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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160107T170000
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UID:4541-1452186000-1452268800@innovation.luskin.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:The Future of Environmental Engineering: Innovative Policies and Grand Challenges
DESCRIPTION:J.R. DeShazo will offer the keynote address for the National Science Foundation’s and Association of Environmental Engineering & Science Professors’ Grand Challenge Workshop on Redefining Environmental Engineering and Science in the 21st Century. He will describe opportunities for environmental engineering as public policy seeks to tackle the emerging challenges of climate change and ecosystem services restoration. These new challenges are transforming the discipline’s traditional focus on water and waste water treatment as well as soil and groundwater remediation.Attendance is free\, but space is limited. Register here.ABOUT THE CONFERENCE\nMOTIVATION:\nThe emergence of Environmental Engineering and Science as an independent discipline can be largely tied to the nation’s first set of comprehensive environmental regulatory initiatives\, especially the Clean Air Act (1970)\, Clean Water Act (1972)\, Safe Drinking Water Act (1974) and the Comprehensive Environmental Response\, Compensation and Liability (“Superfund”) Act (1980).  These Acts funded both research and infrastructure investments that transformed the treatment and provision of water and wastewater\, while contributing to dramatic improvements in the quality of the nation’s air and water.  The discipline of Environmental Engineering and Science has played a critically important role in these monumental accomplishments.In recent years\, however\, research funding in many of the discipline’s traditional focus areas has been stagnant or declining.  In the meantime\, there has been rapid expansion in regulatory interest and funding associated with environmental initiatives related to energy\, climate change and sustainability\, among other topics.  Nonetheless\, to date\, there have been no community-wide initiatives to consider the broader implications of this changing landscape on our discipline’s research agenda\, curricula (undergraduate and graduate) and academic identity.  Consequently\, a community dialogue is needed to proactively discuss how we might modify the scope and direction of our discipline in this dynamic environment. GOALS:\nThese three workshops build upon an NSF-sponsored workshop held at Yale University in summer 2015 and will serve as a way of jumpstarting this dialogue.  Each will include invited speakers and open discussions that will begin a conversation intended to:Identify areas of environmental research currently experiencing high growth\, both those consistent with traditional Environmental Engineering and Science research themes\, as well as those that are currently outside the discipline’s traditional themes;Consider recommendations with respect to how the Environmental Engineering community can better position itself to more rapidly expand into high growth research areas;Develop suggestions regarding how curricula might be adapted to prepare students for research or work in these new areas.The final product will be a report that synthesizes the input obtained from workshop participants\, and provides recommendations that will be made available to both the Environmental Engineering and Science community (via the AEESP website)\, and the National Research Council Committee currently being formed by the Water Science Technology Board to identify Environmental Engineering’s Grand Challenges.Click here to see the agenda. 
URL:https://innovation.luskin.ucla.edu/event/the-future-of-environmental-engineering-innovative-policies-and-grand-challenges-2/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160112T120000
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CREATED:20180801T215320Z
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UID:4542-1452600000-1452604500@innovation.luskin.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Luskin Lecture Series: A Conversation with Mary Robinson
DESCRIPTION:As the world witnesses rising temperatures\, shrinking ice sheets\, and shifts in climate patterns\, the global community is facing an economic and environmental challenge that demands a course of action. Yet any truly sustainable solution will require a core commitment to equity.Mary Robinson\, UN Special Envoy for Climate Change and former President of Ireland\, is an international leader with a vision for an inclusive low carbon emission global economy. Named “a hero and an icon” by Time magazine and recognized with the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Obama\, Robinson has expanded access to sustainable energy and fostered green economies and equal rights initiatives worldwide.Join Robinson in this special Luskin Lecture that will present her unique perspective on climate change and social responsibility. \nRSVP by January 7 or contact us for more information:\nTo RSVP click here.      •      events@luskin.ucla.edu
URL:https://innovation.luskin.ucla.edu/event/luskin-lecture-series-a-conversation-with-mary-robinson-2/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160125T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160125T190000
DTSTAMP:20260506T005850
CREATED:20180801T215321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180801T215321Z
UID:4543-1453743000-1453748400@innovation.luskin.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Luskin Innovators: Speaker Series featuring Richard W. Willson
DESCRIPTION:Join the UCLA Luskin Center and Lewis Center in welcoming Island Press author\, Richard W. Willson\, as he discusses his new book\, Parking Management for Smart Growth\, over refreshments and hors d’oeuvres.REGISTER HEREAbout the book:The average parking space requires approximately 300 square feet of asphalt. That’s the size of a studio apartment in New York or enough room to hold 10 bicycles. Space devoted to parking in growing urban and suburban areas is highly contested—not only from other uses from housing to parklets\, but between drivers who feel entitled to easy access. Without parking management\, parking is a free-for-all—a competitive sport—with arbitrary winners and losers. Historically drivers have been the overall winners in having free or low-cost parking\, while an oversupply of parking has created a hostile environment for pedestrians.In the last 50 years\, parking management has grown from a minor aspect of local policy and regulation to a central position in the provision of transportation access. The higher densities\, tight land supplies\, mixed land uses\, environmental and social concerns\, and alternative transportation modes of Smart Growth demand a different approach—actively managed parking.This book offers a set of tools and a method for strategic parking management so that communities can better use parking resources and avoid overbuilding parking. It explores new opportunities for making the most from every parking space in a sharing economy and taking advantage of new digital parking tools to increase user interaction and satisfaction. Examples are provided of successful approaches for parking management—from Pasadena to London. At its essence\, the book provides a path forward for strategic parking management in a new era of tighter parking supplies. 
URL:https://innovation.luskin.ucla.edu/event/luskin-innovators-speaker-series-featuring-richard-w-willson-2/
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