Food Tank 2020 summit: You and your students are invited

Global Futures Scientists-Scholars

Food Tank 2020 summit: You and your students are invited

The event is the Wisdom of Indigenous Foodways at SkySong, Wednesday, January 22, 4:00 to 6:30 pm, followed by a reception. Tickets are required but are free with code.

NSF mandates new formats for current and pending documents, biosketches and CVs

To create compliant documents, researchers now must use Science Networks Curriculum Vitae, a tool that automatically compiles info from existing systems.

The Second International Conference on Climate Change in the Sahel and West Africa

The Second International Conference on Climate Change is taking place April 1–3, 2020. This conference aims to share experiences on vulnerability issues; adaptation strategies in the fields of agriculture, livestock,

UREx co-founder, Nancy Grimm receives honored recognition

In recognition of her distinguished and continued achievement in research, co-founder and director of the Urban Resilience to Extremes Sustainability Research Network (UREx SRN), Nancy Grimm was elected to the

Sustainability scientist, scholar named President's Professors

Joni Adamson, a sustainability scholar, and Michael Angilletta, a sustainability scientist, were awarded one of the most distinguished faculty honors at ASU: President’s Professor. The title is given to professors who've made substantial contributions to undergraduate education and inspired original, creative works in their fields.

ASU responds to questions posed by the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis

Nearly 50 faculty from across ASU responded to the questions raised by the committee with comprehensive transdisciplinary responses.

We can course correct and save the melting Arctic

Ice in the Arctic is rapidly melting, and this region is projected to be virtually ice-free in the late summer within 20 years. However, transformation is possible and it's about the choices we make, write Peter Schlosser and several ASU thought leaders.

We can course correct and save the melting Arctic

Medium The Arctic is experiencing climate change more dramatically than anywhere else on Earth. In fact, the Arctic Ocean is expected to be virtually ice-free in the late summer within

ASU sustainability scientists forging a future of resilient infrastructure

Extreme weather events are becoming a chronic problem for our built environments. Sustainability scientists Mikhail Chester, Nancy Grimm and Nathan Johnson are part of an interdisciplinary, ASU-led project that will bring researchers and communities together to forge designs for resilient urban infrastructure.

USPCAS-E project concludes after five years

Directed by sustainability scientist Sayfe Kiaei, the $18 million, USAID-funded project was conceived to develop innovative solutions to Pakistan’s energy challenges by modernizing curriculum and infrastructure and facilitating academic exchange programs and joint research projects.

Moved Online: 2020 Social Embeddedness Conference

The March 24 conference will be held online. Share and learn from others how ASU partners with community organizations in socially embedded research, teaching and practice.

ASU carbon-capture technology named one of 2019’s best innovations

Popular Science named ASU Professor Klaus Lackner's carbon-capture technology one of the most important engineering innovations of 2019. Nicknamed “mechanical trees,” these machines can remove carbon dioxide from the air a thousand times more effectively than actual trees.