Using Maps to Accelerate Social Movements and Reclaim Place
Start Date
5-20-2017 10:15 AM
End Date
5-20-2017 11:00 AM
Subjects
Social movements, Indian reservations -- Missouri River Watershed -- Maps, Urban areas -- Missouri River Watershed -- Maps
Description
Jennifer Veilleux is a geographer focused on the water security of international rivers. Jennifer earned her Ph.D. in Geography from Oregon State University. She has a background in surface and subsurface water science and has researched, published, and lectured on threats to humans and the environment from water development in the Nile, Mekong, Missouri, among other basins throughout the world. In addition to scholarship, Veilleux uses maps, infographics, and satellite imagery through social media to highlight spatial relationships of environmental justice and human rights issues as relates to water.
As a Postdoctoral Associate with the Steven J. Green School of International and Public Affairs at Florida International University, Jennifer does research and analysis of the hydropolitics of some of the world’s major rivers.
Persistent Identifier
http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/21083
Median Income for Native American Households by County within the Missouri River Basin
DAPLRouteTribalLand (1).jpg (1269 kB)
Missouri River Basin Contemporary Tribal Land and the Proposed Oil Pipeline
DAPLRouteTribalLandCloseup (2).jpg (2990 kB)
Missouri River Basin Contemporary Tribal Land and the Proposed Oil Pipeline - Closeup
PCT_AIAN_2 (1) (1).jpg (2275 kB)
Percentage of Native Americans by County within Missouri River Basin
Unemployment_Basin_na_4 (1).jpg (2339 kB)
Percentage by County of Unemployed Native Americans 16 and Older in the Missouri River Basin
UrbanAreas_2 (1).jpg (2621 kB)
Urban Areas within the Missouri River Basin
10kLess_standalone_1 (1).jpg (2546 kB)
Percentage by County of Native American Households Earning Less Than $10,000 in the Missouri River Basin
25kless_standalone (1) (1).jpg (2568 kB)
Percentage by County of Native American Households Earning Less Than $25,000 in the Missouri River Basin
Using Maps to Accelerate Social Movements and Reclaim Place
Jennifer Veilleux is a geographer focused on the water security of international rivers. Jennifer earned her Ph.D. in Geography from Oregon State University. She has a background in surface and subsurface water science and has researched, published, and lectured on threats to humans and the environment from water development in the Nile, Mekong, Missouri, among other basins throughout the world. In addition to scholarship, Veilleux uses maps, infographics, and satellite imagery through social media to highlight spatial relationships of environmental justice and human rights issues as relates to water.
As a Postdoctoral Associate with the Steven J. Green School of International and Public Affairs at Florida International University, Jennifer does research and analysis of the hydropolitics of some of the world’s major rivers.
Comments
Maps are located below in the Additional Files section