climate change Archives - Environmental Stewardship /green/tag/climate-change/ Augsburg University Thu, 16 Dec 2021 19:22:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 Earth Month In A Time Of Transition /green/2020/04/01/54290/ Wed, 01 Apr 2020 19:07:50 +0000 /green/?p=54290 As Earth Month unfolds in ways we can’t predict towards the 50th anniversary of Earth Day, stay tuned for stories from the past, opportunities to take action towards a Just Transition mentioned below, and updates from what the Environmental Stewardship Coordinators are learning, doing, and processing during this time! Follow us here and on facebook. ...

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As Earth Month unfolds in ways we can’t predict towards the 50th anniversary of Earth Day, stay tuned for stories from the past, opportunities to take action towards a mentioned below, and updates from what the Environmental Stewardship Coordinators are learning, doing, and processing during this time! Follow us here and on .

(By Allyson Green, Chief Sustainability Officer)

On April 22, 1970, students across the country organized teaching-ins that demanded action on unrestrained pollution that threatened the ecological systems that support life. As our current reality of a global pandemic has shifted plans for the 50th anniversary of Earth Day (and every other milestone the Augsburg community was planning to celebrate), the student Environmental Stewardship Coordinators and I have found ourselves grieving. What about the we were going to mobilize students to participate in? What about the coffee tasting and panel that would highlight the connections between social, environmental, economic, and personal health? We are already anxious about what the climate crisis means for our current and future health and well-being, and now how will COVID-19 change that?

In Minnesota, our health and well-being can be predicted by the color of our skin, economic status, immigration status, gender identity and sexual orientation, and other characteristics of who we are. We could all spend the next 10 days of our stay-at-home order getting lost in . COVID-19 is exposing vulnerabilities in our society that have long been present and experienced most intensely by marginalized groups of people.

And so, even in our grief, visions of a future where all inhabitants of this planet (human and non-human) can thrive are emerging more strongly and becoming more possible. A that doesn’t leave anyone behind is not only possible but necessary, and this is what helps fuel my daily hope and work.

What if everyone had healthcare that covers all of our needs, regardless of immigration status and ability to pay? What if all young people – black, brown, indigenous, LGBTQIA – had what they needed to succeed in school and follow their dreams? What if our worth didn’t depend on our productivity and consumption? And what if we all had the clean air, water, and food our bodies need to thrive?

The framework for sustainability that we use at Augsburg captures the interconnectedness of everything happening right now and reminds us that public health disasters, economic collapses, and social upheavals are not isolated events and are also inherently environmental crises. Our colleagues from the graciously share this model from their own community, honoring Ojibwe culture, that resonates with the Lutheran theology under-girding our institutional values as well.

How is your daily life illustrating these connections right now? My own mental health wavers with my ability to get outside and walk or bike around my neighborhood. As traffic has slowed on the highways, I’m reminded that my physical health is connected to the air quality around me, and I can feel the difference in my lungs. Today, my rent is due, and I’m grateful to still be employed, even as so many of my neighbors are waiting for unemployment checks before they can pay their own rent. How are these connections between wellness, social, economic, and environmental systems playing out on a community, state, national, and global scale right now?

When these systems are out of balance, we have opportunities to change the way they adapt and relate to each other moving forward, but only as we address the root causes of the imbalances to begin with. In , Vijay Kolinjivadi makes direct connections between our global exploitative economy and the climate and COVID-19 crises. We created these problems. And we can resolve them while changing direction towards an . Kolinjivadi reminds us, “the rapid and urgent actions in response to the virus and the inspiring examples of mutual aid also illustrate that society is more than capable of acting collectively in the face of grave danger to the whole of humanity.”

notebook and work stationSo, as I get ready to move on from this blog to my next task of the day, I’ll pull out the notebook I’m now using to keep track of projects while working from home. The notebook itself has become a daily reminder to keep these connections and possibilities at the top of my mind. The first half of the pages are full of notes from my graduate school GIS and epidemiology classes. As the tracking COVID-19 change daily, and , those frameworks for understanding the world are now literally and figuratively the foundation of the projects the Environmental Stewardship Coordinators and I are continuing to work on (virtually) together. A solid understanding of the connections between people and planetary health and wellbeing can help us move towards a Just Transition. We grieve our current losses, and we rejoice in the potential gains we can help enact for more equitable social, economic, wellness, and environmental systems.

Will you this month in celebrating a long history of environmental advocacy that began generations before April 22, 1970 and will continue generations after COVID-19?

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We did the Global Climate Strike. Now what? /green/2019/11/11/we-did-the-global-climate-strike-now-what/ Mon, 11 Nov 2019 19:00:14 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/green/?p=54225 By Anna Cox (’22) This fall from September 20-27, 2019 millions of people flooded streets and capital buildings for climate action. This climate strike was the biggest climate mobilization in history counting more than 7 million strikers. From New York to Berlin to our hometown Minneapolis millions of people joined together  and raised their voices ...

