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Presentation order #28

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12 changes: 11 additions & 1 deletion book/preliminary/presentation_guidelines.md
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Expand Up @@ -21,4 +21,14 @@ Make sure everyone on your team gets a chance to speak about their D4 hack week
*Reminder*: The primary goal of this workshop is to help NOAA realize the full potential of dynamic and integrative data analysis to provide robust societal insights from flood events (and by extension, from other hazard events) by addressing methodological questions, such as:
- How granular (spatially, temporally) do the data have to be to understand social and ecological vulnerabilities in a way that is meaningful for policy design?
- How can we know that the environmental and demographic/social phenomena are related to each other, especially when we may lack certain data products that represent fundamental, mediating socio-economic relationships (e.g. how land parcels are owned, as well as transacted and built upon), or even the quality of such products (e.g., spatial data)?
- What are the most promising strategies for accessing, integrating, and making openly available integrated environmental, demographic, and related social data (and the code that links those data) so that privacy/confidentiality/intellectual property rights or other ethical guidelines are upheld?
- What are the most promising strategies for accessing, integrating, and making openly available integrated environmental, demographic, and related social data (and the code that links those data) so that privacy/confidentiality/intellectual property rights or other ethical guidelines are upheld?

## Presentation Order
1. Migration Mavericks
2. DEMUS
3. Columbia Hurricane Migration
4. CAT Demonstration
5. Demografires
6. Claim to Flame
7. Floodsters
8. Disaster Demography
7 changes: 3 additions & 4 deletions book/remote_participation.md
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Expand Up @@ -29,8 +29,7 @@ Panelists: Andrea Schumacher, Matt Dunbar, Tyler Fricker
## Thursday, September 12th

**9:00 - 10:30 AM: Presentations**

Three teams will have 30 minutes each to present (informally) their methods, challenges, and findings, including time for questions/discussion.
Three teams (Migration Mavericks, DEMUS, Columbia Hurricane Migration) will have 30 minutes each to present (informally) their methods, challenges, and findings, including time for questions/discussion.

**10:45 - 11:00 AM: CAT Update**

Expand All @@ -44,11 +43,11 @@ Panelists: David John Gagne, Julie Demuth, Jessica Godwin

**1:30 - 2:30 PM: Presentations**

Two teams will have 30 minutes each to present (informally) their methods, challenges, and findings, including time for questions/discussion.
Two teams (Demografires, Claim to Flame) will have 30 minutes each to present (informally) their methods, challenges, and findings, including time for questions/discussion.

**3:00 - 4:00 PM: Presentations**

Two teams will have 30 minutes each to present (informally) their methods, challenges, and findings, including time for questions/discussion.
Two teams (Floodsters, Disaster Demography) will have 30 minutes each to present (informally) their methods, challenges, and findings, including time for questions/discussion.

**4:00 - 4:45 PM: Closing Plenary Discussion**

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6 changes: 3 additions & 3 deletions book/schedule.yaml
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Expand Up @@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ tabs:
time: 8:30 - 9:00
location: eScience Common Area
- title: Presentations
description: Three teams will have 30 minutes each to present their project and answer questions.
description: Three teams (Migration Mavericks, DEMUS, Columbia Hurricane Migration) will have 30 minutes each to present their project and answer questions.
time: 9:00 - 10:30
location: Physics 520, remote option
- title: Break
Expand All @@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ tabs:
time: 12:30 - 13:30
location: null
- title: Presentations
description: Two teams will have 30 minutes each to present their project and answer questions.
description: Two teams (Demografires, Claim to Flame) will have 30 minutes each to present their project and answer questions.
time: 13:30 - 14:30
location: Physics 520, remote option
- title: Break
Expand All @@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ tabs:
time: 14:45 - 15:00
location: Physics 520
- title: Presentations
description: Two teams will have 30 minutes each to present their project and answer questions.
description: Two teams (Floodsters, Disaster Demography) will have 30 minutes each to present their project and answer questions.
time: 15:00 - 16:00
location: Physics 520, remote option
- title: Closing discussion
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9 changes: 5 additions & 4 deletions book/teams/06.md
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@@ -1,10 +1,10 @@
# FSU & Penn State
# Demografires

*Mathew Hauer, Alexis Santos, and Sunshine Jacobs*
*Mathew Hauer, Alexis Santos, Sunshine Jacobs, and Masha Vernik*

This project plans to integrate ACS/Census Data and IRS migration data with novel demographic change modeling and data on environmental hazard events (TBD - inland flooding?) to ask: How do populations change in association with environmental events? How do different race/ethnic groups change in association with environmental events? And What are the long-range impacts of environmental change on demographic change?
This project plans to integrate ACS/Census Data and IRS migration data with novel demographic change modeling and data for wildfire risk to ask: How do populations change in association with environmental events? How do different race/ethnic groups change in association with environmental events? And What are the long-range impacts of environmental change on demographic change?

