Faculty Research and Practice Areas
Karen Bailey: Climate adaptation/resilience, sustainable rural livelihoods, human health and well-being, human-wildlife conflict, and justice and equity in STEM
:ÌýEnvironmental governance, environmental communication, political economy and the environment.
Cassandra Brooks:ÌýEnvironmental governance and policy across scales from local to international, marine science, and natural resourceÌýconservation.
Amanda Carrico: Human-environment interactions; environmental psychology; decision-making and behavior; climate change and migration.
Dave Ciplet: Climate and energy justice, just transitions, global climate governance.
Warren Cook: The rhetoric of environmental politics, especially water justice in the U.S. American West.
: Conservation biology, ecology.
Lee Frankel-Goldwater: Environmental and Sustainability Education, Collaborative Planning and Network Governance, Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Transitions, & Community-based Research and Engagement Methods.
Mark GastaÌý(does not accept research students): Outdoor recreation economy, leadership development, corporate social and environmental responsibility, systemic change
:ÌýEnvironmental ethics and policy, applied ethics, normative ethics, metaethics, and ethical and environmental concerns of emerging technologies.
: Sustainability, Outdoor recreation economy, human-environment interactions, conservation, and natural resource management
Joanna Lambert:ÌýCommunity ecology, nutritional ecology, mammals in anthropogenic landscapes, human-wildlife coexistence and conflict, special focus on primates and carnivores.
:ÌýNeighborhoodÌýenvironments and health, nature-based social prescribing, environmental and policy change to support pro-health behaviors,Ìýand community-based participatory research.
Gregor MacGregor: (does not accept research students):Environmental law and policy.Ìý
Meghan McCarroll: (does not accept research students): Community water literacy as a tool for sustainable water management.
Zia Mehrabi:ÌýFood security, climate change, biodiversity, human health, welfare, infrastructure, technology.
Steve Miller:ÌýEnvironmental and natural resource economics, quantitative environmental policy analysis, effects of climate change on natural resource use and economies, applied statistics and machine learning.
Riley Mulhern: Private well water quality in the U.S., Lead risks in schools, childcare centers, and low-income housing, Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), Community and environmental health impacts of mining, & Point-of-use water treatment for reducing drinking water exposures.
: Socio-environmental systems, food systems, tropical forests, rural livelihoods, sustainable development.
Natalie OoiÌý(does not accept research students): Outdoor Recreation Economy, Sustainable Tourism Destination Management, Community Economic Development, Mountain Resort Communities
Nirav Patel: Sustainable development, with emphasis on the linkages between environmental and socio-economic systems.
Josh RadoffÌý(does not accept research students): Decarbonization, energy systems electrification, renewable energy development, green building, climate action planning, corporate sustainability, local government policy development.
Alice Reznickova: (does not accept research students):Community food security and food justice.
William ShutkinÌý(does not accept research students): Urban resilience and sustainability, climate justice, sustainable cities, sustainability planning and management
Damien Thompson: (does not accept research students): Food justice, food sovereignty, permaculture design, small-scale urban food production, community food systems, racial equity in the food system and urban geography.
Carrie Vodehnal:ÌýNormative Ethical Theory, Applied Ethics, Moral Psychology
Associated Faculty
Lisa Barlow:ÌýClimate change and resilience Education (works primarily with first-year undergraduates).
Fernando Briones: The social dimensions of environmental change, resilience, social vulnerability, disasters risk reduction and climate change adaptation in the global south and US marginalized groups.
Clint Carroll: Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, and anthropology.
Deserai Crow:ÌýLocal and state-level environmental policy, natural disaster recovery and risk mitigation in local communities and natural resource agencies.
Meaghan Daly: The science-policy interface and collaborative knowledge production for climate adaptation and mitigation, Adaptive capacities and the dynamics of vulnerability to climate change within socio-ecological systems, and Media coverage and science communication about climate change.
Lisa Dilling: Accelerating the energy transition, Climate adaptation strategies, Policy analysis and tradeoffs, and How decision maker values and perception affect policy choices.
:ÌýEnvironmental sociology, environmental inequality, race and ethnic relations, urban sociology, stratification/inequality, political sociology, Geographic Information Systems (GIS).
Nicholas Flores:ÌýEnvironmental and resource economics.
Mickey Glantz: How climate affects society and how society affects climate, and especially how climate anomalies and human activities interact to affect quality of life issues.
Bruce Goldstein: Long-term, Large-scale Social-ecological Planning, and Collaborative Negotiation and Governance.
Michael Gooseff:Ìý Stream-groundwater interactions, contaminant transport and fate, polar earth system responses to climate change, ecosystem processes in polar landscapes, aquatic biogeochemical cycling, andÌýwater quality modeling.
:ÌýEnvironmental sociology, environmental justice, Sociology of agriculture and food, immigration politics, and political theories of justice.
Jonathan Hughes:ÌýEnvironmental economics, empirical industrial organization, and transportation and energy economics.
Tyler Jones: Abrupt climate change (or the potential for it) through the lens of science, society, and culture. Our current focus areas are Alaska, Greenland, and Antarctica.Ìý
Rita Klees:ÌýBiodiversity conservation, water supply and sanitation, water resource management, and environmental policy.
Paul Komor: Renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies, policies, and markets.
:ÌýEnvironmental history, history of science in the American West, cultural perceptions of nature.
Lucy McAllister: Media and climate changeÌýcommunication; science communication; climate misinformation, corporate social responsibility.
:ÌýLivelihood strategies and decisions relating to land use among the pastoral peoples of Eastern Africa, mostly with the Turkana of northern Kenya and the Maasai of northern Tanzania.
Brian Muller: Planning methods, regional planning, and planning for hazards and climate change.
Astrid Olgilvie: Environmental and climatic history, human ecology in North Atlantic and Arctic regions, syntheses of proxy climate records, historical records of sea-ice incidence, imagology of the north.
:Ìý Using theatre as a tool for women to empower their voices for participation in the development that impacts their own lives and communities.
Phaedra C. Pezzullo: Environmental communication, environmental justice, climate justice, public advocacy, toxic politics, qualitative research.
Shawhin Roudbari: Theories/practices of contentious politics and employs ethnographic and speculative design methods.Ìý
:ÌýEvolution of biodiversity, mechanisms of trait evolution, and population genomics.
:ÌýU.S. and global environmental history,Ìýdisease and the environment,Ìýand history of the environmental sciences.
Levente Szentkirá±ô²â¾±: Business ethics, global political economy, and environmental sustainability, normative political theory, environmental policy, and international relations.
Evan Thomas: Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering.
Leaf Van Boven: Cocial psychology,Ìýenvironmental psychology, and political psychology.
James White:ÌýPaleoclimate and paleoceanography, global change, and geochemistry.
Olga Wilhelmi: Climate, society & environment interactions; GIS in atmospheric sciences; methods for assessing societal risk, vulnerability & adaptive capacity to natural hazards & climate change.