I am here in the Wolong Nature Reserve of Sichuan, China with Prof. Jack Liu and some of his colleagues and graduate students from Michigan State University's Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability. They have been showing Scott Yabiku (Arizona State) and I around to get a feel for their study area and helping us interview elderly residents about social change over the years. We are getting descriptions of when and why the various roads, schools, health clinics, police stations, and other social institutions came to be. We are gathering ideas for how we might collect retrospective social context data via Neighborhood History Calendars in this setting. Of course, a major point of focus is the massive earthquake one year ago. The epicenter was not far from here and the damage was considerable. Most residents are living in temporary housing along the river in the valley and walking to their fields each day to tend the corn and cabbage. Although the last few decades have brought striking social change to this area, nothing has been so dramatic and so quick to alter the social organization of life as the earthquake. The plan is to relocate farmers from all the surrounding hillsides to the river valley in group housing and provide them vocational training to work in what the government officials hope to be a booming tourist industry for seeing Giant Pandas, taking in the beauty of the valley and its forceful, boulder-filled river, and escaping the heat of Chengdu or other urban areas in Sichuan and beyond.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Update from Beijing—Lisa Pearce
Nǐhǎo from China. Yesterday morning our research team met with Prof. Li Dihua and his graduate students in the Graduate School of Landscape Architecture at Peking University. They have designed the post-earthquake reconstruction plan for Wolong Nature Reserve in Sichuan Province.
Yesterday afternoon I gave a talk to students and faculty at the Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. I presented some of my mixed method research on how household structure, economic strategies, and local agricultural practices shape environmental consumption in Nepal.
In our free time, I have visited the Great Wall, Olympic Park, and Tiananmen Square. Beijing is an amazing city--large and vibrant!
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Lisa Pearce is in China
Saturday, May 2, 2009
What I saw at PAA
- a great presidential address by Kathie Harris
- young and senior researchers with a genuine passion for their past and present work
- a successful group of CPC alumni
- excellent poster presentations
- lots of smart people, except when navigating the hotel elevator
- a tolerant group of photo subjects
- an impressive group of CPC researchers, trainees, and staff
Friday, May 1, 2009
Margarita Mooney
Yingchun Ji
presents her poster: A Reasoned Choice Approach: How Economic and Ideological Factors Interact to Shape the Timing of Marriage, on Friday, May 1.
Publish Post
Andy Sharma
Margarita Mooney is blogging, too
Margarita Mooney, CPC Fellow, is blogging about her experience at PAA at http://margaritamooney.blogspot.com/
On-site Support for NIH Public Access Policy
While at the APLIC conference in Ann Arbor earlier this week, I received an e-mail from an Information Core Director of another population center. He said he was “befuddled” by the NIH Public Access Policy and asked if I would be at PAA in Detroit and would be willing to meet to help him understand the policy. He had seen the CPC website about the policy here.
I met with him today and we talked about the big picture of the policy and the details about compliance. He ended our lunch meeting by saying that he has a lot of work to do before the May 15th deadline, but he has a better sense of what he needs to do.
By the way, if you are befuddled – or know someone who is – let me know, I can help.
Lori Delaney
I met with him today and we talked about the big picture of the policy and the details about compliance. He ended our lunch meeting by saying that he has a lot of work to do before the May 15th deadline, but he has a better sense of what he needs to do.
By the way, if you are befuddled – or know someone who is – let me know, I can help.
Lori Delaney
Poster Sessions and Information Booth
Yesterday was my poster session. There were tons of fantastic posters examining child health and poverty. The people presenting the posters and those who came to view our work came from all over the country and the world. I asked the people presenting posters (that were near my poster) if I could take their pictures. Unfortunately, they were a bit camera shy. A lot of CPCers, including Kathie Harris, came by the poster session. I was able to get someone to snap a shot of the two of us in front of my poster.
I volunteered at the information booth after my poster session. PAA members asked a lot of questions. The Renaissance Center is a beautiful building, but it can be a little tricky to navigate. I did my best to direct people to the Ontario Exhibit Hall (where the poster sessions where being held) and to the People Mover. The Detroit Area bus tour was also very popular and many people were interested in attending the tour. My most interesting request was from a group of people from Asia, who wanted to know if they could go to Canada with a passport and an American visa.
One of the great things about PAA is that you see many familiar faces, but also get to meet new people at every meeting. I always look forward to coming to these meetings.
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