> **Working Repository \> [github.com/d4hackweek/d4-fsu-penn-state](https://github.com/d4hackweek/d4-fsu-penn-state)**
> **Working Repository \> [github.com/d4hackweek/d4-demografires](https://github.com/d4hackweek/d4-demografires)**

## Datasets

Expand All @@ -17,3 +17,4 @@ This project plans to integrate ACS/Census Data and IRS migration data with nove
- **Mathew Hauer**: Mathew Hauer has been appointed the Charles B. Nam Professorship in the Sociology of Population at Florida State University, is an Associate Professor of Sociology and serves as the Associate Director of the Center for Demography and Population Health. He studies the impacts of climate change on society. Recently, his research has focused on how migration induced by sea level rise could reshape the U.S. population distribution. The New York Times, National Geographic, Time Magazine, Popular Science, USA Today, and others have featured his research. Before coming to Florida State University, Dr. Hauer spent eight years directing the Applied Demography Program at the University of Georgia where he provided valuable demographic research to local, state, and federal governments.
- **Alexis Santos**: I am currently an Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Studies at the Pennsylvania State University. I am a Demographic Data Fellow for the Administrative Data Accelerator, where we are using administrative records to answer policy relevant questions. I will be involved in studies that leverage vital statistics that aid public policy decision-making. I am also a Research Associate of the Population Research Institute, a center that has been supportive of my research since my arrival to Penn State. I received a Ph.D. in Applied Demography at the University of Texas at San Antonio (2012-2015). Before coming to Penn State, I was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the Brooke Army Medical Center (Fort Sam Houston, Texas). I served as Director of Graduate Studies in Applied Demography at the Department of Sociology and Criminology at Penn State University between 2015-2018. Before moving to San Antonio, I completed a M.A. in Economics at the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras (2012) and a B.A. in Economics at the University of Puerto Rico at Cayey (2010), where I also completed all the coursework for the Minor in Statistics in 2012. I was born in Hartford, CT to Puerto Rican parents who returned to Puerto Rico in 1990. I was raised in Caguas, Puerto Rico in a female headed-household. I went to elementary school in the Paula Mojica Elementary School, and completed the rest of my education at Academia Cristo the los Milagros. Some of my non-academic interests include: music, history, salsa, reading Snoopy, board games, and writing to my elected officers to discuss social issues.
- **Sunshine Jacobs**: Sunshine is a doctoral candidate in the Sociology program at Florida State University, currently working in the Center for Demography and Population Health. She researches climate migration in the United States, focusing on specific hazards such as rising sea levels and wildfire threats. She is particularly interested in the varying migration patterns of racially and ethnically vulnerable populations.
- **Masha Vernik**: Masha Vernik is a graduate student at the University of Washington’s School of Environmental and Forest Sciences. She studies how local farmers are adapting to climate change and is especially interested in the intersections between seed diversity and climate resilience. She employs qualitative and quantitative methods that include conducting interviews, evaluating survey data, and analyzing satellite imagery. Her learning extends beyond the classroom and into the field as an avid gardener and part-time farmworker. She graduated from Boston University with a B.A. in International Relations.
2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion book/teams/index.md
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Expand Up @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ Here is our current list of project for our {{dates}} {{ hackweek }}:
| [Columbia Hurricane Migration](03) | Fabien Cottier, Mona Hemmati, Andrew Kruczkiewicz, and Kytt MacManus |
| [Disaster Demography](04) | Deborah Balk, Dylan Connor, Melanie Gall, Lori Hunter, Jenna Tipaldo, and Helen Wilson Burns |
| [The Floodsters](05) | ChangHoon (Chang) Hahn, Sharif Islam, and Lidia Cano
| [FSU & Penn State](06) | Mathew Hauer, Alexis Santos, and Sunshine Jacobs |
| [Demografires](06) | Mathew Hauer, Alexis Santos, and Sunshine Jacobs |
| [Migration Mavericks](07) | Ethan Sharygin, Justin Stoler, and Mary Angelica Painter |
| [Floaters](08) | Jason Stock, Tyler Fricker, and Patrick Greiner |
| [CAT Demonstration Project](09) | Andrea Schumacher, Julie Demuth, DJ Gagne, Jorge Celis, Amy McGovern, Sara Curran, Sameer Shah, Masha Vernik, Ann Bostrom |