UArizona
x = independently organized TED event

Theme: The Messy Middle

This event occurred on
January 31, 2023
Tucson, Arizona
United States

In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized (subject to certain rules and regulations).

Centennial Hall
1020 E University Blvd
Tucson, Arizona, 85719
United States
Event type:
University (What is this?)
See more ­T­E­Dx­U­Arizona events

Speakers

Speakers may not be confirmed. Check event website for more information.

Hona Vaioleti

undergraduate student Student
Liahona Vaioleti is a current Freshman at the University of Arizona, where he is pursuing a Major in Engineering and a Minor in Spanish. Throughout high school, he competed in Speech & Debate and was named a State Champion, National Semi-Finalist, and the highest-ranked competitor in Duo Interpretation in Arizona upon graduation. He served as a Captain on his team, becoming the first in his Speech team’s history to reach 1000 NSDA Points while simultaneously training his underclassmen. Today, he continues to serve the Speech & Debate community as Tournament Judge, and he looks forward to maximizing every opportunity to use his background in Public Speaking to help others grow more confident on and off of the stage. He hopes to find more opportunities like TEDx to speak on ideas and issues throughout his community, and he looks forward to growing as both a speaker and student in the years to come.

Jennifer Carlson

Associate Professor of Sociology/Government & Public Policy
Jennifer Carlson, PhD, a 2022 MacArthur Fellow, researches gun politics, culture and trauma in the United States. She writes on the politics of guns in American life. She is the author of three books—Citizen-Protectors (Oxford), Policing the Second Amendment (Princeton), and Merchants of the Right (Princeton)—and has published widely in journals such as the American Journal of Sociology, Social Problems, Social Forces and Gender & Society. She is a frequent contributor to leading news outlets such as PBS, the New York Times, NPR, USA Today, and the Los Angeles Times. She is currently conducting National Science Foundation-funded research on gun violence survivors. She received her PhD in Sociology from the University of California, Berkeley.

Kai Lepley

Doctoral Student
Kai Lepley is a Ph.D. student at the University of Arizona’s School of Geography, Development and Environment. He works at the confluence of renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, and resilient land use. Kai sees light in every aspect of his life. His research uses light through a remote sensing perspective to study multifunctional land use—agrivoltaics, agroforestry, urban agriculture, and PV+. As a NASA Space Grant Fellow, he brings the science of light into southern Arizona classrooms through project-based learning and remote sensing curriculum. As a documentary filmmaker and photographer, he captures light to communicate science and the intersections of human livelihoods and natural biodiversity. Kai hopes to make the human impact on Earth a positive one.

Mary-Frances O'Connor

Associate Professor of Psychology
Mary-Frances O’Connor, PhD is an associate professor of psychology at the University of Arizona, and author of The Grieving Brain: The Surprising Science of How We Learn from Love and Loss. She directs the Grief, Loss and Social Stress (GLASS) Lab, which investigates the effects of grief on the brain and the body. O’Connor earned a doctorate from the University of Arizona in 2004 and completed a fellowship at UCLA. Following a faculty appointment at UCLA Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology, she returned to the University of Arizona in 2012. Her work has been published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, Biological Psychiatry, and Psychological Science, and featured in Newsweek, the New York Times, and The Washington Post. Having grown up in Montana, she now lives in Tucson, Arizona. For more information go to https://www.maryfrancesoconnor.com

Meow or Never A Capella

A Capella Group
Founded in 2008, Meow or Never's inception at the University of Arizona as a student-led group of various majors, ages and musical interests, no doubt contributes to the diversity of the ensemble's repertoire and close-knit personality. All of the arrangements that the group performs are completed by current or graduated members of the ensemble, and the group has a tradition of ending every set with their rendition of the University of Arizona's fight song, "Bear Down, Arizona!". Members: Noah Embry, Ross Nemeth, Adam Mattson, Niko Siapkaris, Andrew KimTeaching, Justin Cheung, Jacob Metcalf, Everett Shaffer, Izak Lord-Wohlstein, John Dominguez-Trujillo, Jeremy Romitti, Braydon Owen, Benjamin Durand, Harley Washburn, Josiah Santos, Harrison Scholten, Brent Cesolini

Monica Ramirez-Andreotta

Associate Professor of Environmental Science
Mónica Ramírez-Andreotta, M.P.A., Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Environmental Science, with joint appointments in the College of Public Health and the Global Change-Graduate Interdisciplinary Program at the University of Arizona. Using an environmental justice framework and participatory research methods, she investigates exposure pathways and communication strategies to visualize and translate environmental health research to action and achieve structural change.

Patrick Robles

2022-23 UArizona Student Body President
21-year-old Patrick Robles is actively advocating and fighting for the community that built him. The undergraduate Student Body President of the University of Arizona, Patrick is a first-generation college student majoring in public management & policy with a minor in pre-law. Born and raised in the Southside of Tucson, Patrick is a proud product of the Sunnyside Unified School District. After graduating High School in 2019, he became the youngest staffer for then Pima County Supervisor Ramón Valadez where he helped lead the office in constituent services. Additionally, Patrick joined the Sunnyside Foundation Board as the youngest board member in foundation history raising money and community support for Tucson's Southside. In 2021, Patrick was the youngest member of the Pima County Attorney’s Office Senior Leadership team where he served in the role of Community Outreach Coordinator and actively engaged in underserved communities in criminal justice reform efforts.

UArizona Dance

Dance
Choreographer Sam Watson, performers Riley Jo Parish, Kennedy Frazier, Kyle Anders, Diego Gonzales. The University of Arizona School of Dance is a nationally-ranked program led by world-class faculty with diverse perspectives on Dance. Associate Professor of Practice at UADance, Sam Watson’s creative work merges reality with fantasy while pondering how the human psyche responds to its environment. Since joining the faculty in 1999, Watson's choreography has been in the repertoire of companies including Giordano Dance Chicago, River North Dance Company, Aspen/Santa Fe Ballet, Ohio Ballet, Ballet Tucson, Big Muddy Dance Company, and Masashi Action Machine in Japan. His own dance troupe, WatsOnDance, was featured at the Jazz World Congress in Washington D.C., Wiesbaden, Germany and Nagoya, Japan as well as touring the U.S., Europe, and Guam. In addition to his university teaching, lecturing and choreography work, Sam has guest taught/choreographed in Europe for over 30 years.

Organizing team

Joe
Klug

Tucson , AZ, United States
Organizer

Misha
Harrison

Tucson, AZ, United States
Co-organizer