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SustainaBold Podcast

SustainaBold Podcast

By Rosalie Luo

Welcome to SustainaBold, which covers a whole range of sustainability-related topics with special guests currently working either personally or professionally in promoting planetary well-being. Listen to the episodes here!
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Episode 2: Dr. Cle-Anne Gabriel

SustainaBold PodcastAug 05, 2020

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56:45
Episode 10: Matthew Siegfried

Episode 10: Matthew Siegfried

Matthew Siegfried is a local historian in Michigan and has lived in Ypsilanti since 2001. He is a graduate of Eastern Michigan University with degrees in History and Historic Preservation. Much of his work has been on Ypsilanti’s local history and its connections to broad historical moments. He has focused on Ypsilanti’s rich Indigenous and Black history, and has produced a website (South Adams Street @ 1900) which details the development of Ypsi’s Black community.

In this episode, we discuss his journey that led him down the path of history, place-based education, relational perspectives, landscapes as the interfaces of society and nature, and the role of the collective in understanding our history. 

To read more about Matthew's work, check out the links below:

Visit Matthew's Facebook page and Website for South Adams Street @ 1900 Project


Sep 06, 202155:02
Episode 9: Dharna Noor
Jul 07, 202151:41
Episode 8: Alexis M. Wilson
Mar 17, 202149:16
Episode 7: Dr. Tiara Moore

Episode 7: Dr. Tiara Moore

To kick off 2021, I spoke to Dr. Tiara Moore, an environmental ecologist, about how she became interested in ecology, her experiences as a Black woman in STEM, and how she’s helping to create a safe and inclusive workplace as founder of A WOC Space.

She completed her B.S at Winthrop University, received an M.S. in Biology at Hampton University, and earned her Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UCLA. She’s currently a postdoctoral scholar at the University of Washington and The Nature Conservancy of Seattle where she is using soil environmental DNA to develop a biodiversity census of Ellsworth Forest to compare species diversity across management treatments over the past 10 years.  Check out her amazing research and engagement both inside and outside the lab, including her work as founder of #BlackinMarineScience!

Jan 26, 202151:22
Episode 6: Dr. Britt Wray

Episode 6: Dr. Britt Wray

Welcome Dr. Britt Wray, the 6th guest on SustainaBold! We had an engaging conversation around different mechanisms to enable internal activism or emotional intelligence especially around the climate and greater ecological crisis. We also discussed how her interdisciplinary background informs her approach and writing. One of my favorite insights from the conversation is that finding others that you can connect with over these emotions is a strengthening and empowering mechanism for dealing with uncertainty. Get ready for a deep dive!

Britt Wray, PhD is a broadcaster and author researching the social and ethical entanglements of science and technology, with a focus on the planetary health crisis and synthetic biology. Britt has a PhD in science communication from the University of Copenhagen and is the author of Rise of the Necrofauna: The Science, Ethics and Risks of De-Extinction (Greystone Books 2017). She has hosted several podcasts, radio & TV programs with the BBC and CBC, and is a TED Resident. Currently, Britt is writing a book about the mental health impacts of the climate and wider eco-crisis, which will be published by Knopf-Random House. Check out her newsletter on this (Gen Dread)! It’s a wonderful resource for us all.

Links:

  • Visit her website: https://www.brittwray.com/
  • Subscribe to her newsletter, Gen Dread: https://gendread.substack.com/
  • Follow her on Twitter: https://twitter.com/brittwray

Articles we discussed from her newsletter:

  • What's wrong with the term "climate anxiety"? https://gendread.substack.com/p/whats-wrong-with-the-term-climate
  • Why activism isn’t *really* the cure for eco-anxiety and eco-grief: https://gendread.substack.com/p/why-activism-isnt-really-the-cure
  • The power of meaning-focused coping: https://gendread.substack.com/p/the-power-of-meaning-focused-coping
  • Caroline Hickman’s work: https://www.carolinehickmantherapy.com/
  • Renee Lertzman’s work: https://reneelertzman.com/
Nov 08, 202055:39
Episode 5: Meg Ruttan Walker
Oct 03, 202043:40
Episode 4: Jacqueline Lim

Episode 4: Jacqueline Lim

In this episode, I invited Jacqueline Lim, who is an advisor, facilitator and coach working with individuals and organisations to think and operate more at the systems level, and is passionate about unleashing potential for creating positive change in the world. She specializes in designing strategies and programs for deeper awareness, connection and impact, and is adept on topics ranging from sensemaking in complexity, business models for systems change, and systems leadership. Follow her on Twitter here. 

She leads on the Collective Impact program at She Leads Change - a community and movement of wholehearted leaders co-creating a better future for all. She is also actively part of the project team at Liminal - a collective intelligence community - working with organisations including the Newton Fund (UK) and the Technology Innovation Agency (South Africa).

