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Barnard Lecture Archive:
2003
Sept. 2002
Jan. 2002
2000
1999
September 12, 2003:
Science and Environmental Law: Tales from a Difficult
Marriage
Presented by Dr. Oliver A. Houck, Professor of Law at
Tulane University Law School.
Professor Houcks interests are in environmental,
natural resources, and criminal law. He has served as
a federal prosecutor in Washington, DC and, subsequently,
as General Counsel and Vice-President of the National
Wildlife Federation. He has recently served on the Boards
of Directors of the Defenders of Wildlife and the Environmental
Law Institute, the Litigation Review Board of the Environmental
Defense Fund, and two committees of the National Science
Foundation.
Professor Houck is active in legal proceedings involving
wildlife, biological diversity, coastal, and water pollution
control problems, and publishes regularly on these and
related issues. He is currently consulting on the development
of the environmental law of Cuba. His classes emphasize
relationships between ecology and law, and he regularly
takes students on field trips into coastal ecosystems,
through the Atchafalaya swamp, and other natural areas.
He has received awards as Louisianas Conservationist
of the Year, Gambit magazines New Orleanian of
the Year, and the New Orleans Young Leadership Councils
Role Model of the Year, as well as the Law Schools
Felix Frankfurter Distinguished Teacher. In 2000 and
2002, he was named a recipient of the Sumter Marks Award
for his recent publications. Professor Houck was honored
by Tulane University at the 2002 unified graduation
ceremony when he was awarded the Graduate Teaching Award.
September 17, 2002:
Poverty and Environment
Presented by Dr. Robert T. Watson, Chief Scientist and
Director, Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development,
the World Bank.
As chief scientist and director for Environmentally
and Socially Sustainable Development, Robert T. Watson
is the World Banks senior spokesperson on global
warming and climate change. Before joining the Bank
in 1996, he served three years as associate director
for environment in the Office of Science and Technology
Policy in the Executive Office of the President. In
these positions he has played a key role in the negotiation
of major global environmental conventions and has led
international scientific efforts to understand ozone
depletion, climate change and biodiversity, and to communicate
findings to policymakers.
From 1997 to 2000, Dr. Watson was director of the World
Banks environment department. In addition to his
responsibilities at the Bank, he has chaired the United
Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the
International Global Biodiversity Assessment, and the
Scientific and Technical Advisory Panel of the Global
Environment Facility. He is the current board co-chair
for the International Millennium Ecosystem Assessment,
and the co-chair of an international consultative process
on the role of agricultural S&T in reducing hunger
and improving livelihoods.
Dr. Watsons career has evolved from one focused
on laboratory research to one that encompasses a mix
of science and policy. Early in his career, he worked
for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
doing atmospheric research, and subsequently serving
in NASA management positions. He has published widely
and received many national and international awards
for his contributions to science, including the AAAS
Award for Scientific Freedom and Responsibility in 1993.
Born in the United Kingdom and now a U.S. citizen, he
received his Ph.D. in Gas Phase Chemical Kinetics from
Queen Mary College, London University, in 1973.

January, 23, 2002:
Between Traditions and Modern Challenges: Lithuanias
Natural Environment in the 21st Century
Presented by His Excellency Valdas Adamkus, President
of the Republic of Lithuania.
Note: Originally scheduled for September 12, 2001,
the Lecture was cancelled due to the September 11 terrorist
attacks. President Adamkus returned to Washington and
delivered his remarks in January 2002, through a seminar
hosted by the Washington Science Policy Alliance.
President Adamkus was born in Lithuania, and fought
for Lithuanian independence in the resistance movement
during World War II. His family emigrated to the United
States in 1949, because of the Soviet occupation of
his country. His 48 years in the U.S. included working
for more than two decades for the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency. At the time of his retirement, in
1997, he was Administrator of EPAs Great Lakes
Region. In 1997 he returned to Lithuania and one year
later was elected president.
As President, Adamkus has been widely recognized for
his efforts to bring about environmental changes in
Lithuania through economic reforms. He is working for
balanced and sustainable environmental policies, which
are central to meeting the new challenges of globalization,
re-establishment of free market relations, and rapid
transition to a post-industrial economy.
September 14, 2000:
Sustainable Development Managing Conflict
Presented by Ms. Yolanda Kakabadse, President, The World
Conservation Union.
Yolanda Kakabadse has been president of The World Conservation
Union (IUCN) since 1996. She is also the executive president
of the Foundacion Futuro Latinoamericano, a non-governmental
organization that she founded in 1993. In August of
1998 she was appointed minister of the environment for
the Republic of Ecuador, a position she held until January
2000.
Ms. Kakabadse was born in Ecuador in 1948. She studied
educational psychology at the Catholic University of
Quito. Her nexus with the environmental conservation
movement officially began in 1979, when she was appointed
executive director of Foundacion Natura. In her 11 years
there, Foundacion Natura assumed a position of leadership
in Ecuador and the international community, on issues
relating to environmental education and development
policies.
Ms. Kakabadse is a member of the board of directors
of the World Resources Institute and the board of trustees
of the Ford Foundation. She has been the recipient of
numerous awards, including the Global 500 Award of the
United Nations Environment Program and The Golden Ark
Order, bestowed by Prince Bernard of The Netherlands.
September 2, 1999:
Managing Environmental Risks A View from the
Other End of the World
Presented by the Honorable Simon Upton, Minister of
the Environment, New Zealand.
The Hon. Simon Upton is New Zealands Minister
of the Environment and Associate Minister of Foreign
Affairs and Trade. He also holds the portfolio of Minister
of State Sciences. He has been a Member of Parliament
for the National Party since he was first elected in
1981, at age 23.
Mr. Upton has traveled widely to speak about environmental
issues, including climate change, biodiversity, and
both urban and rural sustainable development. He is
active in the international environmental community,
participating in a range of global issues. He was chairman
of the seventh session of the United Nations Commission
on Sustainable Development, and in 1997 led New Zealands
delegation to the Kyoto Protocol negotiations. He is
a syndicated columnist and author of The Withering State.
He has a keen interest in environment and science policy.
Mr. Upton has degrees in English and Law from the University
of Auckland, and a M.Litt. in political philosophy from
Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar.

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