---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Anne E. Hilton <ahil...@u.washington.edu> Date: Fri, Dec 30, 2011 at 9:14 AM Subject: [dub] 521 Seminar: Traceability Systems for Coffee Farmers: A Key to Sustainability and Food Security (1/6) To: "hcde-community at uw.edu" <hcde-community at uw.edu>, "dub at dub.washington.edu" <dub at dub.washington.edu>
Please join the Department of Human Centered Design & Engineering (HCDE) in Winter Quarter for a 10-week seminar on current topics in the HCDE field by industry experts. Each 40-minute talk will be followed by a Q&A session. Members of the UW community and the public are welcome. More information about the series is available online at hcde.uw.edu/521. *Title*: Traceability Systems for Coffee Farmers: A Key to Sustainability and Food Security *Date*: January 6, 2012 *Speaker*: Stephen Vick** *When*: Fridays, 12:30-1:20 PM *Where*: Loew Hall, Room 206, UW Seattle campus**** *Instructor*: Professor Judy Ramey 1 Credit (Credit/Non-credit) Registration for UW students is available by entry code; contact the HCDE advisor by emailing hcde at uw.edu. Stephen Vick will be discussing data tracking systems at the coffee farm level and how they are critical to sustainability, traceability, transparency, and food security. Because coffee is grown exclusively in developing countries, a number of technological and cultural considerations must be made when designing and implementing these systems. He will discuss the progress and pitfalls of current systems and why HCDE professionals could play an important role in taking these systems to the next level, improving farmer livelihoods in the long run.**** *About the Speaker* Stephen Vick graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Human Centered Design & Engineering from the University of Washington in 2001. Most recently, Stephen worked as the National Quality Control Manager for Intelligentsia Coffee and Tea in Chicago and Los Angeles.**** Stephen began his work in coffee as a barista for Zoka Coffee in Seattle and spent much of his career as a trainer and educator for Zoka, as well as Stumptown Coffee Roasters in Portland, Oregon. He placed third in the 2003 US Barista Championship and has since served a USBC and WBC judge, as well as a Cup of Excellence international jury member.**** A few years ago, Stephen shifted his work to origin, applying his well-rounded knowledge of the high-end specialty roaster market to help farmers improve the quality of their coffee and, in turn, their quality of life. During his time as Quality Control Project Manager for Sustainable Harvest Coffee Importers, he implemented rigorous quality control systems and protocols for the 5,000 farmer members of the Kanyovu Cooperative near Kigoma, Tanzania. The cooperative?s shift in focus with regards to quality resulted in Kanyovu winning first prize at the 2010 EAFCA Taste of Harvest competition in Mombasa, Kenya.**** _______________________________________________ dub mailing list dub at dub.washington.edu http://dub.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/dub -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/private/change/attachments/20120104/da930bef/attachment.html>