Nettsider med emneord «OSEH»
![Vultures, Mountain, Rocks, Sky](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2020/vulture-live.jpg?alt=listing)
LiVE is a research project providing a historically informed comparative ethnography of contemporary vulture conservation in changing European landscapes. The project has been granted funding from the Marie Skłodowska-Curie actions Individual Fellowships.
![Cardboard boxes are piled on top of each other. Words such as "chloropfyll" and "plants" are written all over the boxes.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/events/lunchtime-discussions/2022/barth-eld.png?alt=listing)
![Image contains cattle in a small compound of grass. Palmtrees in the back.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2021/morris_ecovillage.png?alt=listing)
Morris' project Communing with Others: Multispecies Entanglements in Mexican Ecovillages focuses on the emergent ecovillage movement in Mexico, exploring how people imagine, construct, and inhabit intentional, ecologically-oriented communities.
![Picture of a woman on the icy fjord with a larger sound instrument](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2021/sound-workshop.png?alt=listing)
On the 28th of August, Honours Certificate students from the Honours Certificate in Environmental Humanities and Sciences participated in a sound workshop with Signe Lidén. The goal of the exercise was to learn how to build microphones and explore how listening in different ways can contribute to place-based learning.
![Image may contain: Logo, Font, Graphic design, Sky, Graphics.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2020/field-logo_-edited.jpg?alt=listing)
In 2021, OSEH continued its work to strengthen interdisciplinary research, teaching and discussions on climate change and the environment. Due to Covid-19, OSEH had to adapt to a "new normal" and postponed some of its planned activity while moving other activities to the virtual space.
![A picture of a type case with different letters jumbled together.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/events/lunchtime-discussions/2022/photo-by-bruno-martins.jpeg?alt=listing)
In this talk, poet and translator Kathleen Maris Paltrineri will discuss ecopoetic works published in Norway that push boundaries in form, language, and thought as they explicitly or implicitly address the ramifications of climate change. She will also draw on her translation experience to discuss how ecotranslation may invite innovative translation and creative writing practices and may be its own form of activism.
![A whale swimming towards us, its back breaking the surface.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/events/other/2022/bionic-natures1.png?alt=listing)
The Bionic Natures collaboratory is hosting a public talk by Mick Geerits and Arthur Gouillart, who will present their collaborative project Augmented Nature—a set of robotic tools designed to help animals survive the ongoing planetary mass extinction.
![Photo montage of four people on a Zoom call](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2021/growth4smes-illustrasjon.jpg?alt=listing)
The Oslo School of Environmental Humanities congratulates Honours certificate students Harald Bøe and Tarjei Brekke, as well as history student Andrine Brorson, with winning the first Faculty of Humanities case competition!
![Displays a black and white image of a bald man in a black shirt.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2021/thom_van_dooren_fleck.png?alt=listing)
The Oslo School of Environmental Humanities sends its most sincere congratulations to Thom van Dooren for being awarded the 2021 Fleck Prize for his book The Wake of Crows: Living and Dying in Shared Worlds (Columbia University Press 2019).
We invite you to our Environmental Humanities Festival where we celebrate the exciting work happening in the field here at UiO, in Norway, and beyond. The day will start with a keynote lecture by Jamie Lorimer, University of Oxford, followed by presentations by the OSEH Collaboratories, a pop-up exhibition, film screenings, a "green" choir performance, and more.
![The OSEH logo on a marine green background of skies and forest](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2021/cafield_logo_25.4x14.jpg?alt=listing)
In 2020, OSEH continued its work to strengthen interdisciplinary research, teaching and discussions on climate change and the environment. Due to Covid-19, OSEH had to adapt to a "new normal" and postponed some of its planned activity while moving other activities to the virtual space.
![Photo of the salmon ladder by the Akerselva River.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2022/laksetrapp.jpg?alt=listing)
On 2 April, the students in the Honours Certificate in Environmental Humanities and Sciences (EHS) walked along Akerselva and participated in a soundwalk along the river as part of the second excursion this semester.
