Christelle Kwizera

Women’s leadership on COVID-19: “Life-saving work”

While Covid-19 has wrought havoc globally, the developing world is much less equipped to cope. The poorest, especially women, are the hardest hit. Water engineer Christelle Kwizera is determined to

Athena Aktipis

Beating cancer by taking the unbeaten path

Athena Aktipis could be called a “Renaissance woman.” After all, she’s a psychologist, evolutionary biologist, cancer biologist and studies conflict and cooperation. She crosses boundaries and colors outside the lines

MSUS student travels to Senegal to help workshop locust booklets

This article was written by William H. Walker VI, a sophomore in the School of Sustainability. Edited December 2, 2020 by Alana Burnham. From left to right: Team members Fatou

Protected: Industrial Livestock Production System - Hot Topics mindmap

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Science and business: Working together for sustainability

In what ways can science and business sectors collaborate to build sustainable societies? This vital question was the focus of the second Global Sustainability Strategy Forum, where 25 leading experts

Landscape Analysis of key organizations working in sustainable livestock systems

The map linked here illustrates a range of actors and instances of their multi-stakeholder collaborations on specific sub-themes within animal agriculture.  While this is already a complex web of players

Livestock Futures – reading a mindmap to develop insight into relationships

Please download this PDF for the map. The description of a complex mix of issues surrounding industrial animal agriculture is here presented visually in a mind map – a methodology

Science and business: Working together for sustainability

IASS Potsdam In what ways can science and business sectors collaborate to build sustainable societies? This vital question was the focus of the second Global Sustainability Strategy Forum, where 25 leading

ASU Apocalyptic Narratives project wins Luce/ACLS grant

The project, Apocalyptic Narratives and Climate Change: Religion, Journalism, and the Challenge of Public Engagement, combines research on the apocalyptic religious thinking with training in the literature of social change.

ASU Apocalyptic Narratives project wins Luce/ACLS grant

The American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) has announced a grant to the Arizona State University interdisciplinary project “Apocalyptic Narratives and Climate Change: Religion, Journalism, and the Challenge of Public Engagement.” Led

Sun Devils Together: An empathetic approach to ASU student homelessness

This article was co-written by William Walker VI, a sophomore in the School of Sustainability and Paul Prosser, Project Partner Liaison at the School of Sustainability.  All students in Arizona

Students from CSSI implement sustainability practices at music festival

Campus Student Sustainability Initiatives (CSSI) is a student project-oriented club on campus where students engage in sustainability projects. They recently participated in the M3F festival where they helped implement sustainability