Sophomore College 2023
Stanford's Sophomore College provides rising second-year students with an opportunity for three weeks of intensive, research-based study with senior faculty in a range of subjects and disciplines. The Bill Lane Center regularly sponsors Sophomore College courses on the North American West.

River and Region: The Columbia River and the Shaping of the Pacific Northwest
This seminar will explore the crucial role of the Columbia River in the past, present, and future of the Pacific Northwest. Topics will include the lives and legacies of the indigenous peoples that Lewis and Clark encountered more than two centuries ago; the historic fisheries that attracted thousands of Chinese and, later, Scandinavian workers; the New Deal’s epic dam-building initiatives beginning in the 1930s; the impact of the Manhattan Project’s plutonium bomb development at Hanford Atomic Works in WWII; and the twenty-first-century server farms dotted across the Columbia Plateau. We will visit with local water managers, farmers, ranchers, loggers, Native American fishermen, and energy administrators, as well as elected officials and environmental activists, to examine the hydrologic, meteorologic, and geologic bases of the River’s water and energy resources, and the practical, social, environmental, economic, and political issues surrounding their development in the Pacific Northwest region.
The Columbia River and its watershed provide a revealing lens on a host of issues. A transnational, multi-state river with the largest residual populations of anadromous salmonids in the continental US, it is a major source of renewable hydroelectric power. (The Grand Coulee dam powerhouse is the largest-capacity hydropower facility in the US; nearly 50% of Oregon’s electricity generation flows from hydropower; in Washington State it’s nearly two-thirds, the highest in the nation.) The river provides a major bulk commodity transportation link from the interior West to the sea via an elaborate system of locks. It irrigates nearly 700,000 acres of sprawling wheat ranches and fruit farms in the federally administered Columbia Basin Project. We will look at all these issues with respect to rapid climate change, ecosystem impacts, economics, and public policy.
We will begin with classroom briefings on campus, in preparation for the two-week field portion of the seminar. We will then travel widely throughout the Columbia basin, visiting water and energy facilities across the watershed, e.g., hydro, solar, wind, and natural gas power plants; dams and reservoirs with their powerhouses, fish passage facilities, navigation locks, and flood-mitigation systems; tribal organizations; irrigation projects; the Hanford Nuclear Reservation; and offices of regulatory agencies. We will meet with relevant policy experts and public officials, along with several of the stakeholders in the basin.
Over the summer students will be responsible for assigned readings from several sources, including monographs, online materials, and recent news articles. During the trip, students will work in small groups to analyze and assess one aspect of the river’s utilization, and the challenges to responsible management going forward. The seminar will culminate in presentations to an audience of Stanford alumni in Portland, Oregon.
Instructors:

David Kennedy
Founding Co-director of the Bill Lane Center for the American West, Donald J. McLachlan Professor of History Emeritus at Stanford University

David Freyberg
Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Senior Fellow at the Woods Institute for the Environment
APPLICATIONS CLOSED FOR 2023.
Past Courses:
- 2019 and 2022: Energy in Hawaii: Forefront of Clean Energy Technology and Policy
- 2018: Fighting Over Our Common Heritage: Public Lands in the West
- 2017: Water and Power in the Pacific Northwest– The Columbia River
- 2016: Managing Natural Resources on Native American Lands
- 2015: Energy in the Southwest
- 2014: Energy in the West
- 2013: The Last Frontier of the American West
- 2012: People, Land, and Water in the Heart of the West
- 2011: The Colorado River: Water in the West, as Seen from a Raft in the Grand Canyon
- 2007: The Federal Government and the West
- 2006: What's the Matter with California?
- 2005: Spinning the West