
With the aim of strengthening the exchange of knowledge about agriculture and opening spaces for dialogue between local and international communities, the UIS Socorro Campus hosted Peace Corps Volunteer Nolan Carson, who led an informative talk about the International Agriculture Club 2025-2.
The event, which was broadcast from the Aula Maxima at the Convento Campus, presented the objectives, themes and opportunities of the club, which will focus on sustainable agricultural practices, food production, food security and cultural knowledge applied to the field.

During his speech, Carson shared his experience as a volunteer and explained how the Club seeks to integrate students from different disciplines to work on projects that link technical knowledge with rural realities: “the objective is to create a place where ideas grow as much as plants, where we can share local knowledge with global visions,” he said, who also stressed the importance of building networks between young people, farmers and experts from different countries.
This space does not require prior registration and is aimed at those who wish to approach the universe of global agriculture as a commitment to cultivate ideas from collective knowledge and cultural exchange.
