EVT 242
Please join us this Fall as we continue the
Stanford Pioneers in Science series. These events
offer the public an opportunity to learn about the
scientific contributions and lives of Stanford faculty
members who have been awarded Nobel Prizes,
National Medals of Science or Technology, and
MacArthur Fellowships.
Each event consists of a presentation about the
professional accomplishments of the featured
scientist, an interview with the scientist, and Q&A
with the audience.
This series is your chance to engage with some of
the most consequential thinkers of our day—people
who have helped to shape the scientific, technological,
and economic fabric of our modern world.
The Stanford Pioneers in Science Series for the 2009-2010 year is sponsored by Stanford’s Continuing Studies Program and by the Stanford Historical Society.
William H. Durham,
Bing Professor in Human Biology; Yang and Yamazaki
University Fellow in the Department of Anthropology
In addition to being a “rock star” teacher of undergraduates
at Stanford and a favorite faculty leader
of Alumni Travel/Study excursions, Bill Durham is an
internationally acclaimed human ecologist. His major
contributions have been in the theory of coevolution
in human populations, in the causes of scarcity and
environmental degradation in Latin America, and in
the dual challenges of conservation and community
development in the tropics. He won a prestigious
MacArthur Fellowship (“genius grant”) in 1983,
and has received fellowships from the Guggenheim,
Danforth, and National Science foundations.
Durham’s 1991 book, Coevolution: Genes, Cultural,
and Human Diversity, has been called “one of the most
important works of theory ever written by an anthropologist.”
A creator of the coevolutionary approach
to human diversity, Durham regards genes and culture
as two parallel but distinct forms of information
inheritance in human populations. Among Durham’s
specialties is indigenous ecotourism, and his contributions
to this field include co-founding the Center for
Responsible Travel, and establishing a series of Field
Seminars in the Stanford Alumni Travel/Study Program.
Professor Durham will be introduced by his distinguished
colleague Russell Fernald, Professor of Biology,
Benjamin Scott Crocker Professor of Human Biology,
and an internationally recognized expert in the evolution
of the visual and nervous systems in living organisms.
Wednesday, November 4
7:30 pm
Cubberley Auditorium, School of Education
FREE; no registration required
Open to the public
For more information on the series visit: http://continuingstudies.stanford.edu/publicprograms/pioneers.php