Pioneering Change: Jamil Bey Honored for Advancing Geosciences and
Environmental Justice
Pittsburgh, Pa., USA: Dr. Jamil Bey, founder and CEO of Pittsburgh’s
UrbanKind Institute, is the 2023 recipient of the Geological Society of
America’s President's Medal, which is conferred on individuals whose impact
has profoundly enhanced the geoscience profession. “Dr. Bey’s work
[provides] an excellent model for identifying critical Earth system
challenges, broadening participation in the geosciences, and using science
in service of humankind,” says Mark Little, past president of GSA, who
nominated Bey for the award.
Bey was selected as the recipient of this award because he excels at
creating community experiences, sharing resources and information, and
advocating for regional policy around the environment, climate change,
food, and quality of life in Pittsburgh, where the society is hosting its
GSA Connects 2023 meeting. While accepting the award, Bey noted, “this
award is a testament to the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration
and the recognition that urban issues are inherently tied to the earth
sciences.”
Local engagement is at the heart of Dr. Bey’s work, and he fundamentally
believes that cities should be kind places for people. He first got
involved in community organizing while working as a high school teacher,
observing and seeking to eliminate the barriers his students and their
families were facing. Bey went on to found the UrbanKind Institute, whose
mission is to lift up the voices of overburdened and under-resourced
residents in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County. “Our purpose was clear,” says
Bey, “to bridge the gap between academia, community organizations, and
residents themselves, fostering collaboration to uplift and revitalize
neglected urban entities.”
Where do the geosciences come in? “The topography of the city is a
challenge in Pittsburgh,” explains Bey. “Rivers and hills create barriers,
they break up communities. There are over 90 separate neighborhoods in the
city.” Unfortunately, those who are most vulnerable tend to be concentrated
in specific locations in our cities, in a negative feedback loop, and
multiple structural and historical injustices maintain and reinforce these
vulnerabilities.
Today, Bey will
present his work
at GSA Connects 2023, focusing on a two-fold path forward. One avenue is
improving researchers’ ability to engage with local communities on what is
relevant and meaningful to them. “It is about connecting the researchers’
goals to the community goals,” explains Bey.
The other route is being deliberate about bringing people from vulnerable
communities into the sciences and creating pathways for success. Nurturing
young peoples’ curiosity can be a stabilizing force in their lives, and by
becoming scientists themselves they can help refocus their field into what
matters to local communities. “When researchers come from impacted
communities they are more likely to have a personal perspective more so than
an academic perspective,” says Bey.
Ultimately, Bey’s line of work is applied geosciences. “It is not what
people think when they hear those words, but this really is it. This is
what made receiving this award so special: seeing the link between urban
landscapes and the geosciences recognized.”
GSA President’s Medal: Using the Earth Sciences to Address Community
Goals and Priorities
Author: Jamil Bey, UrbanKind Institute President & CEO,
Jamil@urbankind.org
119: T15. Geology and Society Division at 20 I: How Geology Shapes
Society—Past, Present, and Future
Monday, 16 October 2023, 1:50–2:10 p.m.
The Geological Society of America (
https://www.geosociety.org
) unites a diverse community of geoscientists in a common purpose to
study the mysteries of our planet (and beyond) and share scientific
findings. Members and friends around the world, from academia,
government, and industry, participate in GSA meetings, publications,
and programs at all career levels, to foster professional excellence.
GSA values and supports inclusion through cooperative research, public
dialogue on earth issues, science education, and the application of
geoscience in the service of humankind.
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