POSTED BY: ODED ORON
A group of Jackson School undergraduate students together with Washington state’s Tulalip Tribes launched a new interactive digital story “Finding Common Ground in a World of Environmental Change” to over 50 UW students, faculty and local communities who gathered Monday evening at UW’s Intellectual House to learn more about environmental issues affecting the Tulalip Tribes.
The event featured remarks by students, faculty and Tulalip members as well as a screening of a digital story designed to communicate to non-tribal millennials Puget Sound restoration efforts and treaty rights.
The digital story, a collaborative effort between 15 International Studies majors and Tulalip Tribes Public Affairs, is only one component of a strategic communications plan the students developed as part of their Jackson School’s capstone course Task Force.
Nathan Aberg, who introduced the digital story presentation, spoke about using digital as “the glue” in reaching the millennial generation, and how the story incorporates the growing passion they felt for indigenous rights, with an ultimate goal to breed action among millenials for environmental protection and treaty rights.
Representatives of the Tulalip Tribes, including Francesca Hillery, Public Affairs Manager, shared the impact of environmental changes on their livelihoods and important research and partnership with the students.
Task Force consist of small groups of Jackson School undergraduates who investigate a real-world policy issue and produce a final report and practical policy recommendations, to be presented in front of an external evaluator. The evaluation is held on the last day of winter quarter, which this year falls on Friday, March 10.