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A Summer Institute on Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Applications in the Americas

Purpose

The purpose of the Summer Institute is to share knowledge within the scholarly community about the human dimensions of global change research and how such interdisciplinary research programs are conducted. The participants will be researchers from several countries who are both already established research scholars as well as younger scholars just starting their research on these topics. No single discipline has the essential tools needed to undertake extensive, long-term efforts to monitor and assess how various patterns of human use affect environmental processes at local, landscape, regional, and global levels. Thus, it is essential to bring scholars from diverse physical, biological, and social sciences together to share with one another their relevant technical tools and skills for conceptualizing, measuring, and analyzing these problems.

The Location

The Summer Institute will be located on the Bloomington Campus of Indiana University. Many sessions will be conducted in Woodburn Hall, which houses the Department of Political Science and a suite of offices of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis. Lab sessions will be offered in the Student Building, which houses the Department of Anthropology, the Department of Geography, and the Anthropological Center for Training and Research in Global Environmental Change (ACT). We will also spend one full day in the field. Labs will be at ACT.

The Faculty and Presenters

Dr. Emilio Moran, Co-Director of CIPEC; Director of the Anthropological Center for Training and Research on Global Environmental Change (ACT); James H. Rudy Professor of Anthropology; and Professor, School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Dr. Moran has 25 years experience in research in the Amazon Basin and other tropical countries. He is a specialist in tropical ecology, tropical soils, and the study of land use and land cover change. Since 1991, he has developed methods linking traditional field techniques of data collection to remotely sensed data from Landsat satellites. His work is currently supported by grants from NSF, NICHD, and NASA. He is the author of 5 books and 9 edited volumes, and more than 80 journal articles and book chapters.

Dr. Elinor Ostrom, Co-Director of CIPEC; Co-Director of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis; Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Government in the Department of Political Science; and Professor, School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Since 1965, she has pursued an active research program linking institutional arrangements at a local, regional, and national level to the actions of individuals and their outcomes. Since the mid 1980s, she has headed a major research program funded by NSF, the Ford Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations on common-pool resources. She is the author of Governing the Commons and co-author with Roy Gardner and James Walker of Rules, Games, and Common-Pool Resources as well as many articles in scholarly journals.

Antonio Azuela is the Federal Prosecutor for Environmental Protection of The United States of Mexico. He holds a Licentiate in Law from the Iberoamerican University (Mexico City) and a LLM Degree from the University of Warwick (UK). He has been a researcher and lecturer on urban and environmental law, the sociology of law and urban sociology in different Mexican universities. He is on leave from the Institute of Social Research, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), where he is a Research Fellow. He is the author of more than 40 articles and several books, including La ciudad, la propiedad privada y el derecho (The City, Private Property and the Law), (Mexico, D.F.: El Colegio de Mexico, 1989).

Dr. Eduardo Brondizio, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology; Research Associate, CIPEC; and Assistant Director of the Anthropological Center for Training and Research on Global Environmental Change (ACT), Indiana University. His work has focused on agricultural and agroforestry intensification, land use/land cover change, and secondary succession in the Eastern Amazônia region (especially in the Amazon estuary), and the application of remote sensing to these issues. Previously, he was the Coordinator of the "Atlas of the Atlantic Forest Remnants in Brazil," published in 1990. His work has appeared in numerous journals.

Laura Carlson, Research Assistant, CIPEC. Laura is a senior undergraduate pursuing a double major in political science and the politics and ecology of Indiana's forests. The latter is an individualized major which combines elements of GIS, remote sensing, and ecology with political theory and policy analysis. Prior to returning to IU to complete this degree, Laura worked with a regional, nongovernmental organization concerned with forest policy issues in the eastern United States.

Dr. David Dodds, Fellow in Demography, CIPEC. David is an anthropologist who received his Ph.D. from UCLA in 1994. Before coming to CIPEC, he was a Mellon postdoctoral fellow in anthropological demography at UC-Berkeley. His doctoral research, funded by the InterAmerican Foundation and a Fulbright-Hays grant, assessed the degree to which the subsistence system of the Miskito of Honduras may be sustainable by integrating data on population growth, agricultural land use, and deforestation into a mathematical projection model. His postdoctoral research, funded by the Rand Corporation, CIPEC, and the MacArthur Foundation has focused on population and land use change in eastern Honduras, community forestry institutions in Guatemala and Mexico, and experimental economics.

Julie England, Systems Analyst, CIPEC. Julie was involved with the development of core CIPEC research methods from its inception, and has been involved in the design and implementation of every research database developed by the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis for the past 10 years. She teaches database and computing issues to visitors, students, and staff, and helps assess computing and technology needs for CIPEC and its related centers.

Dr. Thomas Evans,Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, and Research Associate, CIPEC, Indiana University. His main area of research is in the application of GIS and Remote Sensing techniques to the study of population-environment interactions. In particular, his past research has focused on developing GIS and spatial analytic techniques to aid in the integration of social survey data and biophysical data. He has conducted fieldwork in Ecuador and Thailand, and collaborated with researchers from a variety of disciplines including sociology, anthropology, ecology, and planning. He is a past employee of Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI), the developers of ARC/INFO and ARCVIEW.

