51

Grant Award: Glen Fredlund and collaborators awarded grant

Principal Investigators: Dr. Neal O’ Reilly (Conservation and Environmental Science-51), Dr. Glen Fredlund (Geography-51), Dr. Shangping Xu (Geoscience-51)

Title: Measuring potential effectiveness of Milorganite biochar mixtures in capturing nutrient runoff in bioretention and rain gardens.

Funded By: Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewage District

Abstract: The goal of this project is to measure the effectiveness of materials in capturing pollution for storm water runoff. Specifically we hope to test if additions of biocar made from Milorganite will effective filter phosphates. If successful these experiments may lead to other applications of biochar mixtures for runoff filtration problems.

Anne Bonds awarded 2016 Fromkin Research Grant and Lectureship

Anne Bonds together with collaborators (Jenna Loyd, Public Health, Lorraine Halinka Malcoe, Public Health, Robert Smith, History, and Jennifer Plevin, Peck School of Art), have been awarded 2016 Fromkin Research Grant and Lectureship. The title of our project is “Transforming Justice: Youth-led Analysis of Mass Criminalization in Milwaukee.”

Anna Mansson McGinty named Global Studies Research Fellow

Anna Mansson McGinty will be one of five Global Studies Research Fellows for the academic year of 2016/2017. Her project “Belonging and ‘Making Home’ among Muslim American Youth: Diverse Identities, Geographies and Politics, draws on feminist, geographical, and anthropological perspectives and is informed by a feminist interest in the embodied practices and experiences of formulating multifaceted identities and “making home” in the specific social and political context of Milwaukee, a mid-sized, segregated city in the American Midwest, as well as in the face of racist and Islamophobic discourses and political rhetoric.

Anna Mansson McGinty and Kristin Sziarto have been invited to Université Paris-Est Créteil

Anna Mansson McGinty and Kristin Sziarto, together with their colleague Caroline Seymour-Jorn at the Department of French, Italian, and Comparative Literature, have been invited to Université Paris-Est Créteil by the Justice, Espace, Discriminations, Inégalités working group of the Labex Urban Futures to present their research within the Muslim Milwaukee Project on March 15-18, 2016.

PhD student Yui Hashimoto selected to attend the 2016 Summer Institute in Economic Geography in Lexington, KY

Yui Hashimoto, Ph.D. student, has been selected to attend the 2016 Summer Institute in Economic Geography to be held in Lexington, KY this summer.

Anne Bonds co-authors publication in the journal Progress in Human Geography

Bonds, Anne and Josh Inwood. 2016. . Progress in Human Geography. Published on-line ahead of print.

Abstract: This paper builds from scholarship on whiteness and white privilege to argue for an expanded focus that includes settler colonialism and white supremacy. We argue that engaging with white supremacy and settler colonialism reveals the enduring social, economic, and political impacts of white supremacy as a materially grounded set of practices. We situate white supremacy not as an artifact of history or as an extreme position, but rather as the foundation for the continuous unfolding of practices of race and racism within settler states. We illustrate this framework through a recent example of a land dispute in the American West.

Josh and Anne Bonds also published a short research brief in Racism Review. The research brief is entitled “.”

PhD candidate Margaret Pettygrove and Prof. Rina Ghose publish article in International Journal of Applied Geospatial Research

Pettygrove, M. and R. Ghose. 2016. . International Journal of Applied Geospatial Research, Vol.7, No.1, 16-29.

Abstract: GIScience research has enhanced citizen engagement through advancements in web-based geospatial techniques and qualitative GIS methodologies, which provide opportunities for new forms of knowledge production. This paper draws on two interrelated approaches to demonstrate the ways qualitative GIS and Web 2.0 can provide nuanced analysis and foster collaborations to advance, in particular, food justice goals, which include developing equity in access to quality nutritious foods. First, the authors create a multicriteria food environment index utilizing GIS-based multicriteria modeling to represent food environments as constituted by multiple food sources and access dimensions. This enables visualization of food environment quality and indicates that food environment quality varies within a single neighborhood. Second, they utilize web GIS technologies to capture and visualize volunteered geographic information about urban food environments, demonstrating the importance of citizen perspectives to developing more nuanced understandings of these environments.

Prof. Sziarto gives lecture at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain

Kristin Sziarto, presented her research to the Gender and Geography Research Group at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain. The title of her talk was “Whose Reproductive Futures? Race-biopolitics and the Black Infant Mortality Reduction Campaign in Milwaukee.”

