20 research outputs found
Peculiar Habits: Academic Costumes at Princeton University
Six years after its founding as colonial Americaâs fourth college in 1746, Princeton prescribed a design for ârobesâ to be worn by the president and âas many of [the students] as shall see fit ⊠.â Perhaps not many students actually saw fit to wear them, for, in 1755, the trustees voted to require that âall students except freshmen be obliged to appear in Habitsâ. They recanted just three years later, and revoked the requirement that the students âwear peculiar Habitsâ, thus beginning the Universityâs own peculiar, nearly 300-year habit of continually revising its approach to academic garb. [Excerpt]
Measuring the carbon footprint of wine tourism and cellar door sales
The wine industry has been dedicating increasing efforts to considering the sustainability of the environment. Various approaches have been implemented to reduce the industry's carbon footprint. With over 40 million wine tourists globally, cellar door operations have become an important distribution channel, especially for the financial sustainability of small and medium-sized wineries, but this component has not been addressed in existing environmental life cycle assessments. This paper presents a methodology for measuring the carbon footprint of wine tourism and cellar door sales based on a combination of the bottom-up and the top-down approaches. In the case of Australia, we find both domestic and international wine tourism lead to substantially higher carbon emissions than the standard wine distribution channels. The difference can be more than 100 fold per bottle of wine. In addition, the benchmarking analysis indicates that cellar door sales may become the most carbon intensive component across all life cycle stages of wine. This information offers an opportunity to evaluate the environmental trade-offs that maybe involved in obtaining the numerous benefits of wine tourism, and to consider ways of minimizing wine tourism-related carbon emissions in the future