Published: May 3, 2021

Mykael Pineda Awarded UROP Grant

 Mykael PinedaUndergraduate student Mykael Pineda was awarded an Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP) Individual Grant for her project, 鈥淐limate Sensitive Post-Fire Management.鈥澨齋he will be co-mentored by听Holly Barnard听and GEOG Alum听Teresa Chapman听from The Nature Conservancy. Mykael will be using this work as the basis of her honors thesis.

Mykael will be using GIS mapping technology to determine the accessibility of seedling planting sites by foot and reports she is "grateful for the opportunity and optimistic about what the future听holds!"


Anila Narayana Awarded UROP Grant

Anila NarayanaCongratulations to 欧美口爆视频 Geography undergraduate Anila Narayana!听 She was awarded an Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP) Individual Grant for the Summer 2021 term to work on the project 鈥淔ood for Thought: Examining Intersections between Urban Gardening, Mental Health, and听Food Insecurity During the COVID-19 Pandemic鈥 under the mentorship of听Azita Ranjbar.听

The aim of this research project听is to determine how participation in urban gardens impacts food insecurity and mental health in underserved Denver communities, as well as to understand spatial patterns between food deserts and mental health services in the area.


Zac Clement Awarded UROP Grant

Zac ClementCongratulations to 欧美口爆视频 Geography undergraduate Zac Clement!听 He was awarded an Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP) Individual Grant for the 21-22 academic year to work on his research project "Constructing 'Home': Undergraduate Housing Insecurity in the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic" under the mentorship of听Azita Ranjbar.听

The project aims to get a better grasp on how undergraduate students have experienced housing insecurity throughout the past year, which he'll be using to write his Geography honor's thesis.


Jessica Voveris Wins the听Thompson Award听First Prize in the Graduate Memoir category

jessica voverisThe Center of the American West hosted a Zoom event to celebrate the 22nd annual Thompson Awards on April 28th, 2021.听In this intimate early evening gathering, judges from each category introduced both the winners and the honorable mentions. The 鈥榓udience鈥 then listened to the authors read excerpts and show video clips from their winning entries. The creators鈥 intellect, talent, and passion were on full display.

Jessica's essay, "Into the Lab but Born Out of the Frontier: A Scientist's Journey Growing Up in the American West," can be read in its entirety in the News & Events section of the Geography website.听 It was awarded first prize in the Graduate Memoir category.听


Xiaoling Chen听received an SWG Evelyn L. Pruitt National Fellowship for Dissertation Research

Xiaoling ChenXiaoling Chen听was awarded a Society of Woman Geographers Evelyn L. Pruitt National Fellowship for Dissertation Research for 2021-2022. This grant will support her dissertation fieldwork during the 2021-2022 academic year. She will conduct an ethnographic study in China on the impacts of health care reform and examine the transformation of medical practices and identities among public healthcare professionals.听

Xiaoling is a PhD student in Geography. She is advised by Dr.听Tim Oakes. She also received generous support for her field research from the Geography Department through the Jennifer Dinaburg Memorial Research Award and the Solstice Graduate Research Award, and from 欧美口爆视频 Boulder through the Beverly Sears Graduate Student Grant award and the Center to Advance Research and Teaching in the Social Sciences (CARTSS).听


Shruthi Jagadeesh Wins Graduate Part Time Instructor Appreciation Award

Shruthi JagadesshShruthi Jagadeesh听has听been selected as a recipient of a听Spring 2021听Graduate Part Time Instructor Appreciation Award. The Geography听department nominated her for this award in recognition of how she has risen to the challenges presented by teaching during the pandemic.听

A PhD student of Geography, Shruthi听received an听MA from the听University of 欧美口爆视频 Boulder in 2020. Her interests include Political Ecology, development, indigenous communities, and conservation. She is advised by Mara Goldman.听


Jessica DiCarlo Receives听2021 Summer Graduate School Fellowship

Jessica DiCarlo was selected as a recipient of the 2021 Summer Graduate School Fellowship. The Geography department nominated her for this Fellowship to support her dissertation writing. Her project, Steel Silk Roads and the Making of the Infrastructure Frontier is an ethnographic study on the Laos-China Railroad that examines China's growing global presence through infrastructure.  Jessica is a PhD candidate in Geography. She received her Master's degree from the University of California Berkeley in 2016. Jessica DiCarlo听was selected as a recipient of the听2021 Summer Graduate School Fellowship. The Geography department nominated her for this Fellowship to support her dissertation writing. Her project,听Steel Silk Roads and the Making of the Infrastructure Frontier听is an ethnographic study on the Laos-China Railroad that examines China's growing global presence through infrastructure.

Jessica is a PhD candidate in Geography. She received her Master's degree from the University of California Berkeley in 2016. Her interests span critical development studies, political ecology, and infrastructure studies. She is advised by Dr.听Emily Yeh, Professor and Chair of the Geography Department.

With the generous support of donors and the 欧美口爆视频 Boulder community, the Graduate School offers awards, grants, and fellowships that support the outstanding research, creative work, and teaching of our graduate students.听


Phurwa Dhondup Published in Geoforum Journal

Phurwa GurungPhurwa Gurung published a sole-authored article titled "" in the geography听journal听Geoforum.

Based on research in Humla district in northwest Nepal, the article challenges the 鈥渋nfrastructural orthodoxy鈥 that posits the region鈥檚 food insecurity to be the direct result of geographical remoteness and the lack of a motorable road.听 Instead, it analyzes how road building can increase vulnerability rather than resolving food insecurity, leading to the proletarianization of wage workers and increased dependence on distant markets for the reproduction of local social lives.