Meet ENVX editor Audrey Stuart! Below you’ll find a brief bio, class level, and a digital scholarship (DS) site link, where you can view this Environmental Studies major’s own work. Below this information are all ENVX posts authored by the editor to date; cick on any post title to view the full post.
Class of 2017 | DS websiteA senior environmental studies student, passionate about merging public policy, global action and environmental change. I enjoy traveling whenever possible and hope to work in global environmental policy one day. |
![]() Whether we realize it or not, environmental studies (ENVS) seems to infiltrate every aspect of our lives by drastically altering the way we think. Even after taking one introductory level class we bristle at ‘big words’ like sustainability, and start to question commonly accepted bodies of thought. A goal is that students will be able to move past the set of … |
![]() Most students enter the ENVS Program because they are genuinely passionate about environmental concerns. Our interests and backgrounds are incredibly varied, and everyone has a unique repertoire of projects and interests. As the program website describes, this major is characterized by an emphasis on “cutting-edge scholarship on environmental issues” that re … |
![]() By the time senior year rolls around and we graduate from Lewis and Clark’s Environmental Studies Program, we are expected to be capable of carrying out analytical research. This entails approaching an issue in a way that incorporates synthesis of multiple views and a full understanding of what is actually happening before asking what can be done. This is a … |
![]() Any student who has taken an environmental studies course at Lewis & Clark can attest that we love to discuss the different dimensions associated with each specific place. Whether we are studying abroad or doing research here in Portland, we aim to complicate our understanding of the place by bringing in various dimensions of scale and (often opposing) v … |



