Mara Goldman

  • Maasi man watching elephants
    Mara Goldman   Associate Professor, Geography Director, Environment & Society Program, IBS University of Colorado BoulderIn Person:GUGG 205 Mar 10, 2023, 3:35 PM - 5:00 PMOr Join Zoom Meeting: Zoom login required (free account
  • Walking elephants
    On Dec. 19, more than 190 countries—excluding the U.S. and the Holy See—signed onto an agreement to protect 30% of land and oceans by 2030 and take 22 other measures to reduce global biodiversity loss this decade. The agreement, signed at
  • Police cars in front of King Soopers grocery store
    Gun violence: Squarely hitting home When the regularity of gun violence in American comes to our own neighborhood, or to that of someone we know, we all say that it is getting “too close to home.”So, when the latest “mass
  • 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:
  • 2018 Fall Newsletter Cover
    The 2018 Fall Newsletter has been published and is available for viewing. The newsletter is packed with department news, alumni updates, and student and faculty articles.  Contents: Bill Travis: Message from the
  • Elephants passing by African field with African onlookers
    ‘The environment’ figures dominantly in our daily lives and academic pursuits—from concerns over climate change and biodiversity loss, to energy policy and agricultural development. Yet we rarely stop to consider how environmental concerns are tied
  • The story is about a reality TV show in Tanzania that showcases women’s empowerment. Goldman’s paper, written together with Jani Little (Ƶ-Boulder, IBS), is cited in the final paragraph of the story:"What Kibona is referring to—“empowerment”—is
  • To many observers, East Africa's Maasai pastoralists hunt lions for two distinct reasons: to retaliate against lions that kill livestock or to engage in a cultural rite of passage. But that binary view reflects mistranslations of Maasai terms and
  • The devastating drought of 2009 in northern Tanzania generated new coping strategies by Maasai people, suggesting that Maasai with more money and social connections are better able than their poorer, less-connected neighbors to endure extreme events
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