Catherine Brinkley
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drdrcatbrinkley.bsky.social
Catherine Brinkley
@drdrcatbrinkley.bsky.social
Community Development Professor with a focus on One Health- health is shared between humans, animals, and the environment (planner, veterinarian)
Reposted by Catherine Brinkley
This is what Hess said: “It brings up mixed emotions to represent the US right now. I think it’s a little hard. There’s obviously a lot going on that I’m not the biggest fan of. Just because I wear the flag doesn't mean I represent everything that's going on in the US.”
February 8, 2026 at 4:54 PM
Reposted by Catherine Brinkley
Agrihoods grow nutritious fruits & vegetables 🥬🍓🥦🍅
“It’s incredible what we could do with what we have, and what we could do even more with intentional planning,” @drdrcatbrinkley.bsky.social told @mrmattsimon.bsky.social
Water may hinder agrihoods in Santa Clara & Encinitas if rains stop.
“Perhaps people with the biggest need for food or nutrition security are also sort of disproportionately facing greater water expenses,” Lucy Diekmann @ucanr.edu told @mrmattsimon.bsky.social @grist.org
What happens when a neighborhood is built around a farm
February 6, 2026 at 7:11 PM
Grist reporter Matt Simon asks: What Happens When a Neighborhood is Built Around a Farm?

As Davis celebrates 50 years since the construction of Village Homes, there are some clear lessons about the numerous benefits of pairing farmland with urban development.
grist.org/cities/what-...
What happens when a neighborhood is built around a farm
This is what happens when communities are built around farms, gardens, and crops - not cars.
grist.org
February 6, 2026 at 10:02 PM
Fund CA Science
www.fundcascience.org
February 4, 2026 at 11:32 PM
Hot off the press!
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
🔜 For advocates, where can you make the most headway on local climate policy: enacting municipal reach codes, drafting a Climate Action Plan, or updating your General Plan?

👩‍⚖️ For policymakers: which policy pathway leads to implementation?
Sage Journals: Discover world-class research
Subscription and open access journals from Sage, the world's leading independent academic publisher.
journals.sagepub.com
February 4, 2026 at 4:04 PM
Reposted by Catherine Brinkley
📣 Call to join our Data Justice for Food Justice Learning Circle! Fill out our interest form by February 13th.

lnkd.in/g-nnmcBr
Interest Form: Data Justice for Food Justice Learning Circle
The Food Systems Planning and Healthy Communities Lab at the University at Buffalo, with funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and convening support from the American Planning Association Fo...
lnkd.in
January 30, 2026 at 4:28 AM
Calling all food systems planners!

We're assembling a HANDBOOK FOR CRITICAL FOOD SYSTEMS PLANNING and would love to consider your abstracts by February 1, 2026.

More info here:
www.linkedin.com/pulse/routle...
ROUTLEDGE HANDBOOK FOR CRITICAL FOOD SYSTEMS PLANNING
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS Abstract due February 01, 2026 Deadline for chapter August 01, 2026 Drawing on diverse disciplines, the Routledge Handbook of Critical Food Systems Planning aims to articulate a cri...
www.linkedin.com
January 16, 2026 at 4:23 PM
Read these trees.

How old are the trees with burn scars?
Why do the smaller trees not have burn scars?
What does this story written on the landscape mean for the coming years?
March 14, 2025 at 4:03 AM
Reposted by Catherine Brinkley
Stand Up for Science day nationwide. Find events at the link. standupforscience2025.org
March 7, 2025 at 2:53 PM
March brings us into Women's History Month- and a chance to celebrate the many contributions of women to their hometowns.
March 7, 2025 at 12:57 AM
Reposted by Catherine Brinkley
Kroger’s is partnering with Microsoft to install facial-recognition tech in stores to identify individual customers and set prices per person. The next shopper might pay a different amount based on their profile."

Article says it will be based on ability to pay, but pretty sure that won't be it.
January 28, 2025 at 3:00 AM
Reposted by Catherine Brinkley
At today's University of California Regents meeting, Regent Sures told us "the concept of having faculty perform self governance, it's not working at all."

He said this in a convo about faculty due process in disciplinary actions, a bullet placed prominently on his desk.

