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Today in Geography

Podcast by Michigan State University Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences

English

Technology & science

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About Today in Geography

Today in Geography is a podcast produced by the Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences at Michigan State University. Each episode, we talk with members of our community about their research and interests, and then we spend some time spotlighting events and celebrations that have shaped the field of geography.

All episodes

14 episodes

episode Today in Geography - Celebrating National Drinking Water Week with Angelique Willis artwork

Today in Geography - Celebrating National Drinking Water Week with Angelique Willis

Today, we welcomed Angelique Willis [https://geo.msu.edu/directory/willis-angelique.html] to the show. Angelique is a dual-major PhD student in the MSU Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences and the Environmental Science and Policy Program. Angelique is strongly committed to leveraging her expertise in Geography, Public Health, Epidemiology, Environmental Health, and GIS to enhance drinking water quality and safeguard human health. Her work focuses on the unique drinking water challenges faced by low-income communities and communities of color, where systemic inequities often exacerbate these issues. Through rigorous research and informed policy advocacy, Angelique aims to uncover and address these disparities, driving transformative changes. Her approach involves mapping drinking water quality issues and conducting studies to assess health impacts. Ultimately, she strives to create sustainable solutions that resonate both locally and nationally, advancing environmental justice and improving public health outcomes. Angelique also discussed the importance of National Drinking Water Week, which takes place the first week of May. In 1988, the American Water Works Association (AWWA) brought Drinking Water Week to the attention of the U.S. government and formed a coalition along with the League of Women Voters, the Association of State Drinking Water Administrators, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Rep. Robert Roe and Sen. Dennis DeConcini subsequently sponsored a resolution to name the first week of May as Drinking Water Week, and the week-long observance was declared in a joint congressional resolution signed by then-President Ronald Reagan. Recognizing Drinking Water Week is an easy way to educate the public, connect with the community, and promote employee morale. Too often, water utilities only receive negative publicity — a main break in the middle of rush hour or increasing rates. Recognizing Drinking Water Week provides an opportunity for positive communication. For more information about Angelique’s work, visit her LinkedIn page [https://www.linkedin.com/in/angelique-willis/]. To learn more about National Drinking Water Week, visit the American Water Works Association website [https://www.awwa.org/communications-and-outreach/drinking-water-week/]. Our Sponsor: The MSU onGEO Professional GIS Certificate Program Our sponsor for this episode is the onGEO Professional GIS Certificate Program at Michigan State University. Their online Geospatial Data Analytics & Visualization Certificate aims to advance the geospatial tools & technology skill-set of professionals currently working in fields that use geospatial technologies. It is also an excellent opportunity for anyone looking to revamp their current career, earn continuing-education or teaching credits, or simply learn new and marketable skills. The online Geospatial Data Analytics & Visualization Certificate consists of four (core) fully online courses that are each delivered in 7-week sessions. These core courses cover topics ranging from map design, interactive and temporal mapping, geovisualization, spatial data analytics, spatial statistics, geoprocessing, geospatial analysis, and much more. In addition to content-based modules, each course features a series of online labs designed to give students hands-on experience using geospatial technologies and improve technical competency. Ready to get started? Visit  ⁠ongeo.msu.edu [https://professional.ongeo.msu.edu/] to learn more.

