Robert L. Ryan, who earned master of landscape architecture (1995) and doctoral (1997) degrees from SNRE, has been named a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA).
A dual-degree program at SNRE has helped the University of Michigan receive national recognition as one of “50 Colleges Committed to Saving the Planet.”
Engineering Sustainable Systems is a dual-master’s degree program between the School of Natural Resources & Environment and the U-M College of Engineering. Students pick from one of three specializations: Sustainable Energy Systems, Sustainable Design and Manufacturing, and Sustainable Water Resources.
To make it easier to follow SNRE events while using U-M Google mail, the school has created an open events calendar.
By adding this calendar, you can view events easily and alongside your own and other calendars. It's convenient and easy to do.
Step 1: Log into your U-M Google account and go to calendars.
Allyson Green, an Environmental Justice student at SNRE, is featured in a blog on the Scientific American website that talks with "new, young and up-and-coming science, health and environmental writers and reporters."
They – at least some of them – have recently hatched in the Incubators (science writing programs at schools of journalism), have even more recently fledged (graduated), and are now making their mark as wonderful new voices explaining science to the public.
Gregg Crane, a professor in the Department of English Language and Literature within the U-M College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, has been named the new director of the Program in the Environment.
Crane has been teaching ENVIRON 377, History and Literature of the Rockies, at Camp Davis since 2007. He is a specialist in American literary and intellectual history, and his current research focuses on the importance of intuition to a collection of literary, philosophical, legal, and environmental writers. His appointments runs through June 30, 2016.




