Tag: policy

Law Club Launches at MTU

A newly established Registered Student Organization (RSO) at Michigan Tech is helping students explore the legal field while making meaningful connections. Law Club at Michigan Technological University creates opportunities for students to explore legal careers, develop professional skills, and engage in meaningful discussions about law and policy.

Law Club MTU meets on Fridays from 5-6pm in the Social Science Annex Lounge in the Annex Building (Building 6, directly behind the Academic Office Building). Free parking is available in Lot 1 or 2, and no permit is necessary after 4pm.

Keep reading to learn more about the Law Club Officers and Advisor stewarding this new student organization.

President: Allie Millina

Allie Millina is a junior majoring in Policy and Law and minoring in Public Health. Allie has gained hands-on experience through a legal research internship with Legal Services of Northern Michigan, where she created case timelines for court, attended client interviews, and observed real settlement hearings and trials. She has worked on policy-focused research projects related to the Global South and interned with Global Detroit where she interviewed refugees about their resettlement process. She also volunteers with Vista Maria, an anti-human trafficking nonprofit.

As President of the Law Club, she is passionate about creating opportunities for students to explore legal careers, develop professional skills, and engage in meaningful discussions about law and policy.

Treasurer: Viviana Cotter

Viviana Cotter is pursuing a degree in Psychology with a concentration in Clinical/Counseling and a minor in Law and Society. She works in the Psychology and Human Factors Department, where she helps manage departmental spending. Additionally, she currently serves as the Treasurer for the Association of Psychology Students at Michigan Tech.

As Treasurer of the Law Club, she is committed to managing the club’s budget and ensuring that funds are allocated to support events, activities, and student initiatives.

Secretary: Gavin Rozak

Gavin Rozak is a junior Environmental Science & Policy major at Michigan Technological University, with a minor in Law & Society. By exploring the intersections between law, ecology, and environmental health, he hopes to engage with environmental justice and conservation. Passionate about building a more sustainable future, he aims to enroll in law school in pursuit of becoming an environmental attorney. Environmental volunteering, debate, and current experience working in arboriculture have reinforced his love for the environment and what it has to offer.

He is excited about the opportunities the Law Club has to offer students and the positive dialogue on legal issues it hopes to provide. In his role as Secretary, he wishes to learn alongside others about legal pathways and current events.

Advisor: Susanna Peters

Susanna Peters, MS, JD, taught at Wayne State University Law School before coming to Michigan Tech. Her research and teaching interests include constitutional law, intellectual property, cyberlaw, and prisons. She attended the University of Pennsylvania Law School and had the opportunity of clerking for United States District/Circuit Court Judge Morris Arnold and U.S. Magistrate Judge Komives. In private practice she has worked as a litigation associate at a Los Angeles law firm that specialized in labor law. Ms. Peters also has a M.S. in Agricultural Economics from the University of California at Davis, where her emphasis on resource economics stemmed from summers spent in the Alaskan fishing village of Yakutat. Since being at Tech she has taught Cyberlaw, Intellectual Property, Constitutional Law, Law and Society, Orientation to Legal Careers, American Government, and Perspectives sections entitled “Crime and Incarceration” and “The Work of the First Amendment: Selected Topics in First Amendment Law.

Contact Allie Millina, akmillin@mtu.edu, if you have any questions.

Navigating Uncertainty in Urban Planning: A New Framework for Decision-Makers

Dan Shtob, Assistant Professor of Sustainability and Health in the Department of Social Sciences, is co-author on an article recently published in the journal Nature Cities. “Planning for the complexity and uncertainty of urban socio-environmental futures” presents a framework to guide decision-making processes in the face of unpredictable futures. With natural links to ecology, engineering and design, urban planning, climate science, and beyond, the article is written for anyone working in complex and unpredictable environments.

The article introduces the RAFT framework—Reversibility, Adaptability, Flexibility, and Tailoring—offering a fresh, modern approach to adaptive management. The goal is to update traditional methods of project design and development by better incorporating complexity theory and a broader understanding of decision-making processes, particularly how politics and governance shape those choices. Shtob and his co-authors emphasize that the impacts of decisions are often as uncertain as the systems they aim to influence, whether social, ecological, or economic.

The RAFT framework acknowledges that decision-makers cannot predict every shift in social, ecological, or political contexts. Instead, it calls for a mindset of flexibility, humility, and adaptability—qualities that enable decision-makers to adjust to unforeseen challenges and pivot as conditions change.

Nature Cities January 2025 journal cover
January 2025 Nature Cities journal cover

Designed with practical application in mind, the RAFT framework is a tool meant for real-world decision-makers grappling with the complexities of urban socio-environmental systems. The framework’s four core principles—reversibility, adaptability, flexibility, and tailoring—help decision-makers guide projects through unpredictable futures, ensuring they can be adjusted as new information or conditions arise. This approach encourages moving forward with action rather than letting uncertainty lead to inaction, a critical choice when addressing the pressing challenges of urban sustainability and climate resilience.

By introducing a more flexible approach to planning, Shtob’s work bridges the gap between theory and practice. The RAFT framework provides a robust toolkit for urban planners, engineers, policymakers, and designers who need to get things done in the face of uncertainty—equipping them with the tools to make informed decisions, adapt to change, and succeed despite the complexities of modern urban landscapes.

In a world where rapid change is the only constant, the RAFT framework offers a refreshing approach to project design and decision-making. It’s an essential read for anyone in the fields of urban planning, sustainability, and beyond, encouraging them to act boldly, with humility and foresight, to create sustainable futures for our cities.