Monday, October 7, 2024

Members in the News: October 7, 2024

Craig Landry, University of Georgia

Thousands of Uninsured Homes Were in Helene’s Path

By: The Washington Post – October 3, 2024

“It’s something people don’t want to think about. People have an optimistic perception of disaster assistance, in reality, it’s not that generous.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: The Washington Post


Sean Cash, Tufts University

When the Dollar Store Closes, US Families on Food Benefits Lose a Lifeline

By: Reuters – September 29, 2024

"In these neighborhoods, it's removing a place where people are shopping, where they've been buying more food than ever before. This is going to make food access harder."

(Continued...)
Read more on: Reuters


Madhu Khanna, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Former U of I Student Gives 10 Million For New Science Center

By: WCIA – September 26, 2024

“This is actually a great opportunity. This is an emerging area of research. And this funding enables us to be really the first in the country to establish such a center and to lead in this effort of developing both the technology as well as thinking about how to scale up that technology.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: WCIA


Brittney Goodrich, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

  • Covercrops that Attract Bees Are a Good Choice
    By: Ag Info – September 19, 2024
  • The Economic of Cover Crops
    By: Ag Info – September 24, 2024

Amitrajeet Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology

The Decision Supermarkets Face With Perishable Food

By: Rochester Beacon  - October 2, 2024

“The sad reality is that even though millions of American households struggle to put food on the table, as food moves from producers to factories, to retailers, and ultimately to consumers, approximately 40 percent of it is thrown out. This is not entirely a matter of carelessness. There are many logistical challenges to confront because food, being perishable, is difficult to transport and distribute safely.”


Read more on: Rochester Beacon 


David Ortega, Michigan State University
Amy Hagerman,
Oklahoma State University

Why the Price of Eggs is on the Rise Again

By: NPR – September 28, 2024

“Farmers must take “precautionary measures in the operations. And when an outbreak is acting quickly, that is really necessary ... to prevent this from spreading to nearby operations.”

“Table egg-laying chickens seem particularly susceptible to HPAI, likely because the virus can spread quickly in their close quarters. Table egg-layer facilities tend to be very large, and so you can lose a million or 2 million birds on a single facility, because this is a highly contagious virus.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: NPR


Uma Lele, Institute of Economic Growth

Who’s Who of Distinguished Leaders 2024 Honoree

By: WSJ – September 29, 2024

(Continued...)
Read more on: WSJ


Joseph Balagtas, Purdue University

Survey Shines Light on Regenerative Ag, Food Affordability

By: Agrinews – September 29, 2024

“This reveals an opportunity for producers and industry leaders interested in expanding regenerative agriculture practices in their operations to clearly communicate to consumers what regenerative agriculture means to their operations.”

(Continued...)
Read more on: Agrinews

Monday, September 30, 2024

NCCC-134 Call for paper proposals

The NCCC-134 Multi-state Research Coordinating Committee on Applied Commodity Price Analysis, Forecasting, and Market Risk Management invites paper proposals for presentation at its upcoming conference to be held April 14-15, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. We are excited to bring this conference back to Chicago, a hub of global commodities trading, for the first time since 2007. 

We encourage paper proposals on all aspects of commodity price analysis and risk management, especially those related to agricultural commodities and agribusiness risk management. Proposed papers should emphasize applied research. The deadline for submissions is November 22, 2024. The Committee will notify all submitting authors of their decision by January 2025.  One author must be registered for the meeting by February 1, 2025. Completed papers are due on June 1, 2025 for posting in the NCCC-134 paper archive. 

Full instructions on how to submit a proposal, including format and a sample proposal, plus other information about the 2025 conference can be found on the updated NCCC-134 website. Venue and hotel details will be posted soon. Questions about paper proposal submissions can be directed to NCCC-134 co-chair Andres Trujillo-Barrera. Questions about meeting logistics can be directed to NCCC-134 co-chair Joe Janzen.

Please share this call widely and encourage your colleagues, collaborators, and graduate students to submit and attend the conference. More information on how to connect with NCCC-134 can be found on our website.

See you in Chicago in 2025!

Joe Janzen, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Andres Trujillo-Barrera, University of Idaho

NCCC-134 co-chairs

Gund Institute for Environment: Funded PhD Opportunities

The Gund Institute for Environment at the University of Vermont (UVM) seeks exceptional PhD applicants to conduct interdisciplinary research on global environmental challenges beginning in fall 2025. Applications are due January 5, 2025.

The Gund Institute is a research center dedicated to understanding and tackling the world’s most critical environmental challenges, where over 250 faculty, global affiliates, postdocs, and graduate students collaborate widely to understand interactions among ecological, social, and economic systems.

Driven by the belief that research should inspire action, we explore environmental issues at the interface of five pressing research themes—climate solutions, health and well-being, sustainable agriculture, resilient communities, and equity and justice—in partnership with government, industry, and broader society.

We are committed to ensuring an inclusive environment where diverse voices and perspectives are active and welcome. We encourage applicants who bring diverse perspectives to our community.

Students will receive up to four years of funding, including an annual stipend of $35,000, plus tuition. All students are eligible for health insurance and additional funds for conference travel and research costs.

For more details and application instructions, explore uvm.edu/gund/gund-phd-research-fellowships.

QUESTIONS?

Contact Julianna White at julianna.m.white@uvm.edu