Breaking free from the silo: Regional network focuses on all parts of the sustainability puzzle
The proposal aims to take transdisciplinary research to a new level by creating a regional sustainability network that spans the state.
The proposal aims to take transdisciplinary research to a new level by creating a regional sustainability network that spans the state.
On Thursday, March 3, the CSU Department of Political Science hosted a virtual discussion of the Russian invasion in Ukraine, hoping to answer questions about what led to the war, how it may proceed, and what may be the consequences.
This Fall 2022, students can focus their learning at Todos Santos on environmental humanities, an interdisciplinary approach to understanding environmental issues from CSU’s humanities disciplines – art, history, literature, communication, philosophy.
“For me personally, Joe’s true gift is the time he spent with us in the college: times he spent breaking bread with our chairs, faculty, and students talking about the liberal arts and how to foster our disciplines for new generations. He’s left us with the potential to carry on those conversations,” said Dean Ben Withers.
This summer, the College of Liberal Arts is excited to offer a 9-credit opportunity for undergraduate students to study the environmental humanities during Summer Session at CSU’s Mountain Campus.
The National Endowment for the Arts announced this month that Colorado State University’s Harrison Candelaria Fletcher, an associate professor in the Department of English, is among 35 writers around the country being awarded the prestigious 2022 Creative Writing Fellowship in Prose.
On the border between Mexico and Arizona is the postage stamp-sized oasis of Quitobaquito. But while the pond itself is tiny, what it holds is immense
Amy Hoeven (’95) is an identical twin, a communications professional, an avid CSU Athletics fan, and a voice for the disadvantaged. On Dec. 18, 2021, she will deliver the alumni commencement speech at the College of Liberal Arts’ commencement ceremony.
When more of life began moving online due to the COVID-19 pandemic, so too did the feminist literary movement in Latin America.
The proposal focused on resiliency kits for people in Mozambique who have been the victims of natural disasters.