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By Anna Cox (’22)

This fall from September 20-27, 2019 millions of people flooded streets and capital buildings for climate action. This climate strike was the biggest climate mobilization in history counting more than 7 million strikers. From New York to Berlin to our hometown Minneapolis millions of people joined together  and raised their voices in defense of climate action and justice. Augsburg University supported students, staff, and faculty in joining action as they felt called, and more than 50 Auggies came together for the strike. Thanks to organizing by Campus Ministry and Environmental Action Committee, Mayor Jacob Frey gave an energizing speech before we went to the strike, reminding us that by going to St. Paul we were taking action, and that after the strike was finished our work was not done. After the strike we needed to continue our action and continue raising our voices by sending letters to government representatives, pushing for more environmental policies. Following this gathering, we hopped on the light rail with hundreds of other strikers – a racially diverse group of teenagers, middle-aged people, college students, and even children.

Augsburg students and staff at Global Climate Strike

We started the strike at the Western Sculpture Garden just a few blocks away from the capital. In the midst of hundreds of people there were sounds of music, strikers were chanting, and megaphones rang through the air. Visually seeing all the posters and the creativity behind them were really inspirational in itself. When the time came to walk to the capitol building it was really an experience to walk beside people from all different backgrounds, coming together for a single cause. When we arrived at the capitol we heard speeches from multiple different people, most of them high school students. Hearing their words and stories was truly inspirational and enlightening.

During this event we were asked a question. What next? After the strike is done what will you do to continue the action? What will you individually? What will Augsburg do as a campus? I think attending a strike just like the one on September 20th reminds us that we still have work to do. We have made improvements, but we can always do more. These are just a few quotes from our student Environmental Stewardship interns and how they felt impacted by the Global Climate Strike.

“I didn’t realize just how many marginalized groups were even more negatively affected by the climate crisis than everyone else. It was eye-opening and I hope others who were not there could watch it somewhere.”

“Last year, I went to the climate strike and I actually worked with a group of people at my school to advocate for the Green New Deal and that day was cold. There weren’t many people there,  just enough to fill the steps of the capitol. This year, there was a mass of people advocating for the health of our planet and it filled my heart with so much hope.”

Ready to take action?

Join us for a listening and action planning session around how environmental equity shows up in our lives and on campus, November 11, 4:30-6:30pm in the Marshall Room. Together we will collectively envision Augsburg’s commitment to environmental action beyond 2019.

 

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Zobitz on Climate Change with International Business Times /green/2014/11/27/zobitz-climate-change-international-business-times/ Thu, 27 Nov 2014 20:11:15 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/green/?p=53688 International Business Times consulted with several climate change researchers including Augsburg’s mathematics and environmental studies professor, John Zobitz.  He shares his insights into the recent record-breaking snowstorm in the Buffalo, New York area and why it’s been so cold and snowy in the U.S. in general this November.  Is it due to climate change/global warming?  That’s ...

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International Business Times consulted with several climate change researchers including Augsburg’s mathematics and environmental studies professor, John Zobitz.  He shares his insights into the recent record-breaking snowstorm in the Buffalo, New York area and why it’s been so cold and snowy in the U.S. in general this November.  Is it due to climate change/global warming?  That’s a controversial question but and find out what Zobitz had to say along with the other researchers.

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Native American Film Series /green/2014/10/29/native-american-film-series/ Wed, 29 Oct 2014 16:58:39 +0000 http://www.augsburg.edu/green/?p=53493 It’s been posted all over campus and online but here’s another reminder. The first screening of the Native American Film Series is tonight.  Yes, that’s right.  TONIGHT. The 2014-15 season will focus on environmental issues and climate change from the perspective of various indigenous groups. Tonight’s event will feature Listening for the Rain: Indigenous Perspectives on ...

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It’s been posted all over campus and online but here’s another reminder. The first screening of the Native American Film Series is tonight.  Yes, that’s right.  TONIGHT. The 2014-15 season will focus on environmental issues and climate change from the perspective of various indigenous groups.
Tonight’s event will feature Listening for the Rain: Indigenous Perspectives on Climate Change.  A discussion will follow after the screening with the filmmakers, Jeff Palmer (Kiowa), Filoteo Gomez Martinez (Ayuuk) and sociologist, Sonia Davila-Poblete.  Wish you had a little more information?  Well, then  and check out the trailer.

Sateren Auditorium- Music Hall
715 22nd Ave South
Reception 6:00-6:30
Screening begins at 6:45
Discussion to follow screening

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