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Denis Pringle Lifetime Contribution to the GSI Award

22/9/2016

 
By Dr Joe Brady, UCD
​The Geographical Society of Ireland honoured Dennis Pringle with a lifetime contribution award at an event held in the Geography Department, Maynooth University on Thursday, 15 September, 2016. Dennis was one a small group of young geographers who joined university departments in Ireland in the 1970s.  He was quick to get involved in the Geographical Society of Ireland, where he and others set about the business of the society with energy, enthusiasm and innovation.  The latter was not always appreciated by the ‘senior’ members but it is ensured that the Society was lively.  It was also busy with a programme of meetings each year, which were generally well attended, fieldtrips and the production of Irish Geography.  Dennis was soon a member of the committee and then Secretary and ultimately President.  He learned that the Society operated on a shoestring; in fact it did not own a shoestring. Since there was no money, everything was done by the individual labour of the members of the committee. 
GeoNews is an excellent example of his work, enthusiasm and dedication to the Society. It would have remained unsung, and even taken for granted, was it not for the excellent idea of a lifetime contribution award.
He took over as editor of GeoNews in 1987 for issue 21 and continued in that role until issue 36. Afterwards he remained a valued adviser to his successors.  We are fortunate that he decided to write a short piece on the occasion of the Society’s 75th Anniversary, A Short History of Geonews.  It is online at http://eprints.maynoothuniversity.ie/2918/1/DP_GeoNews09.pdf.  In it, he describes the production process and you just marvel at the ingenuity, craftiness and dogged determination that ensured a quality production which appeared on time.  Nothing was straightforward and all unnecessary expense had to be avoided; this required the unwitting assistance of the Maths Department and their laser printer.
The account will raise a smile but it also says much about Dennis and why it is fitting that he was honoured by the Society.

​ps:

Prof Gerry Kearns also pays homage to Denis and the Awards event, hosted in Maynooth here

Call for conference presentations: Local Resistance, Global Crisis: developing communities of solidarity and Left Politics for the 21st Century

21/2/2014

 
Call for conference presentations: Local Resistance, Global Crisis: developing communities of solidarity and Left Politics for the 21st Century
Friday June 13th and Saturday 14th 2014, Renehan Hall, South Campus, National University of Maynooth

Keynote Speakers will include:

David Featherstone, Department of Geography, Glasgow. Author of Solidarity: Hidden Histories and Geographies of Internationalism (2012) and, Resistance, Space and Political Identities: the Making of Counter-Global Networks (2008).

Costis Hadjimichalis, Department of Geography, Harokopio University, Athens. His research and publications have included uneven geographical development, socio-spatial justice and solidarity.

Conference themes

The global financial crisis and austerity has been met with significant protest and opposition from new social movements, radical Left political parties and single issue campaigns. However, the response has been uneven and divided across and within different countries and there remain many challenges in relation to developing strategies, alternatives and politics that can progress this opposition. 

This is a conference aimed at academics, community activists, trade unions, political activists, and NGOs, who are engaged in such campaigns and movements, for example in housing, austerity, unemployment, precariousness, regeneration, community campaigns, debt, natural resources, migrants’ rights, amongst others. The conference will provide a space to promote solidarity amongst diverse agendas, groups, organisations and politics to facilitate greater alliances and cooperation amongst those engaged in campaigns and politics to promote social and spatial justice, radical equality, democracy, and human rights. We welcome papers and presentations from practice or theoretical reflections fitting the themes including, but not limited to:

  • Spaces of solidarity
  • How can we progress solidarity, alliances and cooperation between us to support and enhance our individual campaigns and movements?
  • How can we progress solidarity, alliances and cooperation between us to  influence the national, European and global policy and politics?
  • The right to the city: local struggles, global solidarities seeking social and spatial justice
  • New Left Political Parties: what potential for a socialism for the 21st Century?
  • What role can new Left and radical Left political parties play in progressing a radical egalitarian, socialist politics?
  • Social Movements & civil society: Where is the Irish resistance?
  • Partnership with the state as a strategy to achieve social justice; Can such strategies be pursued without silencing or excluding more critical voices and disruptive protests?
  • Reflections and contributions from critical urban and social theory on resistance and solidarity
  • Lessons from communities and social movements engaging in campaigns and struggles in relation to community activism, housing, debt, natural resources, workers rights, migrants rights,  at a local, national and global scale
  • Facilitated open discussion: possibilities and strategies for solidarity, community resistance and Left politics
Email title and short abstract (250 words) indicating which theme it fits under and whether it is a presentation or a poster to rory.hearne@nuim.ie before April 15th.

