[Apr 3 at 11am ET] Wild Animals in Urban Spaces: How Cities Can Promote Wild Animal Welfare in the Built Environment

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Sofia Fogel

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Mar 28, 2024, 5:08:28 AM3/28/24
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The NYU Wild Animal Welfare Program, the NYU Guarini Center on Environmental, Energy and Land Use Law, and the Yale Law, Ethics & Animals Program
present

Wild Animals in Urban Spaces
How Cities Can Promote Wild Animal Welfare in the Built Environment

Wednesday, April 3, 2024 from 11:00am-12:15pm ET


Lester Pollack Colloquium Room | Furman Hall, 9th Floor
New York University School of Law | 245 Sullivan St | New York, NY

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This event will also be streamed for virtual attendance through Zoom

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About the event

Cities are often thought of as distinctly human environments. Yet, a wide variety of wild animals continue to make their homes in and around dense urban areas. Experts increasingly accept that human, animal, and environmental health are intrinsically linked. In this vein, cities have the opportunity to consider how they can adapt their built infrastructure to promote the wellbeing of the human as well as nonhuman residents that share these spaces. 

This panel will bring together experts in local policy, building sustainability, and wild animal welfare to discuss how cities and other local actors can shape their policies for land use and the built environment to better promote the welfare of wild animals. As part of the discussion, researchers from NYU will present findings from a newly-released report that identifies promising policy options for cities to consider, ranging from bird-friendly building materials to green infrastructure design and prohibitions on gas leaf blowers.

 
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About the speakers

Alisa White, Legal Fellow, NYU Guarini Center on Environmental, Energy, and Land Use Law
Alisa is a Legal Fellow at the Guarini Center on Environmental, Energy, and Land Use Law at New York University School of Law. She is a graduate of Yale Law School, Yale School of the Environment, and Dartmouth College. During law school, she co-founded Law Students for Climate Accountability. Her research on environmental law, policy, and economics has been published or is forthcoming in Ecology Law QuarterlyEnvironmental Law ReporterJournal of Benefit-Cost AnalysisEnergy, and PLOS One.

Alexandra Silver, Director, Mayor's Office of Animal Welfare
Alexandra Silver was appointed director of the Mayor’s Office of Animal Welfare by Mayor Eric Adams in July 2022. She previously worked at Animal Care Centers of NYC (ACC), the city’s animal shelter provider, where she connected with other organizations, stakeholders, and elected officials, working to raise awareness about how all New Yorkers can make a difference for animals. Alexandra originally came to ACC as a volunteer, after working as a reporter at TIME. Passionate about animal welfare since childhood and a vegan since 2016, she shares her home with cats Lucas and Freddie Mercury, both adopted from ACC’s Manhattan center, as well as the occasional foster animal. Alexandra received her Bachelor of Arts degree in comparative literature from Princeton University.

Cecil Scheib, Chief Sustainability Officer, NYU Office of Sustainability
Cecil returned to NYU as Chief Sustainability Officer in 2018, after five years as Chief Program Officer at Urban Green Council and Managing Director of the Building Resiliency Task Force for the City of New York. As Director of Energy and Sustainability at NYU from 2007 to 2012, Cecil was intimately involved in guiding NYU towards environmental excellence, leading efforts related to the co-gen plant, the Green Grants Program, 30% emissions reductions, greater solid waste diversion rates, weaving sustainability into procurement, and drafting NYU's Climate Action Plan.

Dr. Mal Graham, Strategy Director, Wild Animal Initiative
Mal is the strategy director at Wild Animal Initiative, a nonprofit working to accelerate science that helps wild animals. They have worked with animals in shelter, veterinary, farm, and zoo environments, but it wasn't until pursuing a doctorate focused on gap-crossing in flying snakes that they realized how little we know about the welfare of wild animals. Now, Mal works on helping other scientists interested in studying wild animal welfare get into the field.

Moderator
Jeff Sebo, Co-Director of the Wild Animal Welfare Program & Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, New York University

Jeff Sebo is Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, Affiliated Professor of Bioethics, Medical Ethics, Philosophy, and Law, Director of the Animal Studies M.A. Program, Director of the Mind, Ethics, and Policy Program, Co-Director of the Wild Animal Welfare Program, and Deputy Director of the Center for Environmental and Animal Protection at New York University. He is the author of Saving Animals, Saving Ourselves (2022) and co-author of Chimpanzee Rights (2018) and Food, Animals, and the Environment (2018). He is also a board member at Minding Animals International, an advisory board member at the Insect Welfare Research Society, a senior research fellow at the Legal Priorities Project, and a mentor at Sentient Media.

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