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		 <title>OSU Department of Geography News and Events</title>
		 <link>http://www.geography.osu.edu</link>
		 <description>RSS/XML File for Events and News of The Ohio State University Department of Geography. Subscribe to this feed to stay 
in touch with news right when it hits the webpage!</description>
		 <lastBuildDate>Wed, 15 May 2013 17:00:01 -0400</lastBuildDate>
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			<title>2013 Department of Geography Graduation and Awards Ceremony:</title>
			<description> 
&nbsp;
2013 Geography Department
Graduation and Awards Ceremony
Undergraduate Awards:
Outstanding Undergraduate Paper Contest:
On behalf of the Undergraduate Geography club, fourth year student Maegan Miller and Geography Undergraduate Advisor Brook Raake presented the awards for the first annual Outstanding Undergraduate Paper Contest. All paper submissions were written for geography courses during the 2012-2013 academic year and were evaluated on the basis of strength of thesis, clarity of argument, and quality of engagement with geographical concepts. There were nine submissions in total that spanned a wide range of courses and covered topics such as the spatial segregation in Jewish ghettoes, metrics for evaluating global cities, an evaluation of the proposed 3-C high speed rail corridor, and theoretical engagements with scale. This year, the selection committed chose winners, fourth years Tim Adams and Devin Oliver. Tim's paper was titled &quot;Transcending the Onion: An Engagement with Site Ontology&quot; and Devin's Paper was titled &quot;Rio's 'Sexy' Olympic Transformation: Interrogating the Role of Sexuality in Urban Branding and Mega-Event Planning.&quot; Each of the winners was awarded a $50 gift card, a geography department t-shirt, and a coffee mug.
 

We have 5 different undergraduate awards, which we are giving to 8 individual undergraduate students today. Each student will receive a certificate or a plaque, and - even better! - each award includes a monetary component as well.
Presented by Professor Nancy Ettlinger.
The undergraduate awards begin with two different scholarships that we give to returning students, the Sharpe Scholarship for Outstanding Undergraduatesand the Fenburr Scholarship for Women and Underrepresented Groups. Students who receive both these awards were chosen on the basis of their scholarly excellence, high GPAs, and their professionalism, as indicated in their statements about professional goals and activities ranging from volunteer work, research, activism, work in extracurricular organizations, and leadership.

 Fenburr Scholarship for Women and Underrepresented Groups. These scholarships were established in 2002 with funds from the Herbert and Dorothy Joseph Fenburr Scholarship Endowment Fund for Geography, which was established in 2002.

I am delighted to honor three outstanding students with this award. 

 Colleen Durfee
 Michaela King (not present)
 Dana Thompson


 Sharpe Scholarship for Outstanding Undergraduates. The Sharpe award was established with funds from the Gary L. Sharpe Scholarship Fund in Geography, which was established in 2010. This scholarship provides funds for undergraduate students majoring in Geography with preference given to students from the state of Ohio.

It is my pleasure to honor 2 outstanding students with the Sharpe Scholarship.

  John Bangoff
 Nathaniel Henry (not present)

