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Publications
2023
Solving water challenges is complex – learn how law, health, climate and Indigenous rights all intersect in developing solutions
Stop the Deforestation Express
Gender and social inclusion in community water resource management: Lessons from two districts in the Himalayan foothills and the Terai in Nepal
The contribution of physical exertion to heat-related illness and death in the Arizona borderlands
Addressing structural hurdles for metadata extraction from environmental impact statements
The Conversation on Water
Development of a Geographic Human Heat Balance Equation to Support Public Health Analyses: An Arizona Urban Sun Corridor application
Creating Cool and Resilient Communities: Integrating Plans for Urban Heat Mitigation
Why Economic Justice for Indigenous Groups is Vital to Saving Endangered Species
How do streetcar transit users and streetcar decision-makers perceive heat risk?
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2021
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2020
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For Archival Publications, click years to expand content.
Barter's award-winning essay, "Defining the Necessary Role and Appropriate Level of Risk in Helicopter-Accessed Wilderness Skiing," was chosen by faculty reviewers as the best submission in this year's competition.
The Fisher Prize, established through an initial endowment by former Pima County Superior Court Judge Lillian S. Fisher, is awarded annually by the Udall Center to a student in the UA law college or to a UA graduate student for an essay addressing an environmental law or public policy topic. The competition is judged each year by faculty in the law college.
Since 1997, the Udall Center has awarded the Fisher Prize to 25 UA students. The Center publishes selected prize-winning papers in its monograph series.
Native Nations and U.S. Borders: Challenges to Indigenous Culture, Citizenship, and Security
Starks, Rachel Rose, Jen McCormack, Stephen Cornell. 2011. Native Nations and U.S. Borders: Challenges to Indigenous Culture, Citizenship, and Security. Tucson, AZ: Udall Center Publications.
Transboundary Ecosystem Services - A New Vision for Managing the Shared Environment of the U.S. and Mexico
Suggests a novel approach to the management of the U.S.-Mexico transboundary environment, framing the conservation of the natural resources shared by the two countries in terms of shared ecosystem services and presenting three cases as examples.
Science and socio-ecological sustainability: Examples from the Arizona-Sonora border
Morehouse, B., D. Ferguson, G. Owen, A. Browning-Aiken, P. Wong-Gonzales, N. Pineda, M. Wilder, and R.G. Varady. 2008. Science and socio-ecological sustainability: Examples from the Arizona-Sonora border. Environmental Science and Policy, 11(3):272-84.
Climate, Water Management, and Policy in the San Pedro Basin: Results of a Survey of Mexican Stakeholders near the U.S.-Mexico Border
Browning-Aiken, A., B. Morehouse, A. Davis, M. Wilder, R. Varady, D. Goodrich, R. Carter, D. Moreno, and E. Dellinger McGovern. 2007. Climate, water management, and policy in the San Pedro Basin: Results of a survey of Mexican stakeholders near the U.S.-Mexico border. Climatic Change 85(3-4):323-41.