Login

Mathematics of Planet Earth

  • Home
  • About MPE
  • Programs
    • Long Term Programs
    • Summer Schools
    • Workshops
    • Meetings
    • Special Sessions
    • Colloquia and Seminars
    • Public Lectures
    • Simons Lectures
  • Education
    • Public Lectures
    • Speakers Bureau
    • Summer Schools
    • Resources
    • Posters
    • Curriculum Materials
    • Academic programs
  • Events
    • MPE Day at UNESCO
    • Public Lectures
    • Exhibitions
    • Competitions
    • Awareness events
  • Partners
    • MPE2013 Partner Reports
    • Societies
    • International Bodies
    • Institutes
    • Research Centers
    • Scientific Journals
    • Teacher Associations
    • Academic
    • Magazines
    • Science Centers
    • Others
    • Becoming a Partner
  • Learn More
    • Books
    • Articles
    • Educational Resources
    • Videos and Podcasts
    • Speakers Bureau
  • Newsroom
  • Blog
  • Calendar
  • Opportunities
  • Français

Search

Latest Posts

AIM/MCRN Summer School: Week 6

August 2, 2020

 [...]

AIM/MCRN Summer School: Week 5

July 26, 2020

 [...]

Professor Christopher K.R.T. Jones — Recipient of the 2020 MPE Prize


Professor Chris Jones is the Bill Guthridge Distinguished Professor in Mathematics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Director of the Mathematics and Climate Research Network (MCRN). The 2020 MPE Prize recognizes Professor Jones for his many significant contributions to climate science and the mathematics of planet Earth.

Categories

Workshops

The Keyfitz Centennial Symposium on Mathematical Demography

General

Organized by John Bongaarts, Hal Caswell, Noreen Goldman, Josh Goldstein, Ron Lee, and Shripad Tuljapurkar

http://mbi.osu.edu/2012/keydescription.html

06/24/2013 - 06/28/2013

Mathematical Biosciences Institute (MBI), MBI, Ohio State

The main goal of the Symposium is to serve as a forum for presentation of ongoing research on the mathematics of population. The program will encompass research on human and non-human populations, and both theoretical and applied research. In bringing together both mathematical demographers and population biologists, the symposium will adhere to Keyfitz’s view, from his first book to his last, that population itself as an object worthy of study, not limited to particular species.

  • Contact

IMU UNESCO ICIAM ICSU