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Katharine Hayhoe, Josefina Varela, Lúcia Lohmann, Douglas Daly, Eliot Nagele

Teaches at Richmond Art Center

Katharine Hayhoe, Ph.D. is an atmospheric scientist whose research focuses on understanding what climate change means for people and the places where we live. She is the Chief Scientist for The Nature Conservancy and a Horn Distinguished Professor and Endowed Professor of Public Policy and Public Law in the Dept. of Political Science at Texas Tech University.

Her book, "Saving Us: A Climate Scientist's Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World," was released in Sept 2021 and she also hosts the PBS digital series Global Weirding, currently in its fifth season. Katharine has been named one of TIME's 100 Most Influential People, the United Nations Champion of the Environment, and the World Evangelical Alliance's Climate Ambassador.

Josefina Braña Varela has dedicated more than 20 years to global environmental issues, most notably the conservation of the world's most important forests. Over the course of her career, she has worked for government institutions, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and academia, developing invaluable perspective and profound expertise.

Currently, Josefina serves as vice president and deputy lead of the Forest team at WWF-US. In this capacity, she manages and supports the implementation of efforts dedicated to halting deforestation and forest degradation in critical geographies. In addition, Josefina is point on Forest Climate Solutions for WWF, overseeing a multidisciplinary team working to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by ensuring our forests remain healthy and abundant. Since 2013, she has also led WWF's global forest and climate policy agenda and advocacy efforts.

Josefina's role involves collaborating on initiatives with WWF field offices in key geographies in Colombia, Guyana, Peru, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nepal, and Indonesia. In each of these regions, she focuses on designing policies and interventions to tackle deforestation and degradation and to conserve and restore forests to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance carbon sinks. This entails building alliances with strategic stakeholders, particularly Indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLCs) living on the front lines of deforestation.

Over the course of her career, Josefina has been integrally involved in major international negotiations. From 2009-2013, she was part of Mexico's delegation to the Convention of Biological Diversity, the United Nations Forum on Forests, and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, where she negotiated REDD+ and land-use related issues.

Josefina holds a master's degree in public policy (with a focus on environmental policy) from the University of Maryland. A native of Mexico City, she studied international relations at the Universidad Iberoamericana.

Lúcia G. Lohmann, Ph.D. is a professor in the Department of Botany at the University of São Paulo (since 2004) and the Executive Director of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation. She is also a research associate at the Missouri Botanical Garden and New York Botanical Garden.

Her primary research interest is to understand patterns of plant diversification and biogeography in the Tropics, especially in the Amazon basin. Her research is highly integrative, combining components of classic taxonomy, phylogenetics, geology, ecology, evolutionary biology, and conservation. Devoting her career to unraveling the biotic richness of the Amazon Basin and Latin America generally, Lohmann has substantially advanced knowledge of the regional ecology and biogeography of these regions, thereby substantially assisting efficient regional conservation.

She graduated from the University of São Paulo with a Bachelor's degree in Biology (1995) and obtained her Ph.D. in Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics from the University of Missouri-St. Louis (1998, 2003). She is a Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAA&S) and the São Paulo Academy of Sciences (ACIESP).

Douglas C. Daly, Ph.D. is B.A. Krukoff Curator of Amazonian Botany and the Director of the Institute for Systematic Botany at The New York Botanical Garden. For more than three decades, he has studied the Amazon flora and the classification, evolution, and uses of the Burseraceae, one of the most important tree families throughout the tropics and the source of both frankincense and myrrh.

Eliot Nagele is the Director of NYBG's Thain Family Forest.

Classes taught by Katharine Hayhoe, Josefina Varela, Lúcia Lohmann, Douglas Daly, Eliot Nagele

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