ecology and is a professor in the College of Biology and Environmental Sciences.

During the presentation, which was attended by 25 people, Cárdenas Díaz discussed preference data from a survey of tourists in the Galapagos National Park and its Marine Reserve. Their research investigated tourists’ willingness to pay for the recovery of two marine endangered species—the hammerhead shark and green sea turtle—through visitor fees and donations.

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School of Sustainability launches new course in the spring

October 28, 2019

United States of America Department of Defense sealThe Arizona State University School of Sustainability is introducing a new course in the Spring 2020 semester. View course flier (PDF).

“Lean Startup Problem Solving for Sustainability” (SOS 594) will present students with complex problems critical to the government and challenge them to generate solutions to fit real time U.S. Department of Defense needs. The issues in particular will revolve around cyber security, AI, national security and energy networks. Students will also be offered the opportunity to invent new technologies with a team of their colleagues.

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