Distinguished Professor Emeritus Harold M. Rose Passes Away

  • – American Association of Geographers
  • Footprints – February 12, 2016

Harold Rose

It is with great sadness that we share news of the death of Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Geography and Urban Studies Harold M. Rose. Originally from Tennessee, Dr. Rose received his PhD in Geography from Ohio State University in 1960. After holding positions at Northwestern University, UCLA, Washington University, and Florida A&M, Dr. Rose joined the Geography faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (51) in 1962. Professor Rose had a long and distinguished career at 51. He was active not just in Geography, where he served as chair from 1990-1994, but he was also a key figure in the Department of Urban Affairs (now Urban Studies), which he chaired from 1970-1973 and 1974-1977, and in the Department of Afro-American Studies (now Africology), which he chaired from 1977-1978.  While the number of students Dr. Rose worked with is difficult to enumerate, he touched the lives of countless urban scholars and practitioners. He modeled the role of public scholar and mentor long after his retirement.

Dr. Rose was a groundbreaking and courageous scholar whose research challenged racism at a time when very few in geography even acknowledged racism and its consequences. Professor Rose’s interest in racism and the social and spatial production of the Black ghetto developed upon his arrival to Milwaukee. He came to a deeply segregated city during a time of heightened civil rights activism around housing and school segregation. He began his career exploring issues of natural resource management but shifted his focus to examine those problems that he found more immediate to his lived experience in the mid-1960s Milwaukee. Joining a small group of geographers in a debate about the relevance of the discipline, Professor Rose modeled the example of community-engaged research. He was extensively involved in community service, from his early work with the Milwaukee Urban League to his seat on the Board of Directors for the community-based North Milwaukee State Bank.

Professor Rose retired from 51 in 1995 after thirty-three years of teaching, pioneering scholarship, and a remarkable career of mentoring and public scholarship. He served as President of the Association of American Geographers (AAG) from 1976-1977 and received an AAG Lifetime Achievement Honor in 1996. He was the first Black president of the AAG—and remains the only Black president some 38 years later—and he used his platform to challenge urban racial segregation and discrimination. His presidential address, entitled “Geographies of Despair” (published in the Annals of the AAG in 1978) focused on racial inequality and violence involving Black males. In 2012, Audrey Kobayashi, then president of the AAG, announced the creation of the Harold M. Rose Award for Anti-Racist and Practice in Geography, on behalf of the AAG council, noting his pioneering work in the study of urban racial segregation and discrimination.

Geography has lost an extraordinarily important, but often overlooked figure. Dr. Rose made significant contributions to geographic understandings of segregation and racism as a socio-spatial process and yet too few in our discipline know and recognize his contributions. In celebrating his remarkable life and achievements, let us not lose sight of the challenges that motivated Dr. Rose’s anti-racist scholarship and teaching. We extend our deep sympathy to his family—including his wife, Ann and his son and granddaughter—and to the many others whose lives he touched.

In Sorrow,

The 51 Geography Department

Harold & Florence Mayer Lecture Series – Fall 2015: Geoffrey Henebry

Professor Geoffrey Henebry of South Dakota State University’s presented “Remote Sensing of Land Surface Phenologies and Seasonalities Using Hot, Warm, and Cool Earthlight” as the 2015 fall Harold & Florence Mayer Lecture Series on December 4, 2015.

Prof. Henebry Lecture

Geoffrey Henebry presents the Fall 2015 – Harold & Florence Mayer Lecture

As a Fulbright Senior Research Fellow at the Brazilian Space Agency in 1993-94, Dr. Geoffrey Henebry used imaging radar to investigate flooding patterns in the Pantanal Matogrossense, the largest wetland on the planet. He is a member of NASA’s Land Use Land Cover Change Science Team. Dr. Henebry entered the field of ecological remote sensing while serving as a post-doctoral fellow with the Konza Prairie Long Term Ecological Research project at Kansas State University. He earned a Ph.D. and a M.S., both in Environmental Sciences, from the University of Texas at Dallas, and a B.A. in Liberal Arts from St. John’s College in Santa Fe.

He currently serves on the editorial boards of BioScience, International Journal of Biometeorology, and Landscape Ecology, and previously at Ecology/Ecological Monographs, Conservation Ecology, and Applied Vegetation Science. He is active in the American Geophysical Union (AGU) and the U.S. Chapter of the International Association for Landscape Ecology (US-IALE). Since 2001 Dr. Henebry has been a Certified Senior Ecologist by the Ecological Society of America.