Environmental and Energy Studies

CEU-UN ISEPEI workshops started

July 1, 2019

The first joint UN-CEU workshop in annual ISEPEI series has started today. The workshop is devoted to Innovations in Disaster Risk Reduction and organized in cooperation with UNDP and features other global key stakeholders in disaster and crisis management. 

The sessions can be followed online at this video link

Methodology to measure threats to biodiversity

Yet another important publication co-authored by our Associate Professor Brandon P. Anthony, former student Luna Milatovic (MESP 16/17) and MESPOM Associated Partner, Anthony Swemmer (South African Environmental Observation Network/SAEON) is now out in Koedoe: African Protected Area Conservation and Science!

Prof. Brandon P. Anthony leads innovative training on rapid assessments of wetlands for Ramsar site managers in Central Asia

June 24, 2019
Department of Environmental Sciences and Policy Associate Professor Brandon P. Anthony recently lead a special training workshop on conducting rapid ecological, and ecosystem service, assessments of Ramsar wetlands in Central Asia. Prof. Anthony worked with the Ramsar Regional Initiative for Central Asia (RRI-CA) and the Regional Environmental Centre for Central Asia (CAREC) to offer a two-day training workshop for Ramsar site managers and other government officials from Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Kyrgyzstan. 
Rapid wetland assessments are being promoted by the Ramsar Convention (Ramsar, Iran, 1971) as a means for countries to design a simple and rapid site assessment system that does not rely on detailed, quantitative assessments, and encourages input from traditional and/or indigenous groups. Although not a substitute for more long-term, comprehensive assessments, rapid assessments can help establish baseline inventories and identify key ecosystem attributes that are undergoing threats. 

Tamara Steger is contributing author to the second WHO environmental health inequalities assessment report

June 24, 2019
Decorative image
Tamara Steger, Associate Professor in the Department of Environmental Sciences and Policy, is a contributing author to the second WHO environmental health inequalities assessment report that was launched on the WHO High-Level Conference on Health Equity in Ljubljana last week. 
 

Equitable Access to Urban Green Space by Young, Old and Low Income Residents: A tale of four cities

Type: 
Lecture
Building: 
Nador u. 15
Room: 
N15 105
Date: 
June 24, 2019 - 10:00am to 11:30am

Abstract: In recent years, with the continuous improvement of China's economic strength, the gap between rich and the poor has also been widening, and the issue of social equity has attracted public attention. As an important urban public service, every resident, including particularly children, the elderly and members of low-income households should enjoy equal access to urban public green space, but we don’t know whether they do.

Three 2018 publications from our professor-alumni collaborations at the department in "Principles of Environmental Policy: Local, European and Global Perspectives"

Community fora as vehicles of change? The Hlanganani Forum and Kruger National Park, South Africa 
AnthonyBrandon P., Mmethi, Helen   
Anthony, Réka [MESP 98/99]

Department group photo 2018/19

May 31, 2019

The wolves are back!

Local attitudes towards the recently re-populated grey wolf and wolf management in Bükk National Park, Hungary

Latest proof of successful professor-student publication collaborations at the department by associate professor Brandon P. Anthony and graduate of the 2016/17 1-year Masters Program in Environmental Sciences & Policy (MESP), Katalin Tarr.

Recent departmental study highlights effects of legalization of recreational cannabis on forest management and conservation in US national forests

Mark Klassen, 2018 graduate of the 1-year master program and Associate Professor Brandon P. Anthony of the Department of Environmental Sciences and Policy published their findings in Ecological Economics, available now online with a 50 days' free access at Elsevier.com. 

Saving Asiatic black bears requires changing local beliefs

photo credit: Sustainability Times

The Malayan sun bears and Asiatic black bears, or “moon bears,” found across much of South and Southeast Asia and the Himalayas experienced a dramatic decline in population in recent decades and are facing a variety of threats throughout their range. They are routinely seized from forests so as to harvest their bile, which traditional beliefs credit with magical curative powers.