how to solve environmental problems by the geographical studies
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Hari M. Osofsky is a Professor at the University of Minnesota Law School;
2013-14 Fesler-Lampert Chair in Urban and Regional Affairs; Director of the Joint Degree Program in Law,
Science & Technology; Faculty Member of the Conservation Biology Graduate Program; Adjunct Professor of
the Department of Geography, Environment and Society; and Fellow of the Institute on the Environment.
This essay contains edited portions of Hari M. Osofsky, Suburban Climate Change Ejforts. Possibilities for Small
and Nimble Cities Participating in State, Regional, National, and International Networks, 22 CORNELL J.L. &
PUB. PoL:Y 395 (2012) and Hari M. Osofsky, Climate Change and Crises of International Law: PossibilitiesfJr
Geographic Reenvisioning, 44 CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L. 423 (2011). The author very much appreciates the
helpful suggestions from both academics and state and local officials on this project on suburbs and climate
change-including Sarah Bronin, Tai-Heng Cheng, Jessica Clarke, Kirsten Engel, Daniel Farber, Michael
Gerrard, Alexandra Klass, Peter Lindstrom, Beth Mercer-Taylor, Philipp Muessig, Amir Nadav, Ashira
Ostrow, Pierre-Henri Prelot, Ben Richardson, and Ruti Teitel-which have helped her shape this project and
ensure that it reflects the on-the-ground experiences in the Twin Cities metropolitan region. The author is
also grateful to Myron Orfield for allowing her to reproduce his map of the Twin Cities divided by type of
suburb. This essay's ideas have been significantly improved by the insights of participants in workshops at the
Emory University School of Law, Georgetown University Law Center, New York Law School, University of
British Columbia Law School, University of Minnesota Law School, and Washington University School of
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To add to Aditya Prasoon's answer(which I personally found more logical and appropriate), distinction between the type of companies you've asked arises only for non-IT employees, since for Software/IT/CS students IT companies are core companies anyway.
E.g. a Mechanical Engineer from xyz college in Pune University is hired by Infosys. Despite being Mechanical Engineer he/she is not working on what he/she was being taught or groomed for during engineering days, for him/her, IT becomes non-core. Otherwise if this engineer had been working in ABC company(Mechanical Firm) that allows engineers to apply their knowledge earnt during engineering, then ABC would have been core company for Mechanical Engineer.
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