Tony Birch lecture and workshop, 26-27 February, Sydney

01 Feb Tony Birch lecture and workshop, 26-27 February, Sydney

The HumanNature: Sydney Environmental Humanities Lecture Series will be running again in 2019 with a great lineup of speakers.

The first lecture will be:
Prof. Tony Birch (Victoria University)
“Connection and cooperation in a time of climate change”

Tuesday 26 February 2019
6:00-7:30pm
Australian Museum

For further information and to book your ticket, please visit: https://australianmuseum.net.au/event/human-nature-series-connection-and-cooperation-in-a-time-of-climate-change/ Staff and students of the five partner universities can book $10 tickets with the discount code: HNUni

As part of Prof. Birch’s visit to Sydney we will also be running a workshop on
“Speaking the Anthropocene: Indigenous Perspectives”
Wednesday 27 February 2019
11:30am-1:30pm
University of Sydney

The workshop is aimed primarily at HDR students and ECRs, but open to all. For further information and to register please visit: https://goo.gl/forms/RF1pEruENtLm0W793


Further information will soon be available on the other talks in the series. Dates and speakers are included below in case you would like to save the date.
TUESDAY 26 FEBRUARY – Tony Birch (Victoria University) / TUESDAY 12 MARCH – Jarita Holbrook (University of the Western Cape) / TUESDAY 23 APRIL – Lesley Green (University of Cape Town) / TUESDAY 14 MAY – Craig Santos Perez (University of Hawai’i, Manoa) / TUESDAY 25 JUNE – Macarena Gomez-Barris (Pratt Institute, Brooklyn) / TUESDAY 20 AUGUST – Katherine Gibson and Juan Francisco Salazar (Western Sydney University) / TUESDAY 22 OCTOBER – Mark Carey (University of Oregon) / TUESDAY 12 NOVEMBER – Andrea Gaynor (University of Western Australia).

HumanNature: The Sydney Environmental Humanities Lecture Series is a collaboration between the Australian Museum, Macquarie University, the University of New South Wales, the University of Sydney, the University of Wollongong, and Western Sydney University.


Image courtesy of Mark Holloway (CC BY 2.0)

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