News
Professor Holly Barnard, co-chair of the Hydrologic Sciences Graduate Program and former Arts and Sciences Associate Dean of Research, has received the Colorado State University 2026 Hydrology Days award.
Critical digital geographies scholarship has a well-developed repertoire for theorizing adverse relations between technology, media, society and space, setting up an enduring ambivalence in analysis of minor, small scale, improvisational efforts to rewrite these relations. At this impasse, I argue for an intentional turn to analytic frames rooted in methodologies of hope.
Jennifer Fluri, Chair of the Geography Department, has won the 2026 Boulder Faculty Assembly (BFA) Award for Excellence in Leadership and Service.
Abby Hickcox (Geography PhD 2012 alumna), Associate Director of the Honors Program and Teaching Professor, has won the 2026 Boulder Faculty Assembly (BFA) Award for Excellence in Teaching.
A new satellite could transform how water is studied worldwide. But to help unlock its capabilities, scientists first needed to take critical measurements on a mountaintop.
By Sachi Kitajima Mulkey
"These women are using their hard-earned knowledge to protect our planet already ravaged by brutal storms, epic floods and intense wildfires."
Over the last three decades, domestic amenity or 鈥渓ifestyle鈥 migration has stimulated a process of rural gentrification across the United States, shifting landscapes of production to landscapes of consumption--from Jackson Hole, Wyoming to Highlands, North Carolina.
Dr. Alex A. Moulton Assistant Professor Geography and Environmental Science Hunter College, 小黄书NY Black, Race, and Ethnic Studies Abstract: Within Afro-Jamaica religions, 鈥渟cience鈥 is used as
The Colorado Geographic Alliance (COGA) and 小黄书 Geography are calling for maps that capture life affirming geographies. This year's theme is Cartographies of Hope."Cartographies of hope are doorways to rehearsing a liberatory world
In the geographic tradition of Clyde Woods, this panel underscores the knowledge holders of Colorado, making visible the everyday ways in which our speakers transform places, landscapes, and futures into spaces of life affirming possibility. This panel will discuss Native ways of knowing Colorado, accountable relations with Native nations and peoples; immigrant dignity and practices of relational liberation; disability justice and the transformation of the built environment to affirm all life. The seeds for a liberatory world are already here.