NH International Seminar features UNH scholars speaking on a variety of research topics
The New Hampshire International Seminar series opened this spring on February 18 with UNH assistant professor of geography Joel Hartter discussing "Baboons and Farmers: Impacts of Imposed Conservation in a Forest Park Landscape in East Africa." Hartter's lively presentation to a near-capacity crowd focused on research he conducted last June in Uganda.
Seminars are held on Wednesdays from 4:00-6:00 p.m. in Murkland 115 and are free and open to the public. All presenters for the spring series are recent recipients of CIE International Travel Grants. The future seminars are as follows:
- March 11- Louis S. Tisa, professor of microbiology and genetics, "Global Issues Require Global Collaborations: Understanding Plant-microbe Interactions with Worldwide Practical and Eecological Relevance"
- April 15 - Lu Yan, associate professor of history, "More Than ‘International Relations’: Sino-Japanese Cultural Interactions, 1895-1945"
- May 6 - Steve Bornstein, associate professor of communication sciences and disorders, "Intervention Approaches for Children with Hearing Impairment and Other Disabilities in Russia"
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||
Joel Hartter |
Louis Tisa |
Lu Yan |
Steve Bornstein |