Second, we have 3 awards for students completing their major. The goal of these awards is to honor these students' achievement in the classroom, research, service and/or leadership. The students chosen for these awards were all nominated by individual faculty members who wrote glowing letters about them. These students are all outstanding emerging scholars - all noted by faculty to be exceptional.
Taaffe Award for Outstanding Undergraduates in Atmospheric Science, and Climate and Physical Geography. This award was established with funds from the Edward J. &quot;Ned&quot; Taaffe Memorial Fund in Geography, established in 2003. It is my pleasure to honor DAN MILLER with this prestigious award.
Dan's research project, which is being prepared as peer-reviewed journal submission, aims to use meteorological observations from an ongoing NSF-funded project to help identify and calibrate the primary processes responsible for the oxygen isotopic ratio signature observed in the Bruce Plateau Core in the Antarctic Peninsula. This calibration will allow more robust conclusions to be drawn about pre-1950 conditions from the ice core-derived proxy data. Dan presented his initial findings at the American Meteorological Society's Annual Conference this January. At this meeting he also presented the results of his research at the Center for Multiscale Modeling and Atmospheric Processes at Colorado State University, where he was awarded an internship in the summer of 2012; this research examined local climate policies and green energy initiatives in Fort Collins, Colorado. Dan later presented his Antarctic research at the Denman Undergraduate Research Forum, where he was awarded an honorable mention. 
 Beyond his research projects, Dan has worked with the Ice Core Paleoclimate Research Group at Byrd Polar since he was a freshman and has assisted with organizing the ice core archive and compilation of ice core-derived data sets.&nbsp; Rearranging ice cores in freezers at -30 degrees Fahrenheit, Dan was able to have &quot;the polar experience&quot; right here in Columbus.
 Dan's advisor is Ellen Mosley-Thompson; she cannot be here today, but she sends her warmest wishes and congratulations. She was joined on Dan's committee by Ph.D. candidate Brad Goodwin, who was instrumental in mentoring Dan with data analysis methodology for the Antarctic Peninsula project. 
 In addition to his academic accomplishments, Dan has an impressive record of service to OSU at BuckeyeThon, and to the broader community through the Mid-Ohio Food Bank and Central Ohio Animal Shelters.
Dan is graduating with honors. He will be heading to graduate school at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, where he has been awarded a GRA in the Northeast Climate Science Center.&nbsp; Please join me in congratulating Dan and wishing him well in his bright future!
Huntington Award for Outstanding Undergraduates in Environment and Society, and in Urban Regional and Global Studies. This award was established with funds from the Charles Clifford Huntington Memorial Fund, established in 1957 by a gift from Helen Hughes Huntington in the memory of her husband. It is my pleasure to honor MEAGAN MILLER with this prestigious award.

Maegan is a human geographer with interests in social justice. Her undergraduate thesis was an engaging study of anti-homeless law and enforcement in Columbus. Despite rhetoric about Columbus being an apparently &lsquo;nice' city regarding the homeless, notably with reference to a language of care and compassion, Maegan found persistent implicit criminalization of the homeless through new strategies that blur the line between city government and civic society. These findings reflect a research strategy that spans a variety of types of sites across the city landscape. Meagan's research is based on secondary as well as primary data, including 20 IRB-approved interviews.
 Maegan's advisor, Mat Coleman, is out of town and sends his very best and warmest wishes. He was joined on Maegan's committee by Nancy Ettlinger and Nada Moumtaz in the Department of Comparative Studies. Beyond the thesis project, Maegan presented her research at the Denman Undergraduate Research Forum. Outside formal academic work, Maegan is currently co-President of the Undergraduate Geography Club, Executive Director of the new progressive student news magazine on campus (The Pulse), an editorial member for the Journal of Politics and International Affairs based in the Department of Political Science, and a mentor for the Girls' Circle program on campus. She has served as a tutor for the Dowd Center of the Homeless Foundation in Columbus, and has interned at both the Community Refugee and Immigration Service and the Kaleidoscope LGBTQ Youth Center in Columbus. Maegan has also participated in Ohio State's study abroad program in Indonesia. She is indeed well rounded!
Maegan is graduating with honors and research distinction. She is heading to graduate studies at UCLA in Geography, where she will be funded via UC's prestigious fellowship: the multi-year Cota Robles fellowship. Please join me in congratulating Meagan and wishing her well in her bright future!
Robinson Award for Outstanding Undergraduates in GIScience and Spatial Analysis. This award was established with funds from the Arthur H. Robinson Fund, established in 1985, based on an initial gift from Arthur Robinson in 1947. It is my pleasure to honor MAHMOD ABDALLA with this prestigious award.

