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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


Katrina and Other Megacatastrophes: Science, Policy and Human Behavior
September 26, 2005
Monday, 7:00 - 9:00 pm
National Soybean Research Center
1101 W. Peabody, Urbana

Megacatastrophes such as hurricane Katrina and the recent Sumatran tsunami often cause vastly more loss of life, disruption of human activities and damage than events orchestrated by terrorists. Equally or more destructive volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, floods, and tsunamis have occurred throughout human history. On a longer time-scale--meteorite impacts, glacial-scale floods and massive rapid outpourings of volcanic magma have occurred on a scale to affect the entire planet and its life simultaneously. Rare, but high-consequence, events have occurred frequently enough in the evolution of human civilization to severely disrupt the fabric of lives and social structures, and will become more devastating as the population of the planet rapidly increases over the next century.

We invite you to participate in an informal public forum on this timely topic. We have convened experts from our campus to address the scientific issues involved in predicting such events, how these events reveal preexisting social and economic disparities in the devastated area, practical aspects of implementing policies to plan for and recover from such events, and ways in which people and societies might cope with them.

Susan Kieffer (Geology), moderator

Sundiata Cha-Jua (African American Studies and Research Program)
John Dwyer (Champaign County Public Health Department)
Amr Elnashai (Mid-America Earthquake Center)
Amy Gajda (Journalism and Law)
Dianne Harris (Landscape Architecture)
Ed Kieser (WILL)
Greg McFarquhar (Atmospheric Sciences)
Rob Olshansky (Urban and Regional Planning)
Feniosky Peña-Mora (Civil and Environmental Engineering)
Don Wuebbles (Atmospheric Sciences)


Access streaming video of the Katrina forum event.
(RealPlayer required.)
Images from Dianne Harris's presentation were taken from Peirce Lewis, New Orleans: The Making of an Urban Landscape, 2nd edition. (Santa Fe: Center for American Places; Charlottesville: Distributed by University of Virginia Press, 2003).



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