All Episodes

Displaying 31 - 41 of 41 in total

Camille Dungy’s new book, “Soil,” digs into poetry, plants, parenthood and the pandemic

Audit host Stacy Nick talks with CSU Distinguished Professor, writer and poet Camille Dungy about using her garden to explore issues of history, race, sustainability a...

From environmental disasters to eco-grief: CSU’s Center for Environmental Justice aims to find sustainable ground

When people typically think of environmental injustice, they often only think of these kinds of big, headline-grabbing events. But according to Stephanie Malin, associ...

The bumpy history of Colorado's ski industry

From voters saying no to hosting the Winter Olympics to the Earth Liberation Front's attack on Vail ski resort, Colorado State University Associate Professor and autho...

CSU researchers look at the roots, impact of the prison agriculture industry with Prison Agriculture Lab

There are more than 600 prison agricultural programs currently in the United States, but very little data looking at the how, what, and maybe most importantly, why of ...

Can healing our divided nation start at the dinner table?

CSU Sociology Professor Michael Carolan about how food and food systems can play a role in building empathy and bridging our nation's deep divide. (Originally aired No...

For one CSU professor, America’s connection to witches is less ‘Hocus Pocus,’ more historical

Colorado State University history professor Ann Little talks about our fascination with the early North American witch trials and what a modern-day witch hunt could lo...

Documentary looks to uncover the ‘Big Lie’ about mail-in voting

CSU filmmakers Steve Weiss and Jesse Grace talk about their latest project,“Democracy Vs. The Big Lie: The Truth Behind Mail-in Voting,” which looks at the controversy...

How a few seeds and a little luck gave us the iconic Pueblo chile

We talk with Michael Bartolo, senior research scientist emeritus at CSU's Arkansas Valley Research Center and "father" of one of Pueblo's hottest crops. (Originally ai...

Don't call it a 'migration,' Colorado's tarantulas go on walkabouts

Entomologist and CSU Bug Zoo Director Maia Holmes discusses that age-old question: Why did the tarantula cross the road? (Originally aired Aug. 31, 2022)

Protecting the great outdoors -- from us

Colorado State University's Katie Abrams talks about her research into social marketing and communications strategies and how keeping wildlife and tourists safe could ...

How the Queer Memory Project is archiving Northern Colorado’s LGBTQ+ history

Colorado State University Associate Professor of Communication Studies Tom Dunn talks about the creation of the Queer Memory Project, an online archive dedicated to pr...

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