Mahmod came to the United States from Sudan, with interests in both the experiences of recent immigrants here in Columbus, as well as a strong focus on public health issues in his homeland. He blends these important substantive interests with spatial analysis and GIS.
 As all research is to some extent a matter of perseverance, Mahmod's senior thesis is a case in point. He wanted to research West Nile virus in Franklin County, and had to deal with the frustration of highly uneven data availability, notably that data are available for Franklin County, excepting Columbus. With that in mind, he transformed his project so as to identify the problems for data analysis and lay an important foundation for future research. From the mapping and locational analysis components of the project, Mahmod was able to determine that the location of monitoring stations in Franklin county has been driven principally by jurisdictions. His research, then, sets the stage for the design of an effective spatial sampling scheme. 
 Beyond the thesis, Mahmod presented his research at the Denman Undergraduate Research Forum. He is graduating with research distinction in Geographic Information Science. His advisor, Ningchaun Xiao, has been in Guangzhou this semester and by skype joined Morton O'Kelly and Desheng Liu for the thesis defense. Neither Morton nor Ningchaun can be here today, but they send they send their warmest wishes and congratulations.
 In addition to his research in GIScience, Mahmod interned with the Center for Urban and Regional Research. When he is not busy working at CURA and on his research, he is busy being a husband and father. He is now poised to find the job of his dreams. Please join me in congratulating Mahmod and wishing him well in his bright future!
 
Congratulations to all the exceptional undergraduate students who have received awards!
&nbsp;
Graduatestudent Awards: 
Presented by Professor Darla Munroe.
Fenburr Travel Scholarship for Outstanding Graduate Students
This $600 scholarship is intended to offset costs of travel associated with professional development. The competition is run twice a year, with three awards made in Autumn and Spring and the competition is open to Master's and doctoral students. The awardees for this past year are Alfonso Fernandez (Autumn 2012), Jeff Olson (Autumn 2012), Scott Reinemann (not present) (Autumn 2012), Peter Chen (not present) (Spring 2013), Emily Scarborough (Spring 2013), and Aaron Wilson (Spring 2013).

Rayner Scholarship for Field Work
This scholarship provides $1,000 to support fieldwork endeavors by graduate students. The awardees for this past year are Jessica Barnes (Autumn 2012), Nick Crane (Autumn 2012), Hyeseon Jeong (Spring 2013), and Oliver Wigmore (Spring 2013).

Lakshmanan Chatterjee Fellowship for Outstanding Ph.D. Students 
 ('Lakshmanan Chatterjee Fellowship')
This endowment was established June 5, 2009 with gifts from Dr. Tiruvarur R. Lakshmanan and Dr. Lata Chatterjee to be used to recognize a distinguished graduate student in the Department of Geography who is in the PhD program.
This award is intended to benefit a PhD student either from the Global South (Asia, Africa, or Latin America) or carrying out research on the Global South. The award should support a student professionally focused on issues of benefit to humanity, and with demonstrated professional promise. The fellowship provides funds for research and it was awarded to Alfonso Fernandez and Zoe Pearson. Alfonso is studying the dynamics of Chilean glaciers in a context of climate change. Zoe is conducting fieldwork to understand the lingering effects of the war on drugs in Bolivia. Both recipients received $1,000.
  
The Robert Max Thomas&nbsp;Graduate Fellowship ('Thomas Fellowship')
Jessica Barnes was selected as the 2013 Robert Max Thomas Graduate Fellowship. Her research examines the value of artist entrepreneurs to the local economy, not just in monetary terms but also in personal, emotional and cultural value. Her dissertation stands to make important contributions to economic geography in urban cultural economy. Jessica has two peer-reviewed publications and two others in progress. She has served as a Graduate Teaching Assistant for many terms, and developed our first online course, Geog 2750: World Regional Geography.
This award recognizes graduate student excellence, broadly defined. Qualified candidates shall demonstrate professional promise with special consideration given to students expressing an interest in economic geography or the impact of geography on economic development.&nbsp;&nbsp;The award is for $4,000.

