Tag: social sciences

Digging Deeper: Social Sciences at the 41 North Film Festival

The 41 North Film Festival, running November 6–9 at Michigan Tech’s Rozsa Center, offers audiences an opportunity to explore urgent human stories—above ground, underground, and the spaces in between. This year, Social Sciences faculty bring their expertise to two of the festival’s most thought-provoking films, connecting cinematic storytelling with real-world questions about place, history, and the human experience.

Based on Robert Macfarlane’s bestseller, Underland is a cinematic voyage beneath the surface of the earth. Special guest Dr. Bradley Garrett, who is featured in the film, will take part in a discussion following the screening. The Q&A will be moderated by Dr. Timothy Scarlett, Associate Professor of Archaeology and Anthropology and Co-Director of the Keweenaw Energy Transitions Lab. Together, they’ll delve into the film’s themes of hidden worlds, human curiosity, and our relationship with the unseen landscapes below us.

On Saturday, Natchez examines questions of historic preservation in a town defined by—and dependent on—its conflicted antebellum past. The post-film discussion will be facilitated by Dr. Sarah Scarlett, Associate Professor of History and Co-Director of the Keweenaw Time Traveler project, along with Dr. Kette Thomas, Humanities, and Wyndeth Davis, Superintendent of Keweenaw National Historical Park.

Together, these films and conversations embody the spirit of the social sciences: uncovering the layers of meaning that shape how people inhabit and interpret the world around them.

Read the full 41 North Film Festival feature by festival founder and director Erin Smith, Dive Deep at the 41 North Film Festival, on the Michigan Tech Humanities newsblog.

In Print: Wellstead Published in Policy Design and Practice

Wellstead Policy Design
Adam M. Wellstead
Professor of Public Policy, Social Sciences

Adam Wellstead (SS) is a co-author of a paper published in Policy Design and Practice. The paper is titled “Public Value and Procedural Policy Instrument Specifications in ‘Design for Service.'”

Michael Howlett of Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada, is the other co-author of the paper.

Wellstead joined Michigan Tech’s Social Sciences Department in 2011 after a 15-year career with the Canadian federal government. Wellstead’s background in policy and public management contributes to the research and teaching in the Environmental Policy Program. Additionally, his research interests include investigating multi-level governance arrangements in the natural resource sector, measuring policy capacity and evidence-based policy-making, policy mechanisms, and theories of the policy process. In addition, Wellstead enjoys developing and conducting (primarily online) surveys and undertaking structural equation modeling using LISREL.


About the Social Sciences Department at Michigan Tech

Michigan Tech’s Department of Social Sciences offers bachelor of science degrees in AnthropologyPolicy and Community DevelopmentSustainability Science and Society, and Social Science, along with a bachelor of arts degree in History. Our graduate program includes master’s and doctoral degrees in Environmental and Energy Policy and Industrial Heritage and Archaeology (the only one of its kind in the world), and a master’s in Sustainable Communities. Additionally, you can get a graduate certificate in Public Policy in by taking three courses in just one term.

Questions? Contact us at socialsciences@mtu.edu. Follow us on FacebookInstagram and Twitter for the latest happenings.