This is the UC.
January 23, 2025 at 5:54 AM
"The fight to make the Martin Luther King Jr. birthday a holiday took 32 years"

constitutioncenter.org/blog/how-mar...
How the Martin Luther King Jr. birthday became a holiday
The fight to make the Martin Luther King Jr. birthday a holiday took 32 years, a lot of campaigning, and guest appearances including Stevie Wonder, Ted Kennedy, and the National Football League.
constitutioncenter.org
January 21, 2025 at 3:41 AM
P.s. this year we're in a Major Lunar Standstill on the 18.6 yr lunar cycle... So the waning crescent moon coming up in a few days in the northern hemisphere well look like a "wet moon" or "cheshire" smile this month. search.app/8KX7U85eXhif...
Major Lunar Standstill -- Moon Teachings for the Masses
Sunwheel - Proposed and constructed under the watchful eye of Professor Judith Young of the Astronomy Department at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst
search.app
January 19, 2025 at 9:09 AM
About to go bad
January 17, 2025 at 4:22 PM
This rapid uptick in #homelessness has been a federal policy choice... which is why so many local organizations are innovating approaches.

We review these attempts at #poverty alleviation with a survey of 105 #guaranteedincome programs in the US: doi.org/10.1515/bis-...
January 16, 2025 at 6:32 PM
Nearly every California jurisdiction considers the risk of "wildfire" in their land-use plans.

PlanSearch.caes.ucdavis.edu
January 10, 2025 at 9:34 PM
New publication alert: we review 105 guaranteed income pilots in the US- programs that offer a guaranteed amount of cash at regular intervals (unusually monthly).

doi.org/10.1515/bis-...

Who funded them? How was success framed? When did participants shape the program?
Guaranteed Income: A Policy Landscape Review of 105 Programs in the United States
Cash assistance programs have been piloted as Basic or Guaranteed Income across the United States. This research asks how programs are being designed and evaluated, with implications for how collectiv...
doi.org
January 3, 2025 at 7:26 PM
Reposted by Catherine Brinkley
Wrote a piece in @nature. Eliminating the massive carbon footprint of academia is the job of academic institutions, not individual scientists. Yes, fly less and then call on your campus to electrify and stop operating fossil fuel infrastructure.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
November 2, 2023 at 5:47 PM
Reposted by Catherine Brinkley

Fossil Free UCD, a grassroots organization of students, faculty, and staff, calls upon the Chancellor of @ucdavis.bsky.social to officially establish targets of 75% reductions in Scope 1 and 2 emissions below the 2019 baseline by 2030, 81% by 2035, and 95% by 2040, among other asks.

🌱🐋 🌎 🧪
December 12, 2024 at 5:25 PM
Really loved "Our Moon" - a sweeping history of geological formations, evolution of life, and the history of science.

For all the urban plans oriented along cardinal directions, this book explains humanity's repeat cultural homage to our place within the cosmos.

Thank you, @rboyle31.bsky.social
January 2, 2025 at 10:22 PM
1/9: I teach in the Department of Human Ecology- and this is our introductory textbook, written in 1949 by George Zipf. The scholar would die the next year at the age of 48. I often think of what might have happened to the field had he lived.
December 13, 2024 at 4:53 PM
Awesome student team at PlanSearch has finished uploading all the updated + adopted city and county comprehensive plans for California.

That's 1,709 PDFs covering 138M words. These are essentially advertisements of what communities want: density, greenbelts, preservation...
December 8, 2024 at 1:28 AM
1. Given the many interventions to cure a "food desert" in the face of increasing agrifood consolidation -- what works?

Join us December 4th for a #AAAS panel discussion on Food insecurity and food access
1. The conventional explanation for food deserts—that these places are too poor or too rural to generate enough spending on groceries, or too Black to overcome racist corporate redlining — fail to grapple with a key fact: food deserts didn’t used to exist. My new piece in The Atlantic.
The Mystery of Food Deserts
They didn’t materialize around the country for no reason. Something happened.
www.theatlantic.com
December 2, 2024 at 7:53 PM
This is a particularly nice solution for farms near urban areas - with transmission lines and direct to consumer markets for solar wine (also great shade for livestock)
December 1, 2024 at 4:07 PM