The E. Willard and Ruby S. Miller&nbsp;Fellowship ('Miller&nbsp;Fellowship') 
This year's E. Williard and Ruby S. Miller Fellow is Christine Biermann. Christine is a broadly trained human and physical geographer. In her nomination letter, her advisor calls her a creative thinker, whose exceptional research on the restoration of the American chestnut promises to make a splash in political ecology, restoration ecology and science studies. Christine is the recipient of a prestigious National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship. She has four peer-reviewed publications published or forthcoming. She has taught Geog 3980 (Biogeography: an Introduction to Life on Earth) twice.
The E. Willard and Ruby S. Miller&nbsp;Fellowship&nbsp;Award is the highest recognition the department can bestow on a Graduate student. The award is given in recognition of potential to make a major contribution to geography or its subfield(s), particularly through scholarship and scholarly writing. The award is for $4,000.

&nbsp;
Retiring Faculty:Presented by Dept. Chair Dan Sui
Yuri Medvedkov, Professor of Geography at The Ohio State University 1987-2013. In appreciation of your dedicated service for 26 Years.
 
&nbsp;
More pictures can be found on the Department Facebook Page.</description>
			<pubDate>Wed, 15 May 2013 15:34:22 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#309</link>
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			<title>Dept. Spring Picnic:</title>
			<description>The Department of Geography's Spring picnic took place on Saturday, April 20, at High Banks Metro Park. The somewhat chilly Spring weather made for a cold day to be outside and participate in the hike and games. Everyone were well prepared for the hike but quickly found their way to the roaring fire in the shelter.
  The fun kicked off in the late morning with a beautiful hike through the park; many of Ohio' early blooming wild flowers were on display, such as Trillium, Spring Beauty, Bluettes etc. The hike proceeded to the observation platform where in the past it has been possible to see a nesting pair of Bald Eagles. But unfortunately we were told that the nest had failed this Spring and the Eagles had gone just a few days ago. On the way back to the shelter we saw many wild birds. Most notable a small flock of Yellow Rumped Warblers, and a Barred Owl. After the morning hike everyone settled down in the shelter and enjoyed a plethora of sandwiches, side dishes and desserts. It was truly a feast fit for kings. The most popular place was clearly the fire place. 
  Many other games and friendly competitions were held throughout the afternoon, including, Frisbee, football, soccer, wiffleball, and Chinese hacky sack (jianzi). It was a great day to spend with a really fine group of people outside of Derby Hall. Thank you Colin for all the work you did setting up this event. More pictures are available on the Department Facebook Page.</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 23 Apr 2013 14:59:40 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#308</link>
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			<title>Coriolis Effect Illustrator in Action:</title>
			<description>In celebration of Earth Day we thought it appropriate to expose you to some illusive Earth Forces/Effects. Here is a short video of the Premier test flight of our new Coriolis force/effect demonstrator. The turntable was built by James DeGrand for use in the Geography 1900 Intro to Weather and Climate class lab. Notice how the ball seems to bend to the right when in flight, as the system turns counter clockwise. Get to experience this effect if you are taking Geography 1900 in the future.</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 22 Apr 2013 13:29:46 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#307</link>
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			<title>Jeff Rogers wins 2013 Francois Matthes Award:</title>