4 May 2026 - 40 min
episode Today in Geography - Celebrating International Workers' Day with Mehmet Eroğlu artwork

Today in Geography - Celebrating International Workers' Day with Mehmet Eroğlu

Today, we welcomed ⁠Mehmet Eroğlu [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mehmet-ero%C4%9Flu-1a1956213/]⁠, a recent graduate of the Ph.D. program at the ⁠Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences⁠ [https://geo.msu.edu/index.html] at Michigan State University. Mehmet is a human geographer whose research focuses on power struggles in the production of landscapes, particularly in relation to workers and working-class communities. His work seeks to understand how, to what extent, and under what structural constraints and opportunities workers exercise their agency in shaping their own geographies. While his broader research interests center on the intersections of labor, place, and power rather than specific regional contexts, his current research examines the struggles of informal coal miners in Turkey. Mehmet discussed International Workers’ Day, a celebration of labourers and the working classes that is promoted by the international labour movement and occurs every year on May 1st. To celebrate this important holiday, Mehmet encourages listeners to watch Bread and Roses [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bread_and_Roses_(2000_film)], a film directed by Kenneth Loach, starring Pilar Padilla, Adrien Brody and Elpidia Carrillo. Our sponsor for this episode is the MSU Geography Undergraduate Program. At MSU Geography, you won’t just study the world — you’ll help shape it. Ready to map your future? Visit geo.msu.edu [https://geo.msu.edu/] and talk with an academic advisor today.

1 May 2026 - 47 min
episode Today in Geography - Celebrating Earth Day with Leo Baldiga artwork

Today in Geography - Celebrating Earth Day with Leo Baldiga

Today, we welcomed Leo Baldiga [https://geo.msu.edu/directory/baldiga-leo.html] to the show. Leo is a dual-major PhD student in the MSU Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences and the Environmental Science and Policy Program. His research interests include the areas of Agrarian Change, Natural Resource Rights, Commons Politics, Development, and Demographic and Cultural Shifts in Southeast Asia. Leo graduated with a BA in Comparative Cultures and Politics from MSU's James Madison College in 2020 and was a Fulbright Research Fellow at Chiang Mai University in 2021, working with local community organizations on a range of topics related to land rights, healthcare access, and statelessness. In 2022-23 he worked with the Mekong School Institute of Local Knowledge on the Mekong Water Protectors citizen science program, Mekong Youth Program, Mekong Safeguard Program, and the Mekong School Digital Library. Throughout this time, he has been working on the Mekong Culture WELL (Water, Ecologies, Land, and Livelihoods) grant through the James Madison College on a household survey, ecocultural mapping, and various other projects. Leo also discussed the importance of the founding of Earth Day on April 22, 1970. Inspired by the anti-war "teach-ins" of the 1960s, Senator Gaylord Nelson (D-WI) proposed a national teach-in on the environment after witnessing the environmental damage caused by the 1969 Santa Barbara, California oil spill. Denis Hayes, a young activist, was hired to organize the first national event. The date of April 22 was chosen to fall between spring break and final exams at most colleges and universities to maximize student participation. Today, more than a billion people in nearly 200 countries celebrate Earth Day, making it the largest secular, civic-minded day of action in the world. If you would like to learn more about Leo’s research on agricultural drone use, please visit “Agricultural drones are taking off globally, saving farmers time and money [https://theconversation.com/agricultural-drones-are-taking-off-globally-saving-farmers-time-and-money-265154],” an article Leo wrote for The Conversation with co-author Ben Belton. If you would like to learn more about Earth Day, visit https://www.epa.gov/earthday [https://www.epa.gov/earthday]. Our Sponsor: The MSU onGEO Professional GIS Certificate Program Our sponsor for this episode is the onGEO Professional GIS Certificate Program at Michigan State University. Their online Geospatial Data Analytics & Visualization Certificate aims to advance the geospatial tools & technology skill-set of professionals currently working in fields that use geospatial technologies. It is also an excellent opportunity for anyone looking to revamp their current career, earn continuing-education or teaching credits, or simply learn new and marketable skills. The online Geospatial Data Analytics & Visualization Certificate consists of four (core) fully online courses that are each delivered in 7-week sessions. These core courses cover topics ranging from map design, interactive and temporal mapping, geovisualization, spatial data analytics, spatial statistics, geoprocessing, geospatial analysis, and much more. In addition to content-based modules, each course features a series of online labs designed to give students hands-on experience using geospatial technologies and improve technical competency. Ready to get started? Visit  ⁠ongeo.msu.edu [https://professional.ongeo.msu.edu/] to learn more.

