Climate Justice

The grand challenge theme for year two is climate justice.
Participants of The Justice Challenge in the 2024-2025 academic year will explore the complexities of climate justice from sustainability, ethical sourcing, access, affordability and more.
Climate Justice Colloquium
Students will meet online once per week with dual foci of meeting with a subject expert or experts and applying the knowledge in an online workshop format. This will provide opportunities for the scholars community to meet, expose students to the Climate Justice Grand Challenge through hearing from leaders in the field, and invite participation in an engaging Reacting to the Past simulation role play. Potential topics for the colloquium could include: concepts that frame climate justice; societal climate change responses; justice-focused climate policies; responses to the climate emergency; and connection of climate justice with other political, economic and historical issues.
- Section 1: Aug. 27, 2024-Oct. 22, 2024, 5-8 p.m. CST, online
- Section 2: Aug. 28, 2024-Oct. 23, 2024, 1-4 p.m. CST, online
Signature Experiences
Signature experiences are offered in multiple formats to allow each participant flexibility in what best accommodates their needs. Signature experiences include the design challenge, hackathons and field course described below. Students will be matched to one of these experiences based upon their preferences and availability.
Hackathons
Spring 2025 Provisional Dates
- Online date/time Jan. 24-25, 2025
- Online date/time Feb. 21-22, 2025

Hackathons have quickly gained acclaim for promoting and accelerating innovation well beyond their origins in the information technology community (Falk Olesen and Halskov, 2020). During a typical hackathon, enthusiastic problem solvers gather, form working teams and develop innovative solutions for the given challenge, concluding the event with solutions presented and evaluated based on workability, feasibility and usability (Brenner, 2011). They are fun and informal, an excellent learning platform that attracts a spectrum of students, especially those interested in branching out from traditional classroom settings and with a hunger for experiential, project-based learning (Nandi and Mandernach, 2016). Hackathons are known to expand student participation in STEM and food, agriculture, natural resources and human sciences by advancing educational opportunities, particularly for underrepresented groups (Parker and Wagner, 2016), while developing competencies with transdisciplinary collaboration.
Over the course of two days, student problem solvers from multiple institutions form working teams and develop innovative solutions for an issue central to food justice.
Design Challenges
Spring 2025 on-site at:
- University of Houston, Houston, Texas
- University of Montana, Missoula, Montana
- Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas

The semester-long design challenge is a local, in-person opportunity for students to identify and propose solutions to a local problem related to the grand challenges annual theme. This is delivered as a seminar with students from multiple majors participating. A pedagogy built upon design thinking encourages creativity, critical thinking and collaboration on solution design in an iterative process with great potential to transform higher education (Bj枚rklund et al., 2019). A key concept in design theory is understanding the inter-relationships and complexities of what are termed 鈥渨icked problems;鈥 i.e., so inter-related are these that a singular solution may lead to further problems unless they are tackled at a systemic, structural level. Design theory is firmly grounded in developing solutions by working closely with the community. As such, the design challenge provides participants with a lesson in participatory democracy.
Student problem solvers from a single institution spend an in-person semester (equivalent to a three-credit course) to develop innovative solutions to a local challenge central to food justice.
Field Course
- Date and location:
- The field course will be hosted by the University of Montana on May 17-23, 2025, in Missoula, Montana.

This in-person experience immerses students into a deeper exploration of the annual theme within a given community. The field course provides student participants with experiential learning opportunities through the application of the widely used 鈥減lace as text鈥 model to explore the annual theme. Thus, students experience real-world constraints, opportunities and realities of the topic from the blended scientific expertise of the field course coordinators and the lived expertise of local communities. The curriculum is packed with local community visits, team building, problem solving and culminating projects.
Each student participant will receive a flight subsidy of up to $500. Room and board will be provided. Student participants will be housed on campus and provided with a campus meal plan.
Students will experience real-world constraints, opportunities and realities of climate justice from the expertise of field course coordinators and the lived expertise of local communities. The curriculum will be packed with local community visits, team building, problem-solving and culminating projects.
Culminating Conference
- June 5, 2025, 5-8 p.m. CST
The annual program ends in a culminating conference for students to reflect and to provide a forum for cooperative learning among students from their signature experiences. Student participants create an asynchronous artifact that becomes available to peers, experts and the Assessment Committee. Students form panels for interactive Q&A sessions with their peers, 糖心视频 and guest experts to detail the extent of their learning with one another in real time.
Participants gather in an online format to showcase their portfolios and program outcomes.