The Himalaya Climate Data Field Lab 2024 is an innovative workshop where over 100 researchers, artists, and activists come together in an unconventional setting to collaborate and shape the program as it progresses over the course of a month and beyond. His participation in the workshop is for three weeks. Sunil is specifically involved in the artificial intelligence and machine learning working group, contributing to various projects. Additionally, he is actively participating in sessions covering topics such as local and indigenous climate knowledge, co-production of data and knowledge, data sovereignty, and the impact of climate change on the cryosphere. Sunil says, “I’m grateful to the ICIMOD Himalayan University Consortium for providing a travel grant that made attending this workshop possible”.
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Geospatial science and health: An overview of the Te Taiwhenua o te Hauora | The GeoHealth Laboratory’s impactful research over the past 20 years and what future health challenges will be tackled next
In this seminar, we will explore the differences in health and health behaviours by neighbourhood, uncovering some of the underlying reasons for these variations in health. To better understand the range of ways in which differences in health emerge, Professor Malcolm Campbell will present a series of research projects from Te Taiwhenua o te Hauora | The GeoHealth Laboratory