As citizens of an increasingly globalized society our actions impact not only our own community, but people around the globe. Similarly, the issues facing people on the other side of the world affect us here at home. In this interconnected world it is our responsibility to remain informed, and engaged so that we can shape a brighter future, not just for ourselves, but for all the world.

In recognition of our responsibilities as global citizens, Global Awareness Week seeks to start a dialogue within the Santa Barbara community on issues that have a global impact, and to empower people to engage these issues on a local level.

Monday, March 12, 2012

The Shape of Water

Wednesday, April 11th, 5:30-8:00
North Hall 1006

THE SHAPE OF WATER (narrator: Susan Sarandon; narration co-written by Edwidge Danticat) interweaves intimate stories and compelling footage of Khady, Oraiza, Bilkusben, Dona Antonia, Gila - living in Senegal, Brazil, India, and Jerusalem. The women:
  • spearhead rainforest preservation (rubber-tappers in Brazilian rainforest);
  • sustain a co-operative of 700,000 rural women (world's largest trades union, India);
  • promote an end to female genital cutting (women abandoning this practice, Senegal);
  • oppose war and the occupation of Palestine (Women In Black, Jerusalem);
  • maintain Navdanya farm (Himalayan foothills) to further biodiversity and women's role as seed keepers
THE SHAPE OF WATER offers fresh insights into the complex realities and passions of these unsung visionaries creating a more just world.                                                                                                                                                                           Kum-Kum Bhavnani is Professor of Sociology. Her research interest lie within development, feminist and cultural studies. She has published a number of books and articules including Taling Politics (1991, Cambridge University Press), Shifting Identities Shifting Racisms (Sage 1994: co-edited with An Phoenix), Feminism and 'Race' (2001, Osford Univesity Press) and Feminist Futures (Zed 2003: co-edited with Johan Foran and Priya Kurian). In 2006 she completed a feature documentary film, THE SHAPE OF WATER (narrated by Susan Sarandon) which took four years to complete and spans three continents. Her newest film NOTHING LIKE CHOCOLATE premiered in 2012 at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Dirty Energy

Thursday, April 12th, 8:00-9:30pm

IV Theater 2

On April 20th, 2010, the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded off the Gulf of Mexico taking the lives of 11 workers and sank as millions of barrels of oil poured into the ocean creating one of the worst environmental disasters in history. Dirty Energy tells the personal story of those directly affected by the spill who now struggle to rebuild their lives amidst the economic devastation and long-term health risks. A story too often glossed over by the mainstream media and ignored by those sent to Washington to represent the will of the people, not the corporations.

The fate of the Gulf region and its inhabitants is largely unknown. The systematic failures of BP and the Federal Government to properly confront this environmental calamity with honesty and integrity have had powerful consequences. Sadly the human cost has been greatly underestimated and hidden from the public. Still today, the people of the Gulf are fighting to preserve their endangered way of life. This is their story.

For more information visit http://www.dirtyenergymovie.com/



Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Solutions for a Cultivated Planet

Christian Balzer
Tuesday, April 10th, 5:30 - 6:30
IV Theater 2

Global food demand is expected to double by the year 2050, when the global human population will have reached 9-10 billion people and the average person will be more wealthy and demand more food than today. Meeting this immense food demand will have dire environmental implications - unless agriculture is intensified in sustainable ways. Negative environmental effects of agricultural development include deforestation, loss of biodiversity, greenhouse gas emissions from land clearing, transport, and fertilizer application, and groundwater pollution. Recent research has shown that it is possible to feed the world in 2050 while greatly reducing these factors, by following five guidelines: 1) Stop agricultural expansion in tropical rainforests, 2) close "yield gaps" on underperforming croplands through agricultural intensification, 3) use fertilizers and other "inputs" more strategically, 4) shift diets towards less meat and dairy and more plant protein, and 5) reduce food waste. 

Christian Balzer was born in Providence, RI, and grew up in Weinheim, Germany. He studied Physics, Mathematics and Biology at the University of Heidelberg, Germany, then transferred to St. Olaf College in Northfield, MN where he graduated with a B.A. in Biology and Environmental Studies in 2008. He then spent one year working as a researcher at the University of Minnesota with Dr. David Tilman. During this time, he conducted research on global agricultural trends and their environmental and economic implications. This work has resulted in two papers that he has co-authored: Solutions for a Cultivated Planet, which was published in the journal Nature in October 2011, and Global food demand and the sustainable intensification of agriculture, which was published in the journal PNAS in December 2011. He is currently a third year Ph.D. student in the department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology at UCSB. When he is not doing research, Christian enjoys surfing, hiking, snowboarding, backpacking and playing the guitar.

Worldhealer, the organization, it's global mission and goals.


Roxana Bonderson
Friday, April 13th, 5:30 – 6:30
IV Theater 2

Learn about the innovative emerging nonprofit called Worldhealer, sponsoring UCSB’s Global Awareness Club, supporting interns to create their own programs, one of which is Global Awareness Week.  Worldhealer was founded by young Santa Barbara local Roxana Bonderson, whose vision starts in Santa Barbara and encompasses the entire globe. She will talk about surprising facts about true poverty and the extreme socio-economic divide in Brazil, how urban favelas differ from those in smaller, developing communities, and Worldhealer’s approach to creating systemic change within the community. Worldhealer’s comprehensive global program, called the Studio, is a reproducible model similar to a community center, which offers supplemental education and nutrition to school children, vocational programs to adults, incentive programs, and improvements to the living environment. These efforts aim to increase the opportunities for all members of the Studio Program to become competitive participants in an increasingly globalized world, while uniting deeply stratified communities across geographic and socio-economic boundaries.

Roxana F. Bonderson is an active member of the humanitarian community as the author and designer of several non-profit proposals for development projects within emerging countries. Along with two degrees in architecture, she is specialized in urban design and global studies with an emphasis in sustainable development, global management, marketing and intercultural communications. She speaks English, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, and Farsi. Beginning in her undergraduate years, Roxana took every opportunity to travel extensively on her own, as well as studying abroad and work in Italy, Germany, Cuba and Brazil.  In the course of these experiences, she impressed upon herself not only how fortunate we all are to live in the United States but how astounding it is that such masses of humanity elsewhere continue to live in poverty due to the simple lack of opportunity or support.  Being educated as an architect, she also took careful notice of how the living environment and urban fabric of a place can affect the inhabitants. Being trained as an educator, she observed how the lack of schooling narrows the horizon of an individual’s ability to dream of better things. All of these experiences added to her growing need to make an impact on the lives and environments of those who do not have as much as we do and has led to the creation of her nonprofit organization, Worldhealer, Inc.