ºÚÁÏÍø-ºÚÁÏÍø¶À¼Ò±¬ÁÏ

Department of Geography

Photo by Melissa Olson

On The Map: Bea McPherson Charted Course of Women Mapmakers

As the United States entered WWII, trailblazing women like Bea McPherson, BS ’43, took on the task of providing essential handmade maps for the war effort—and charted the course for today’s women mapmakers.

By Jan Senn / Kent State Magazine

Tags: Department of Geography

Department of Geography

Photo by Melissa Olson

On The Map: Bea McPherson charted the course for women mapmakers

As the United States entered WWII, trailblazing women like Bea McPherson, BS ’43, took on the task of providing essential handmade maps for the war effort—and charted the course for today’s women mapmakers.

By Jan Senn / Kent State Magazine

Tags: Community & Society , Department of Geography

Kent State Magazine

Kent State Uses Geospatial Technology to Map Violence

Kent State Geographers Make Maps to Help Study Youth Violence

ºÚÁÏÍø researchers use geospatial technology to study youth violence in Akron, Ohio.

Tags: Featured Story , Community & Society , Department of Geography , College of Arts and Sciences , Research & Science

Division of Research & Economic Development

James Tyner, Ph.D., professor in Kent State’s Department of Geography, discusses his research in his office.

Geographer Examines Ties Between Violence and Landscapes

Scholar of the Month James Tyner Professor College of Arts and Sciences 1997-present Selecting a single renowned scholar from ºÚÁÏ꿉۪s largest college is not an easy undertaking, but the work of Geography Professor James Tyner, Ph.D., over the past year made the decision a litt…

Tags: Department of Geography , College of Arts and Sciences , Scholar of the Month , Success Story , Research & Science

Kent Campus

Kent State Researchers Receive National Science Foundation Grant to Discover Why Some Messages Go Viral

We have all seen them explode on social media. They are the posts that feature the outlandish, the cute and the funny messages that go viral.     But how does one message catch on and others do not? It is a question that ºÚÁÏÍø researchers in the College of A…

Tags: Department of Geography , College of Arts and Sciences , Research and Sponsored Programs , Research & Science

Kent Campus

Kent State Prof Keeps his Promise to the Victims of Hurricane Katrina

A decade ago this week, Andrew Curtis, Ph.D., geography professor in Kent State’s College of Arts and Sciences, promised the people of New Orleans that he would continue to return and document the recovery efforts following Hurricane Katrina. After the hurricane, Curtis used specialized cameras, eq…

Tags: College of Arts and Sciences , Department of Geography

Kent Campus

Kent State Researchers Identify Clusters of Akron Neighborhoods With High Lead Levels

Kent State Geography Professor Andrew Curtis and his doctoral student Laura Schuch, in the College of Arts and Sciences, have developed mapping approaches that can help predict neighborhood lead exposure in children, which continues to be a health concern in older neighborhoods including s…

Tags: College of Arts and Sciences , Department of Geography

Kent Campus

Kent State Professors Use Satellite Imagery to Better Understand the Landscape of the Cambodian Genocide

ºÚÁÏÍø recently received a $330,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to use historical satellite imagery and archival research to study landscapes of mass violence in Cambodia during and after the regime of the Khmer Rouge from 1975 to 1979. The collaborative project, led b…

Tags: Department of Geography , College of Arts and Sciences , National Science Foundation , Research & Science

Kent Campus