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This Week

Previous CAS Presentations

Jan 22, 2008
One Laptop Per Child: Technology and the Developing World


May 2, 2007
Serious Games: Video Games in Undergraduate General Education


February 15, 2006
The Pakistan Earthquake: A Wake-up Call for Mid-America?


January 27, 2006
CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Immigration


September 26, 2005
Katrina and Other Megacatastrophes: Science, Policy and Human Behavior


February 23, 2005
CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Reforming Social Security


February 17, 2005
Origins of a Networked World: From World War II to the Internet


November 16, 2004
Coole Lady


April 28, 2004
Hospital Tax Forum


October 3, 2003
Carlo Rotella


March 12, 2003
Sheldon Jacobson

February 5, 2003
George Gollin

December 5, 2002
Civil Liberty and National Security

October 7, 2002
Ania Loomba

February 28, 2002
Hans Heinrich Hock

January 22, 2002
Dianne Pinderhughes

November 5, 2001
Jean-Pierre Leburton

November 5, 2001
From Chaos to Pilgrimage

October 23, 2001
Donald Crummey

October 16, 2001
Globalization

August 29, 2001
Stem Cells

September 28, 2001
Bill Greenough

May 3, 2001
Dialogue on Toulouse-Lautrec





cas : cas presentations


Megacatastrophes - Earthquakes poster The Pakistan Earthquake: A Wake-up Call for Mid-America?
CAS Initiative on Megacatastrophes: Science, Policy and Human Behavior
February 15, 2006
Wednesday, 4:00 - 5:30 pm
Third Floor, Levis Faculty Center
919 West Illinois Street, Urbana

Destructive hurricanes, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, floods and tsunamis have occurred throughout human history and often cause vastly more loss of life and disruption of human activities than events orchestrated by terrorists. "Creeping megacatastrophes" are new phenomena that affect the future of civilization itself: water is becoming globally scarce and contaminated; our atmosphere is changing; losses of soil threaten the global capacity of agriculture to feed us; and critical terrestrial and oceanic ecosystems are disappearing. These natural and creeping megacatastrophes will become increasingly devastating socially and economically because the population of the planet is rapidly increasing and because of human actions and policies.

We invite you to participate in a series of informal public forums on these timely topics. We have convened experts from campus and the local community to address the scientific issues involved in predicting such events, how these events reveal preexisting social and economic disparities, and practical aspects of implementing policies to cope with them based on our experience with natural disasters.

Participants include:
Susan Kieffer (Geology), moderator
Irfan Ahmad (Center for Nanoscale and Science and Technology)
Robert Bauer (Illinois State Geological Survey)
Max Edelson (History)
Amy Gajda (Journalism and Law)
Jerome Hajjar (Mid-America Earthquake Center)
Rob Olshansky (Urban and Regional Planning)

Cosponsorship provided by the Walgreen Endowment, courtesy of CAS Professor of Geology Susan Kieffer.

This event is the second in a series of panels included in the Megacatastrophe initiative. In September 2005 CAS presented Katrina and Other Megacatastrophes.

Pakistan Earthquake - Streaming Video Pakistan Earthquake - Streaming Audio


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