Register your interest email: rory.hearne@nuim.ie

We are working to keep registration costs as low as possible at this stage

Supported by: The Department of Geography NUIM , NIRSA, Network on Politics, Power and Society NUIM

Taking personal responsibility for climate change adaptation  

10/2/2014

 
New research published by NUI Maynooth researchers in Nature Climate Change shows that adaptation to climate change is likely to take place not as a smooth, planned process but as a series of crises which will cause major disruption as instant short-term solutions are sought.   The findings of the study could prove key to establishing how society changes to cope with more turbulent weather and more frequent mega storms.   Dr Conor Murphy and Prof John Sweeney of the Department of Geography and Irish Climate Analysis and Research Units (ICARUS), NUI Maynooth worked with colleagues at the University of Exeter and the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at the University of East Anglia, which also provided funding for the study.   

The team examined attitudes in Cumbria in north-west England and Galway in western Ireland, which were both hit by heavy flooding in November 2009.   The flooding of 2009 was devastating to both communities. Record rainfall was recorded in both countries, resulting in a number of deaths, properties being severely damaged and economic disruption.   The study, which was the first to track the impacts of floods across two countries, surveyed 356 residents in both areas eight months after the flooding and measured perceptions of governments’ performances in dealing with the aftermath, as well as perceptions of fairness in that response and the willingness of individuals to take action.  

 Researchers found that when people in both studies felt that government had fallen short of their expectations, the resulting perception of helplessness leads to an unwillingness to take personal action to prevent flooding in future.   Residents in Galway were significantly more likely to believe that their property would be flooded again than those in Cumbria. Yet it was Cumbrians who believed they had more personal responsibility to adapt to reduce future incidents.   The researchers found that issues of fairness, blame and liability are the dominant factors in determining the willingness of individuals to take action in the context of future risks. Given the high exposure of development in flood prone areas it is clear that both England and Ireland need to make major investments in building flood resilience with changing rainfall patterns induced by climate change.   The researchers concluded that to successfully adapt to climate change an implicit contract between citizens and government agencies needs to be considered, to enable fairer and smoother processes of adaptation.   The paper was published on 25th November 2012 as Adger, W. N., Quinn, T., Lorenzoni, I., Murphy, C. and Sweeney, J. (2012) Changing social contracts in climate change adaptation. Nature Climate Change 10.1038/nclimate1751.

New Masters in ‘Transformative Community Development' at NUIM

10/2/2014

 
NUI Maynooth today launched an innovative new Masters in ‘Transformative Community Development’.  The new Masters programme, established as part of the TEN-Hunger Project (Transformative Engagement Network), is funded by Irish Aid and the Higher Education Authority and will bring together over thirty academics across disciplines to focus on issues of climate change and food security in vulnerable communities in Zambia and Malawi.

As part of the TEN Hunger Project, NUI Maynooth has collaborated with the University of Mzuzu in Malawi, Mulungushi University and the Zambian Open University in Zambia to design a Masters programme that will enrol 36 students across the three universities.  These students comprise professionals in governmental and non-governmental agencies who work closely with vulnerable communities in Zambia and Malawi and have demonstrated a unique knowledge and understanding of the challenges posed by climate change to these people.

As climate change continues to threaten the livelihoods of rural communities in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa, TEN-Hunger and its staff and students will seek to work with these communities to help transform their capacity to cope with the challenges of climate change, particularly around issues such as food security and nutrition.   

Speaking at the launch of the new Masters, NUI Maynooth Professor Anne Ryan said: “Building relationships between Universities and local communities allows the voices of the most vulnerable to feed into the research and teaching agendas of Universities, while the links to policy that Universities hold are critical to ensuring the wellbeing of communities.”