			<description>Dr. Jeff Rogers - professor of geography and State Climatologist - was awarded the 2013 Francois Matthes Award for Lifetime Achievements in Cryospheric Sciences, given by the Cryosphere Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers during this year's AAG meeting in LA. Congratulations Jeff, very well deserved indeed. FYI, Ellen Mosley-Thompson was the 2012 recipient for this award. It really says a lot about the caliber and achievements of our atmospheric science faculty when the award is given to our colleagues two years in a row.</description>
			<pubDate>Mon, 22 Apr 2013 11:35:51 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#306</link>
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			<title>Congratulations to Mahmod Abdalla:</title>
			<description>Congratulations are in order for Mahmod Abdalla who successfully completed  the required examination for graduation with research distinction in Geographic  Information Science, today, 4/19/2013. Mahmod's thesis is titled &ldquo;Exploratory Spatial Analysis of West Nile Virus  Disease (WNV) in Franklin County&rdquo; and he was advised by Ningchuan Xiao. Desheng Liu and Morton O'Kelly comprised the rest of the examination committee.
</description>
			<pubDate>Fri, 19 Apr 2013 12:09:13 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#305</link>
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			<title>2013 GGO Panel Discussion:</title>
			<description>Restoring our Rivers, Imagine our future: The Olentangy in Columbus. 2013 GGO Panel Discussion: The Olentangy River in Columbus has been transformed throughout the city&rsquo;s history, and is still being transformed today by the removal of low-head dams, reimagining of the space along its banks, and developments upstream. The Geography Graduate Organization invites you to a panel discussion that will offer perspectives on the future of the Olentangy and how best to make use of our urban rivers. OSU Faculty Club, 181 Oval Dr S, Columbus, OH 43210 at 5:00PM Thursday April 18.
</description>
			<pubDate>Wed, 17 Apr 2013 15:26:42 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#304</link>
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			<title>Joseph Sullivant Medal Award:</title>
			<description>The Board of Trustees approved awarding the Joseph Sullivant Medal to Lonnie G. Thompson, earth sciences, Distinguished University Professor; and Ellen Mosley-Thompson, geography, Distinguished University Professor. The medal offers &quot;recognition by means of a practically imperishable record, of an admittedly notable achievement on the part of a son or daughter of the University, whether that achievement be in the form of an important invention, discovery, contribution to science, the practical solution of a significant engineering, economic, or agricultural problem, or the production of a valuable literary, artistic, historical, philosophical, or other work&quot;. The medal, awarded every five years, will be presented at a date yet to be determined. Congratulations Ellen and Lonnie.</description>
			<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2013 14:33:00 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#303</link>
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			<title>Byrd Polar Research Center Spring Seminar:</title>
			<description>The Byrd Polar Research Center Spring 2013 Seminar will be held Thursday, 18 April 2013 at 3:30PM in the Scott Hall Auditorium. The seminar will be presented by President Emeritus Of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) Dr. Richard Anthes. Dr. Anthes will elaborate on, Hurricanes, Weather Patterns and Climate Change: Why a Few Degrees Matter.</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 09 Apr 2013 13:46:45 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#302</link>
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			<title>Fenburr and Rayner Scholorship Winners:</title>
			<description>  The Department is very pleased to announce this semester's winners of the Fenburr Travel Scholarship, and the Rayner Scholarship for fieldwork. 
 The Fenburr Travel Scholarship winners are:
Peter Chen, Emily Scarborough and Aaron Wilson


