Events
Check out our calendar of events and participate in our seminars, public lectures and more.
Come along and support our Fenner Honours and Masters students and hear about all the exciting research taking place at the Fenner School.
Buildings are both a major contributor to climate change and highly vulnerable to its impacts. This seminar explores the relationship between buildings and climate change, focusing on energy use, material demand, carbon emissions, and climate-related risks. The talk will discuss how the building sector can contribute to mitigation and adaptation, and highlight pathways towards more sustainable, resilient, and low-carbon-built environments.
Past events
The Fenner School HDR Cohort invite you to join our HDR Shut Up and Write sessions!
The Fenner School HDR Cohort invite you to join our HDR Shut Up and Write sessions!
The Fenner School HDR Cohort invite you to join our HDR Shut Up and Write sessions!
This talk introduces a new Risk, Reward and Resilience Framework (RRR) that synthesizes and integrates insights from diverse disciplines and domains.
In this seminar, Prof Tiffany Knight presents her research into plant-pollinator interactions and ecosystems, and discuss the various challenges, solutions, and nuanced imperfections presented in contemporary approaches to capturing the complexities of pollinator biodiversity.
In this seminar, Dr Anoulak will draw on his extensive experience to reflect on what sustainable management of the Mekong River will mean in a globalising world.
Australia is the second largest sheep producing country globally and lamb and mutton production is the second largest meat industry within Australia. Yet Australians eat very little mutton or offal. Kate Wingett investigates.
The Fenner School is back for another year of wall-to-wall Environment and Society, and you’re invited to eat a classic Fenner spread.
Join Dr Suraj Upadhaya as he explores how he has come to understand farmers’ individual social and economic motivations and their farms’ biophysical and economic characteristics influence their behaviors, in order to promote adoption of conservation practices.