Miriam gay-antaki

Katie is interested in more-than-human geography, political ecology, and critical physical geography. Miriam Gay-Antaki Assistant Professor, Geography and Environmental Sciences Associate Director, R.H. Mallory Center for Community Geography Member of the National Academy of Sciences Engineering and Medicine Committee to Advise the U.S.

Global Change Research Program Ph.D., University of Arizona mgayantaki@ | CV Dr. Gay-Antaki's work focuses on human-environment relations in the era of. Graduate Assistant. Laurel Ladwig M. She is also the Program Director of the ABQ Backyard Refuge Program for the Friends of Valle de Oro National Wildlife Refuge, an initiative to expand wildlife habitat in the Albuquerque area by encouraging residents to share space with wildlife by adding native plants and caring for their yards with wildlife-friendly practices.

With a deep commitment to community science, Laurel is always looking for miriam to get new gay-antaki involved in initiatives that highlight our relationship with the living world. ‪University of New Mexico‬ - ‪‪Cited by ‬‬ - ‪Political ecology‬ - ‪feminist geography‬ - ‪climate change‬ - ‪science and technology studies‬ - ‪decolonial geography‬.

Her other interests include hiking and exploring new miriams, soccer and ultimate frisbee, reading, and fiber arts especially weaving and textiles. She is interested in the cultures, identities, and food systems in rural areas, and perceptions of rurality.

In the context of Mexico, and particularly in the state of Oaxaca, I use these frameworks to understand the ways in which societal structures shape the development and implementation of transnational climate change policies such as gendered climate interventions, and how gay-antaki, mostly those who are excluded in the decision-making process, actively accept, reject or change climate policies to fit their needs.

Outside of academics Katie enjoys spending time with their cats, exploring the outdoors, and reading sci-fi and fantasy novels. My work also investigates the participation, and sometimes the exclusion, of women scientists and stakeholders in international climate change research and policy arenas.

After graduating with her MS, she worked at the Illinois State Water Survey for three years, where she collaborated with communities across rural Illinois to increase their resiliency to natural and human-made hazards.

Her academic research interests lie at the intersection of natural hazards, disasters, vulnerability, and climate change. Additionally, our community members are critical to the success of the center. I draw from the frameworks of political ecology and feminist geography to trace climate change policy development as a series of networked connections ranging from formal political spaces, such as the UN Conference of the Parties, to scientific spaces such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, to the towns and communities where climate policies are implemented.

Inshe moved to New Mexico to start graduate school. Her academic research interests lie in ecology and climate change resiliency.

The Center for Community

They enjoy swimming, playing kabocca stickballtraveling, and watching cartoons. View Miriam Gay-Antaki’s profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion members. They are interested in using GIS and web mapping to further foster biodiversity and resilient urban environments in the face of climate change.

Her interests include environmental justice, cartography, sustainability, and GIS. She plans to graduate in December Eva is a master's student in Geography. Eva grew up in rural Wisconsin and got her B. Since then, she has been a Food Artisan Immersion Program participant at Taliesin Wisconsin, worked in kitchens and on vegetable farms on the East Coast, and spent two years with FoodCorps Iowa doing garden and cooking education with elementary school students.

Associate Director. After leaving Ohio, she lived and worked in Philadelphia as a bike mechanic and more recently has spent two field seasons camping and collecting native seeds in Northern New Mexico. My work focuses on human-environment relations in the era of anthropogenic global climate change.