Emily Yeh

  • Emily Yeh
    Congratulations to Emily Yeh, Geography Department Chair!  She was notified by Scott Adler, Dean of the Graduate School and Vice Provost for Graduate Affairs that she has been chosen as a 
  • 2020 Spring Newsletter cover of laptop with photo of coronavirus
    The 2020 Spring Newsletter has been published and is available for viewing. The newsletter is filled with department news, alumni updates, and articles by faculty and students.  Contents:
  • 2019 Fall Newsletter Cover
    The 2019 Fall Newsletter has been published and is available for viewing. The newsletter is packed with department news, alumni updates, and articles by faculty and students.  Contents: Message from the
  • Tibetan plateau with mountains vista and grassland
    by Kelly Hopping & Emily YehThe Tibetan Plateau supports a vast expanse of rolling meadows and grassy steppes that are nearly 3 miles (4,500 meters or 14,700 feet), on average, above sea level. Well above the tree line, these alpine ecosystems
  • 2018 Spring newsletter cover with the table of contents
    The 2018 Spring Newsletter has been published and is available for viewing. The newsletter is packed with department news, student and faculty articles, and Emily Yeh's final "Message from the Chair" article. Articles
  • Asia image from a rug or textile artwork
    Center for Asian Studies wins three-year grant from Henry Luce Foundation to conduct trans-Pacific studies in ‘lively research field’ (article by Clint Talbot)As the United States steps back from international development, China is launching huge
  • Emily Yeh
    A special Alumni Event to feature and celebrate the work of the Geography department was held on Friday Oct 27 in IBS 155. The event was well-attended by alumni, current students, faculty, staff, and members
  • Emily Yeh in foreground with Tibetan landscape and prayer flags on the ground behind her.
    Emily at Chaktsalgang, the first of four major prostration sites along the circumambulation route of Mount Kailash, Tibet, July 2016 In these unsettling times, geographical inquiry is more important than ever. Yet, in the United
  • "Encompassing South American wildfires, Arctic sea-ice retreat, post-Soviet politics, climate change in Tibet and GIS, ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓƵ Boulder geographers keep their fingers on the pulse of a changing world"A new article titled "This is not your junior-high
  • University of Colorado alumnus Yönten Nyima (PhD in Geography, 2012) and Professor Emily Yeh were cited in two recent articles in Nature and SciDev.net on the rapidly changing status of nomadism in the grasslands of the Tibetan
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