UA Environmental Faculty in the News

August 23, 2009
The Washington Post

UA law professor Robert Glennon's op-ed "Our Water Supply, Down the Drain" appeared in the Aug. 23 edition of the Washington Post.

August 10, 2009
Institute of the Environment

Diana Liverman, co-director of the UA Institute of the Environment, appeared this week on Arizona Illustrated, speaking about a recent Oxfam International report that concludes poor countries have a much harder time adapting to climate change.

August 9, 2009
Arizona Republic

UA law professor Robert Glennon writes that one must first understand the value of water in Arizona to understand its future and urges careful stewardship of water to ensure a bright future for generations to come.

August 5, 2009
ABQ Journal.com

Paul Robbins, a professor of geography at the University of Arizona in Tucson, is a student of our lawns, and the social and institutional structures we have built around them.

July 20, 2009
KVOA.com

Three UA researchers are going to get an award for their analysis on the uncertainty in managing the water supply in the Colorado River Basin.

July 20, 2009
KTAR.com

Three UA researchers are going to get an award for their analysis on the uncertainty in managing the water supply in the Colorado River Basin.

July 17, 2009
The Daily Show

UA Law Professor Robert Glennon discusses his book, "Unquenchable: America’s water crisis and what to do about it," on "The Daily Show."

July 14, 2009
UA News

UA law professor Robert Glennon, who has spoken throughout the nation about his newly published book, "Unquenchable," will be interviewed this week by "The Daily Show."

July 7, 2009
Arizona Daily Star

The nations most enriched by energy-driven economies will be the least affected by the climate change their consumption causes, according to a report released Monday by the humanitarian group Oxfam International.

July 2, 2009
Science Daily

Jon Pelletier demonstrates that as the global climate system cooled, the fraction of total river discharge derived from snowmelt increased significantly. The result was a huge increase in the magnitude and frequency of highly erosive floods.