The Rayner Scholarship for fieldwork recipients are:
  Oliver Wigmore and Hyeseon Jeong

Congratulations and thanks to everyone who applied.
The Fenburr Travel Scholarship:
This  $600 scholarship is intended to offset costs of travel associated with  professional development. 'Professional development' typically refers to  activities related to the conduct or dissemination of research, such as  training workshops, conferences, or fieldwork.&nbsp;The competition is run twice  a year, with three awards made in Fall and Spring. The competition is open to  Master's and doctoral students.
The Rayner Fieldwork Scholarship:
This $1,000  scholarship is intended to support fieldwork endeavors by graduate students.  'Fieldwork' is understood as any form of data generation that is conducted in order to address a research question.  Fieldwork costs might therefore include expenses  related to travel to a field site, supply or equipment costs, access fees (to libraries, archives) or other research-related expenses.</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 09 Apr 2013 12:00:29 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#301</link>
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			<title>Prestigious National Award goes to Zoe Pearson:</title>
			<description>The Department is very proud to share the great news that Zoe  Pearson has just been awarded a SSRC &quot;Drugs, Security and Democracy&quot;  Fellowship for her doctoral research project, which will explore new coca  control policies in Bolivia. This is an award open to all doctoral students and  postdocs in the Americas (at least US and all of Latin America). Only about 15  are awarded annually. The fellowship pays for all living, research, and travel  expenses during the research period and sends the recipient to two  all-expenses-paid workshops in Latin America with the other fellowship recipients. This is a really prestigious, national recognition for Zoe and our deparment. Congratulations to Zoe Pearson and Kendra McSweeney (advisor).
</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 09 Apr 2013 10:58:52 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#300</link>
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			<title>New Visiting Scholar:</title>
			<description>Sook-Jin Kim is an associate professor in the department of geography at Konkuk University in Seoul, Korea.&nbsp; She received her PhD in 2006 from the University of Minnesota, where she was supervised by Eric Sheppard.&nbsp; Sook-Jin works on economic geography and environmental issues in South Korea  and has published in&nbsp;Economic Geography,&nbsp;Antipode,&nbsp;Geoforum&nbsp;and  other leading journals.&nbsp; This year she will be a visiting scholar in our department (until January 2014), enjoying her first sabbatical from Konkuk.&nbsp; She plans to use this time to write several research papers. Sook Jin is working with Joel Wainwright. She is located in Derby Hall room 1160. Sook Jin will be with us until Jan. 2014</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 09 Apr 2013 10:41:25 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#299</link>
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			<title>Tethersonde experiments on the Oval:</title>
			<description>This week our Geography 1900 Intro to Weather and Climate Class  have been conducting weather monitoring experiments flying our Tethersonde out on the Oval. We added a GoPro camera to the baloon rig today and had it shoot HD video of the Oval from a height of 150 meters. Here are two 18min videos from the camera, first starting with the ascent, and second ending with the descent. See pictures from one of our launches on our facebook page.</description>
			<pubDate>Thu, 04 Apr 2013 16:10:03 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#298</link>
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			<title>Congratulations to our Denman Participants:</title>
			<description>Please join  us in  congratulating three students in the Geography department for receiving  Honorable Mention in last week's Denman Undergraduate Research Forum!
  Maegan Miller (Geography),  &quot;America's Nicest City? The Contentious Politics of Care and Punishment  for the Homeless in Columbus, OH&quot;
  Maegan is advised by Mat Coleman.
  Nat Henry (Geography),  &quot;Dark Snow&quot;
  Nat was advised by Jason Box.
  Daniel Miller (Atmospheric  Sciences), &quot;Contemporary Meteorological Observations Facilitate  Interpretation of a New Multi-Century-Long Ice Core from the Antarctic Peninsula&quot;&nbsp; 
  Daniel is advised by Ellen Mosley-Thompson
Well done! </description>
			<pubDate>Wed, 03 Apr 2013 14:25:09 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#297</link>
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			<title>Distinguished Undergraduate Research Mentor Award:</title>
			<description>Mat Coleman, awarded the Distinguished Undergraduate Research Mentor Award (DURM) at the Denman Undergraduate Research Forum. Nice job Mat, following in the footsteps of Geography professors Kendra McSweeney, Bryan Mark and Becky Mansfield who received this award in 2012, 2011 and 2010. Mat  focuses his research on immigration law and politics.  More specifically   his interests lie on issues related to the U.S.-Mexico border,   interior immigration enforcement, critical geopolitics, political   geography, states and statecraft, geographies of power and resistance.
</description>
			<pubDate>Fri, 29 Mar 2013 10:12:16 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#296</link>
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			<title>Dissertation Proposal Development Fellowship:</title>
			<description>Austin Kocher, second-year PhD candidate in Geography, was selected to receive a 2013 Dissertation Proposal Development Fellowship (DPDF) from the Social Science Research Council. The award supports mid-stage graduate students in the humanities and social sciences to formulate effective research proposals through scholarly exchange within interdisciplinary areas of study. Austin's research focuses on the shifting immigration in the southeastern U.S. and the movement of people across borders. His dissertation concerns the legal geography of U.S. Immigration Courts. Read more about Austin in this ASC article</description>
			<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 14:06:08 -0400</pubDate>
			<link>http://www.geography.osu.edu/news-and-events#295</link>
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