The document provides a summary for Kelly A. Bryan including her contact information and professional experience. She has over 7 years of experience in executive administration and customer service. Her current role since 2010 is as an Executive Assistant where she manages calendars, coordinates projects and meetings, assists with sponsor recruitment, and acts as a liaison between the Executive Director and sponsors. Previously from 2007 to 2010, she worked as a Program Director and Weight Loss Consultant at Jenny Craig where she provided counseling, education, and support to clients to help them achieve their weight loss and nutrition goals.
Introduction to Health-Earth, "health for all on a single planet"
The modern time, since approximately the start of the Industrial Revolution, is increasingly called the “Anthropocene” the human dominated era. Humans have not only become the dominant mammal on the planet (claimed as eight times the mass of all wild terrestrial mammals) but in so doing our species has changed the atmosphere, the climate, many ecosystems and the location, distribution and composition of part of the Earth’s crust, from gold to oil and other fossil fuels. Humans are now a geological force, for good or ill. What does this all mean for human health, both now and in the future?
“Health-Earth” (H-earth) is a global network (nine research groups, six countries and one UN University) of interdisciplinary public health scientists, established in 2014, that seeks to advance the understanding of these complex and interlinked issues in the context of global health. A symposium on this topic, with five speakers from four countries, has been accepted for the 27th conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology (ISEE), to be held in Sao Paulo, Brazil in September.
The symposium seeks to position the interaction between the changing Earth system and human health within the legitimate scope of environmental epidemiology and public health more broadly. The problems of the Anthropocene, created by our species, are potentially solvable. This is an important, conceptual and scientific challenge for public health, the whole scientific community, and, for all of society. These challenges include but extend beyond that of global anthropogenic climate change, beyond our generation, and even this century.
Bio
Prof Colin D Butler graduated in medicine in 1987 from the University of Newcastle and has three postgraduate qualifications relevant to public health, including a PhD from the ANU (2002). In 1989 he co-founded the NGO BODHI. He is a former ARC Future Fellow (2011-2015) and is sole editor of Climate Change and Global Health (CABI 2014) and lead editor of Health of People, Places and Planet. Reflections based on Tony McMichael’s four decades of contribution to epidemiological understanding (ANU Press, forthcoming). He contributed to the health chapter of the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and was a co-ordinating lead author for the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, including its conceptual framework. He has to date given 67 invited talks overseas, in 16 countries. In 2009 he was named “one of a hundred doctors for the planet”, by the French Environmental Health Association, in the lead up to the Copenhagen climate conference. In 2014 Colin was arrested in NSW for protesting what he calls “Australia’s coal frenzy”. In the same year he co-founded Health-Earth. He has worked at UC since 2012.
El gigantesco ojo cósmico de China llamado a ser el telescopio más grande del mundo finalizada su construcción. Investigación de los orígenes del universo y búsqueda de vida extraterrestre en otros planetas.
Este documento presenta una descripción de los diferentes tipos de derechos humanos, incluyendo derechos individuales, sociales y de los pueblos o naciones. También enumera 10 derechos fundamentales de los niños y las niñas, como el derecho a la no discriminación, a una seguridad social, a un nombre y nacionalidad, a la alimentación, vivienda, recreo y servicios médicos, y a la educación y protección.
The document provides a summary for Kelly A. Bryan including her contact information and professional experience. She has over 7 years of experience in executive administration and customer service. Her current role since 2010 is as an Executive Assistant where she manages calendars, coordinates projects and meetings, assists with sponsor recruitment, and acts as a liaison between the Executive Director and sponsors. Previously from 2007 to 2010, she worked as a Program Director and Weight Loss Consultant at Jenny Craig where she provided counseling, education, and support to clients to help them achieve their weight loss and nutrition goals.