Dr. Bernie Grummell added that “For Irish Universities the benefit of such engagements is great. We can get a real sense of the experiences, strengths and needs of vulnerable communities and we can integrate these into our teaching and research.”

Dr. Conor Murphy highlighted that “Changes in rainfall are already having a devastating effect on farming practices. In many instances traditional coping strategies are ineffective while uptake of technology and alternative practices have been slow for many complex reasons.”

In addition, Professor Martin Downes commented that “The lessons we learn from these communities of remarkable survivors will be stored in a dedicated repository that will make them available to everyone to use in easing the effects of climate change.”

Project website: www.tenhunger.org

NUIM Geography in The Irish Times

6/2/2014

 

Climate change scientist stresses the need to plan for extreme weather

Putting preventative measures in place to deal with flooding is cheaper than dealing in a reactive way to the extreme weather that is going to become more frequent over the coming years, according to an Irish climate change scientist.Dr Conor Murphy, a director of the Irish Climate Analysis and Research Units at NUI Maynooth, said that while the Office of Public Works was “very engaged” with the issue of climate change, it was not receiving sufficient attention at Government and local authority level.

Read More

NUIG Geographers participate in Erasmus Intensive Programme Project in Greece, May 2014

22/1/2014

 
Shane Conway, PhD student in Geography, NUIG has been selected to participate in an Erasmus Intensive Programme Project on sustainability research and policy. The course entitled 'Achieving Sustainable Development on an Island. Social ecology concepts and methods in a real world context' will take place in May 2014 in the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, Samothraki, Greece. The course is designed as a 13-day excursion to the island of Samothraki in Greece with the aim of learning and applying social ecology approaches in a local setting while building synergies with an on-going UNESCO Man and Biosphere process. Dr. Henrike Rau, National University of Ireland, Galway and member of the Geographical Society of Ireland is a co-organiser of the programme along with colleagues from Vienna Institute of Social Ecology, Alpen Adria University, Lund University, University of the Aegean, and the Autonomous University of Barcelona. 

Geography wins Annual NUI Galway Health and Safety Award

22/1/2014

 
The School of Geography and Archaeology in NUI Galway was this year’s winner of the annual overall award for best health and safety standard for the University. The School was presented this award for their work in communicating and promoting workplace safety through their web pages. Their web pages bring much of their safety documentation together and provide access by staff and student to the necessary resources as well as raising the profile of their workplace safety requirements.  This is a positive example that other NUI Galway Units can usefully apply. Congratulations to Mr. Joe Fenwick, Dr. Siubhan Comer, Ms. Suzanne Gilsenan, Dr. Aaron Potito and Professor Elizabeth FitzPatrick for their winning work!

New faces at Geography in Galway

22/1/2014

 
Geography at NUI Galway is delighted to welcome three new members to the discipline
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Christina Costello is the new Administrative Assistant in Geography. Christina has worked in NUI Galway for over a decade and joined the discipline of Geography in January 2014.


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Dr José A. Cortés-Vázquez is an environmental social scientist, drawing on different disciplines such as Human Geography and Social Anthropology and specialising in the study of nature conservation, sustainability and people-park conflicts in southern Europe. Hailing from Spain, Jose has an MA from University of Kent and a PhD from Pablo Olavide University. He joined the discipline in September 2013 and is currently studying new phenomena related to the privatisation of nature conservation and the conceptualisation of the role Protected Areas play in the expansion of global capitalism in Europe's post-financial crisis context. 


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Physical geographer, Dr Audrey Morley joined Geography in NUIG in Autumn 2013. After completing her Bachelor of Arts in Geography and Archaeology, University College Dublin, Audrey travelled to the US to complete a Master of Science in Quaternary and Climate Studies, Climate Change Institute, University of Maine, Orono. She obtained her Doctor Rerum Naturalium in Geosciences, from the University of Bremen, Germany. Audrey’s central research objective is to understand how regional climate instabilities develop into abrupt hemispheric and global climate change. Specifically, she focuses on the response of the North Atlantic to climate forcing mechanisms during the Holocene (10.000 years) by examining atmosphere-ocean circulation systems and their potential role in controlling, propagating, and amplifying climate instabilities into abrupt climate change.


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    Paul Alexander

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