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  1. Welcome back for a bonus episode of A Matter of Degrees! We were lucky enough to sit down with Rebecca Solnit — author, historian, and climate activist — to talk about her newest climate anthology, Not Too Late.Leah and Nikayla Jefferson both wrote essays for the book and joined Rebecca onstage for this live episode.

  2. 2 de mar. de 2023 · A Matter of Degrees. Give up your climate guilt. Sharpen your curiosity. Join Dr. Leah Stokes and Dr. Katharine Wilkinson as they tell stories about the powerful forces behind climate change — and the tools we have to fix it. This show makes sense of big climate questions and critical topics.

  3. 20 de jul. de 2023 · A Matter of Degrees podcast on demand - Give up your climate guilt. Sharpen your curiosity. Join Dr. Leah Stokes and Dr. Katharine Wilkinson as they tell stories about the powerful forces behind climate change — and the tools we have to fix it. This show makes sense of big climate questions...

  4. 20 de jul. de 2023 · A Matter of Degrees is produced in partnership with FRQNCY Media, The 2035 Initiative at UC Santa Barbara, and The All We Can Save Project. A Matter of Degrees Dr. Leah Stokes, Dr. Katharine Wilkinson Government 4.9 • 45 Ratings; Give up your climate guilt. Sharpen your curiosity. ...

  5. 1 de jul. de 2003 · It is hard to say which is more compelling: A Matter of Degrees' strength as a book of science history or its strength as a work of literature. Segre writes with such elegance, clarity and charm that it is easy to forget that this is a work we read for self-improvement rather than self-indulgence.

  6. It’s All a Matter of Degrees: Comparing Survey and Administrative Educational Attainment Data Andrew Foote, Larry Warren ... • Data report degree earned, degree field, date of graduation, institution • Restrict to bachelor’s degrees ゅfuture work is going to look at other degree levelsょ ...

  7. A Matter of Degrees. In the jungles of the Brazilian Amazon, groups of farmers and their families get by on what they can grow with the land beneath their feet. They're known in Brazil as “landless workers,” a social movement with the goal of increasing land access and ownership for the country’s rural poor. These landless workers ...