Introduction to Health-Earth, "health for all on a single planet"
The modern time, since approximately the start of the Industrial Revolution, is increasingly called the “Anthropocene” the human dominated era. Humans have not only become the dominant mammal on the planet (claimed as eight times the mass of all wild terrestrial mammals) but in so doing our species has changed the atmosphere, the climate, many ecosystems and the location, distribution and composition of part of the Earth’s crust, from gold to oil and other fossil fuels. Humans are now a geological force, for good or ill. What does this all mean for human health, both now and in the future?
“Health-Earth” (H-earth) is a global network (nine research groups, six countries and one UN University) of interdisciplinary public health scientists, established in 2014, that seeks to advance the understanding of these complex and interlinked issues in the context of global health. A symposium on this topic, with five speakers from four countries, has been accepted for the 27th conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology (ISEE), to be held in Sao Paulo, Brazil in September.
The symposium seeks to position the interaction between the changing Earth system and human health within the legitimate scope of environmental epidemiology and public health more broadly. The problems of the Anthropocene, created by our species, are potentially solvable. This is an important, conceptual and scientific challenge for public health, the whole scientific community, and, for all of society. These challenges include but extend beyond that of global anthropogenic climate change, beyond our generation, and even this century.
Bio
Prof Colin D Butler graduated in medicine in 1987 from the University of Newcastle and has three postgraduate qualifications relevant to public health, including a PhD from the ANU (2002). In 1989 he co-founded the NGO BODHI. He is a former ARC Future Fellow (2011-2015) and is sole editor of Climate Change and Global Health (CABI 2014) and lead editor of Health of People, Places and Planet. Reflections based on Tony McMichael’s four decades of contribution to epidemiological understanding (ANU Press, forthcoming). He contributed to the health chapter of the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and was a co-ordinating lead author for the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, including its conceptual framework. He has to date given 67 invited talks overseas, in 16 countries. In 2009 he was named “one of a hundred doctors for the planet”, by the French Environmental Health Association, in the lead up to the Copenhagen climate conference. In 2014 Colin was arrested in NSW for protesting what he calls “Australia’s coal frenzy”. In the same year he co-founded Health-Earth. He has worked at UC since 2012.
El gigantesco ojo cósmico de China llamado a ser el telescopio más grande del mundo finalizada su construcción. Investigación de los orígenes del universo y búsqueda de vida extraterrestre en otros planetas.
Este documento presenta una descripción de los diferentes tipos de derechos humanos, incluyendo derechos individuales, sociales y de los pueblos o naciones. También enumera 10 derechos fundamentales de los niños y las niñas, como el derecho a la no discriminación, a una seguridad social, a un nombre y nacionalidad, a la alimentación, vivienda, recreo y servicios médicos, y a la educación y protección.
Обращение к губернатору, работа PR-агентства Inmar Relationsdolgovaigrigorievorg
This document is a letter addressed to the Governor of Novosibirsk Oblast from the collective farms "Novopokrovskoye", "Novonikolskoye", and "Zayur'evskoye" in Ordinsky District. It summarizes the farms' current financial difficulties and requests the governor's assistance. Specifically, it notes that the farms have been struggling financially but have maintained production without investment. However, a new management group led by Mr. Maesky is now attempting to isolate the farms' leadership and seize their assets. The letter warns that this poses a real threat to the social stability and economy of the region. It asks the governor to use his authority to protect the farms
Обращение к губернатору, работа PR-агентства Inmar Relationsdolgovaigrigorievorg
This document is a letter addressed to the Governor of Novosibirsk Oblast from the collective farms "Novopokrovskoye", "Novonikolskoye", and "Zayur'evskoye" in Ordinsky District. It summarizes the farms' current financial difficulties and requests the governor's assistance. Specifically, it notes that the farms have been struggling financially but have maintained production without investment. However, a new management group led by Mr. Maesky is now attempting to isolate the farms' leadership and seize their assets. The letter warns that this poses a real threat to the social stability and economy of the region. It asks the governor to use his authority to protect the farms