The next She Leads Change Leading Collective Impact programme begins on 23 September, and is themed on diversity, inclusion and equity. If you are looking for a safe, peer-based place to learn how to enable a more systemic, multi-stakeholder response to challenges related to this theme, and grow in confidence, purpose and authenticity as a leader leading collective change - this programme might be for you. Find out more about the programme here. Women (and their colleagues) are welcome to apply.

As an independent advisor, Jacqueline has collaborated and worked with organisations including SustainAzores, the Finance Innovation Lab, B Lab Europe and Apolitical. She is also part of the Expert Group on SDG Investments in Cities convened by the UN Global Compact and the OECD.

Her experience includes 7 years in the Singapore Government where Jacqueline was a Government Scholar and worked on social policy, and a further 8 years at Volans, an acclaimed London-based think tank and advisory firm operating at the forefront of sustainable development led by John Elkington. There, she worked directly with Fortune 500 companies to pioneer sustainable approaches to innovation and value creation, and led numerous multi-sector initiatives involving business, innovative start-ups and city officials - including with the UN Global Compact and Innovate UK.

Jacqueline has written for Fast Company and other publications and speaks regularly at global conferences. She is trained in methodologies including the Three Horizons model by the International Futures Forum, and is a trained “Organisational and Relationship Systems” coach. She holds an MBA from the Judge Business School at the University of Cambridge.

Sep 03, 202042:50
Episode 3: Dr. Weslynne Ashton

Episode 3: Dr. Weslynne Ashton

Welcome to the third episode of the Sustainabold podcast! Today, I invited Dr. Weslynne Ashton to the show. She's an associate professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology with joint appointments at the Stuart School of Business and the Institute of Design.

Professor Ashton is a sustainable systems scientist whose research teaching and practice are oriented around transitioning our socioecological systems towards sustainability and equity.  Her research has grounded in industrial ecology and circular economy. Her current work focuses on increasing sustainability and equity in urban food systems and developing regenerative economies and post-industrial regions, emerging economies and small island states.

She has a bachelor's degree in environmental engineering, from MIT and masters and doctoral degrees in environmental science from Yale university. We talked about her approach to research and community focus, sustainability as care and solutions to address growing weaknesses of our current economic system, both professionally and personally. Hope you enjoy the show!

Aug 12, 202058:50
Episode 2: Dr. Cle-Anne Gabriel

Episode 2: Dr. Cle-Anne Gabriel

Welcome to the second episode of the SustainaBold podcast!

I invited Dr. Cle-Anne Gabriel to the show, a lecturer/assistant professor at the University of Queensland in Australia, who studies sustainability and business with emphases on renewable energy and degrowth.

Cle-Anne is a Lecturer within the Strategy Discipline, and UQ Business School's Director for the United Nations Principles for Responsible Management Education (UN PRME). She is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (SFHEA), an award-winning educator, a Paul R. Lawrence Fellow and a Director of the North American Case Research Association (NACRA).

Cle-Anne researches in the areas of sustainable development and post-growth futures, renewable energy enterprise and business models for sustainability. She is a sustainable development specialist who has worked on projects and assignments funded by organisations such as Australian Aid (AusAID), the European Union (EU) and New Zealand's Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE). She designed and delivered an Energy Baseline Study for the city of Dunedin in New Zealand and provided policy advice on the city's Energy Plan and the lead-up to its accession to the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy.

Please visit her website and Twitter here!

Aug 05, 202056:45
Episode 1: Imari Walker
Jul 22, 202051:55
Welcome to SustainaBold! (Trailer)

Welcome to SustainaBold! (Trailer)

This episode is a trailer for the podcast. See you soon! 


Transcript:  Welcome to Sustainabold, an upcoming podcast on sustainability from an interdisciplinary perspective. I'm Rosalie, and I'll be mostly bringing in insights from Earth and Environmental Science and business management, which my education is rooted in, in addition to a mix of other social sciences to provide a holistic view of emergent theories and practices exhibited by both individuals and organizations. If you're interested in sustainability from a perspective like this, I welcome you to join me on this journey. Rather than only taking up space, I also plan to use this podcast to elevate Black voices, talk about intersectionalism, and share resources with one another on other related movements like abolition for those that are interested. Since I've been feverishly rewatching Avatar and Legend of Korra, I can't get the concept of balance out of my head. Balance in reference to both the individual and the world. Guru Pathik to Aang. You must gain balance within yourself before you can bring balance to the world. Iroh tells the same thing to Zuko all the time, as he has trouble finding his purpose. In these moments, I feel exactly like Zuko when he meets up with Aang and the rest of the group — as if I know I'm on the right side of history, but haven't found my place within that side yet. This extended analogy is really just to say that I want this podcast to help myself and others think through and brainstorm how to achieve sustainability in a meaningful way that doesn't alienate others in the process. We can't have a sustainable society without a society to flourish. I hope you join me in learning and engaging about sustainability so we can move forward from a similar starting point. Thanks for listening, and I'll see you soon!

Jun 21, 202002:01