A book talk with Lauren E. Oakes, scientist and author of Treekeepers: The Race for a Forested Future. Sponsored by the Environmental Studies, Geography, & Anthropology Depts.
In recent years, planting a tree has become a catchall to represent “doing something good for the planet.” Many companies commit to planting a tree with every purchase. But who plants those trees and where? Will they flourish and offer the benefits that people expect? In Treekeepers: The Race for a Forested Future, Lauren E. Oakes takes us on a poetic and practical journey from the Scottish Highlands to the Panamanian jungle to meet the scientists, innovators, and local citizens who each offer part of the answer. Their work isn’t just about planting lots of trees, but also about understanding what it takes to grow or regrow a forest and to protect what remains. Throughout, Oakes shows the complex roles of forests in the fight against climate change, and of the people who are giving trees a chance with hope for our mutual survival.
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Lauren E. Oakes is an environmental scientist and writer. She has held various appointments at Stanford University over many years as a researcher, lecturer, and adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Earth System Science. In addition to publishing her forest and climate-related research in academic journals, her writing has appeared in Undark, Scientific American, Emergence Magazine, Lit Hub, the New York Times, Nautilus and other media outlets. Her first book, In Search of the Canary Tree (Basic Books, 2018), won second place for the 2019 Rachel Carson Environment Book Award and was a finalist for the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Communication Award. She’ll speak about Treekeepers, her new book about the global reforestation movement. www.leoakes.com
Copies of Treekeepers will be available for purchase at the event. Thank you!
Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.