![Students protesting in the streets of Stockholm](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/events/oseh-lecture-series/2022/1972-fn-konferens-(42).jpg?alt=listing)
In this talk, professor of design history Dr. Kjetil Fallan, explores design interventions at, and in the wake of, the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm 1972. What can design activism tell us about the conference's influence on future political decision-making? Or about the development of environmental thinking and ecologically informed design ideology in Scandinavia?
![An illustration of a diver seen from below. The water is coloured green.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/events/lunchtime-discussions/2022/meyer-eld.png?alt=listing)
This talk by contemporary historian Tirza Meyer will be a presentation of the project ‘Humanoid Oceans’ that seeks to explore the history of what happens to the oceanic environment when humans venture into the ocean with the help of technology.
We invite to a conversation on the role of education in creating alternative environmental futures. Tim Ingold (University of Aberdeen) will hold a public lecture at Kulturhuset on "Reason and Response-ability", followed by a panel discussion with Mette Halskov Hansen (UiO), Britt Kramvig (UiT), Felix Riede (Aarhus University) and Heather Swanson (Aarhus University). Moderated by Gro Birgit Birgit Ween (Museum of Cultural History, UiO).
![Image may contain: Logo, Font, Graphic design, Sky, Graphics.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2020/field-logo_-edited.jpg?alt=listing)
The Oslo School of Environmental Humanities started in spring 2019 with the aim of facilitating and strengthening humanistic research on the environmental crisis that crosses disciplines and creatively respond to the environmental and social challenges of our time. Here is a recap of the first 12 months of OSEH and the initiative's activities.
![Photo of EHS students by the Oslo Fjord in the summer.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2021/fjordexcursion-main.png?alt=listing)
On the 5th of June, 2021, the students at the Honour's Certificate met up with the Oslo Fjord School. The learning focus of the excursion was on the underwater multispecies lives of the Oslo fjord and "Underwater Urbanity".
![Entagnled photo of fish under water and mossy rocks with Kelp.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2022/ecoslam_compositeimge_1000x562.jpg?alt=listing)
The Oslo School of Environmental Humanities hosted its first ever Knowing Natures Eco-Slam on 3 December 2021, an open drop-in exhibition with presentations and performances by the EHS Honours students.
![OSEH logo on a marine green colored background of skies and forest.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/news/2021/cafield_logo_25.4x14.jpg?alt=listing)
On the 30th of November 2021, the University of Oslo held the annual Conference of Education where OSEH Director, Ursula Münster, was the Keynote speaker.
![Several twigs with sprouting buds.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/events/lunchtime-discussions/2022/bastian.png?alt=listing)
New OSEH Associate Professor II, Michelle Bastian, will discuss her current fellowship project which will build connections with phenology, the study of lifecycle timing in plants and animals, and humanities research.
![This image shows a man pointing towards manholes.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/events/lunchtime-discussions/2022/nikiwe-eld-1.png?alt=listing)
In this talk, environmental anthropologist Dr. Nikiwe Solomon explores how particular assumptions built into the design of infrastructure, as well as the bureaucratic and techno-managerial approaches used to build said infrastructure, often take for granted the social consequences of infrastructure’s day-to-day (mal)functioning.
![Poster with information on the event "Monsters of the Anthropocene" over an image of a box full of toys.](https://www.hf.uio.no/english/research/strategic-research-areas/oseh/news-and-events/events/other/2022/monsters-of-the-anthropocene-halloween-symposium-picture.png?alt=listing)
What do the futures of monster theory hold? And what stories can we tell about its origins? ‘Unruly Origins, Strange Futures’ explores the pasts and futures of thinking with monsters through art, politics, storytelling and scholarship.
![Bildet kan inneholde: fotografi, hvit, lys, produkt, svart.](https://www.hf.uio.no/forskning/satsinger/oseh/aktuelt/arrangementer/annet/2022/oseh_recsus_banner_cropped.gif?alt=listing)
Hvem definerer hva bærekraft betyr? Og hvilken rolle spiller utdanning i måten vi forestiller oss fremtidens økologiske virkeligheter? Tirsdag 7. juni kommer Tim Ingold til Kulturhuset for å snakke om nettopp disse temaene, etterfulgt av en paneldebatt med Mette Halskov Hansen, Britt Kramvig, Felix Reide og Heather Swanson.