Bard Center for Environmental Policy to Host C2C Fellows Sustainability Leadership Workshop February 14–16
ANNANDALE-ON-HUDSON, N.Y. — During the weekend of February 14–16, Bard College will host the third annual Northeast regional C2C Fellows Sustainability Leadership Workshop. Directed by Eban S. Goodstein, director of the Bard Center for Environmental Policy (Bard CEP) and dean of the Bard MBA in Sustainability, the three-day workshop offers training to college students and recent graduates aspiring to become sustainability leaders in politics and business. C2C stands for Campus to Congress, and also for Campus to Capitol, City Hall, and Corporation. C2C Fellows Sustainability Leadership Workshops offer training in communication, entrepreneurship, fund-raising, self-knowledge, and other critical topics. In addition to Goodstein, other speakers include New York congressional candidate Sean Eldridge, president of Hudson River Ventures.
The workshop is open to current undergraduate or graduate students and recent graduates from any college or university in the Northeast. Students from any academic background are welcome. The cost of the workshop is $30 and includes registration, food, and lodging for nonlocal participants. For more information about the workshop or to apply, visit Bard’s C2C Fellows website at www.c2cfellows.org or contact Jess Scott at [email protected] or 845-752-4514. Application deadline is January 31.
For more information about the Bard Center for Environmental Policy, visit www.bard.edu/cep.
# # #
(1.15.14)
This event was last updated on 01-16-2014
Recent Press Releases:
- The Fisher Center at Bard Announces Summerscape 2026, Bringing Opera, Dance, Spiegeltent, and the 36th Bard Music Festival, Mozart and His World, to the Stunning Hudson River Valley Setting, June 25 – August 16
- Bard College Named a Top Producer of Fulbright US Students for 2025–26
- First Survey on Marilou Schultz Charts Her Innovation at Intersection of Navajo Weaving and Digital Technology
- Bard College Hosts Panel Discussion and Film Screening About Biodiversity in the Hudson Valley