22 Apr 2026 - 44 min
episode Today in Geography - Remembering A Sand County Almanac with Alanna Post artwork

Today in Geography - Remembering A Sand County Almanac with Alanna Post

Today, we welcomed Alanna Post [https://geo.msu.edu/directory/post-alanna.html] to the show. Alanna is a PhD student in the MSU Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences with a dual major in Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior. She received her B.S. in Ecology and Environmental Biology from the Biology department at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and her M.S. in Biology from Sonoma State University (Rohnert Park, CA). She is interested in forest ecology, disturbance ecology, and remote sensing. Alanna's research focuses on understanding post-fire forest recovery dynamics through the lens of forest structure. Alanna discussed her research as well as the influence she experienced from reading A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold. On April 14, 1948, Oxford University Press informed Leopold that it wished to publish his manuscript. One week later, Leopold suffered a fatal heart attack while fighting a grass fire that had escaped from a neighbor’s farm near the shack. In the months that followed, Leopold’s son, Luna, took the lead in getting the manuscript into print. If you would like to learn more about Alanna’s research, please visit the Ecological Remote Sensing and Modeling Lab at https://www.ersamlab.com/ [https://www.ersamlab.com/]. If you would like to learn more about Aldo Leopold and A Sand County Almanac, visit https://www.aldoleopold.org/ [https://www.aldoleopold.org/]. Our sponsor for this episode is the Undergraduate Degree Program for the Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences at Michigan State University. Choose from Bachelor of Science concentrations in Earth Observation & Geospatial Analytics, Physical Environment & Climate, or Human-Environment & Economic Geography. Or tailor your path through human, physical, and regional geography courses with a Bachelor of Arts degree. Ready to map your future? Visit  geo.msu.edu [https://geo.msu.edu/] to talk with an academic advisor today.

14 Apr 2026 - 30 min
episode Today in Geography: Remembering the declaration of the COVID-19 Pandemic artwork

Today in Geography: Remembering the declaration of the COVID-19 Pandemic

Today, we welcomed Dr. Sue Grady, a professor in the Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences at Michigan State University. Dr. Grady is a health and medical geographer. Her research focuses on women’s health, specifically maternal and infant health. She is interested in understanding how local environments in which women live impact their health (i.e., increase the opportunity for infectious disease transmission and/or contribute to chronic diseases), which in turn, impair their pregnancies, leading to adverse maternal and infant outcomes. Most of her current research focuses on reducing maternal and infant mortality. She is studying perinatal regionalization in Michigan to improve our understanding of inpatient hospital referral patterns of high-risk African American mothers and infants. Dr. Grady utilizes geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial epidemiological methods, including multilevel modeling, to disentangle these complexities. The students she mentors are interested in a variety of health and medical geography topics. Dr. Grady discussed her research as well as the official declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic by the World Health Organization on March 11, 2020.  If you would like to learn more about Dr. Grady’s research, please visit https://geo.msu.edu/directory/grady-sue.html [https://geo.msu.edu/directory/grady-sue.html] or her Google Scholar page at https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=IdbEU9oAAAAJ&hl=en [https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=IdbEU9oAAAAJ&hl=en]. If you would like to learn more about the American Association of Geographers Health and Medical Geography Specialty group, visit ⁠ https://www.aag.org/groups/health-and-medical-geography/ [https://www.aag.org/groups/health-and-medical-geography/].   Our sponsor for this episode is the MSU onGEO Professional GIS Certificate Program. If you are looking to revamp your current career, earn continuing-education credits, or simply learn new and marketable geospatial skills, visit today to learn how to earn a professional certificate in Geographic Information Systems (GIS) or Geospatial Data Analytics & Visualization. Learn more at https://ongeo.msu.edu/ [https://ongeo.msu.edu/].

11 Mar 2026 - 53 min
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