Dr. Clark Gibson, Assistant Professor of Political Science and Research Associate, CIPEC. Dr. Gibson's research focuses on the politics of natural resource management at the national, regional, and local levels. He has worked extensively in Southern and Eastern Africa on wildlife and forestry issues. As part of the International Forestry Resources and Institutions (IFRI) Research Program, he has undertaken fieldwork regarding forests and the communities that use them in North, South, and Central America. Dr. Gibson has published based on his fieldwork in journals such as Environmental History, World Development, Human Ecology, and Comparative Politics. He is the author of the forthcoming book Politicians and Poachers: The Political Economy of Wildlife Policy in Africa (Cambridge University Press). Dr. Gibson teaches the IFRI Training Course as a graduate seminar at Indiana University.

Dr. Glen Green, Remote Sensing Postdoctoral Scholar, CIPEC. Dr. Green earned a Ph.D. from Washington University (Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences) in St. Louis, MO. He has studied several of the prominent agents of anthropogenic change (grazing, salinization, and de- forestation caused by subsistence farming and charcoal production) in a diverse array of vegetation types. In field and laboratory studies, he has relied heavily on quantitative methodologies such as GIS, Remote Sensing, and GPS technologies. His research interests include examining deforesta- tion processes to determine environmental degradation associated with various resource manage- ment policies, and the use of models together with remotely sensed mapping and monitoring to study the biodiversity implications of land cover changes and the future economic costs associated with various conservation and development strategies. He has worked in Madagascar, Egypt, and in the oak-hickory forests of the U.S. Midwest.

Robin Humphrey, Institutional Database Manager, CIPEC. Robin is the Database Manager for institutional data. He has had more than 10 years experience working in the computing applications at Indiana University. Robin coordinates all database changes with the member Collaborating Research Centers and reviews all data collected in the field with the team leaders. Currently he is working with the data recently collected in Brazil and Guatemala. He also assists in training visiting scholars and graduate students in computer and database classes.

Dr. Fabrice Lehoucq, Institutional Research Coordinator, CIPEC. Dr. Lehoucq holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from Duke University. He is a specialist in comparative politics and institutional analysis. He has been a Fulbright Scholar and has received grants from The American Political Science Association, The Helen Kellogg Institute, the University of Notre Dame, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and The Social Science Research Council. He is the author of articles and books on voter turnout rates, political change and electoral fraud. Currently, he is studying the impact of property rights and informal institutions on forest conditions in Guatemala as well as studying the sources and consequences of government policies on forests in select countries of the Western Hemisphere.

Dr. Stephen McCracken, Postdoctoral Scholar, ACT. Dr. McCracken is a social demographer with a focus on health and environment in Latin America. He earned a Master's degree at the Center for Latin American Studies, University of Florida in 1985, and a Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Texas at Austin. Teaching areas include Analytical Demography, Social Demography of Mortality, Population-Development & Environment, and Social Science Research Methods. Current research focuses on family demography, land-use strategies, and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon, and historical demography of Indiana and de/reforestation. Both research endeavors have been focusing on how traditional sources of data (e.g., census and sample surveys) can be combined with remotely sensed data through the use of GIS for furthering research and analysis.

Dr. J.C. Randolph, Director of the National Institute of Global Environmental Change (NIGEC); Professor, School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Dr. Randolph is a forest ecologist. He teaches courses in applied ecology, forest ecology, and applications of geographic information systems (GIS). His research interests focus upon ecological aspects of global environmental change with particular interests in forestry and agriculture. Other research interests include physiological ecology of woody plants and small mammals. Dr. Randolph was director of Environmental Programs for 10 years and later Associate Dean for Research from 1986 to 1989, both in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Currently, he is the Director of the Midwestern Regional Center of the National Institute for Global Environmental Change (NIGEC), sponsored by the Department of Energy.

Jane Southworth, Research Assistant, CIPEC. Jane is currently a student in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs undertaking a Ph.D. in Environmental Science. Prior to this she received a Master's degree in Meteorology and Climatology within the Department of Geography at Indiana University, and a B.S. in Geography from Leicester University, England. Her research interests lie within the field of Remote Sensing, specifically in the use of the thermal band as a tool in land use/land cover classification schemes and is currently working on a proposal for undertaking this research in the Yucatan, Mexico. Jane's position within CIPEC entails much work in the area of remote sensing analysis and methodologies for various research sites. This procedure standardizes the methods used across all sites and hence allows for ease of comparison.

Dr. Catherine Tucker, Environmental Research Coordinator, CIPEC. Catherine received her doctorate at the University of Arizona in 1996. Her research investigates human dimensions of forest change, with a focus on the relationships between tenure arrangements, national policies, socioeconomic conditions, demographic factors, and management decisions. She is conducting a longitudinal study of forest change in western Honduras, and she is starting work in Oaxaca and Michoacán, Mexico. She has forthcoming articles in Human Ecology, Mesoamérica, and Praxis. In addition to interests in deforestation, institutional arrangements, and global environmental change, Catherine brings to CIPEC a background in team research projects, group administration, and management and broad experience with fieldwork in Latin America.

Dr. Richard Wilk, Professor, Department of Anthropology, Indiana University. Dr. Wilk's fieldwork focus has been in Belize for over 20 years now, though he has also done research in West Africa and the U.S. There are three major topical themes in his research: a focus on the social and economic organization of the household, an interest in consumer culture and the global media, and a continuing concern with ethical issues and practice in our discipline, with particular emphasis on the issues raised by archaeologists' depictions of the past. He has co-edited a book on beauty pageants, with 14 case studies from around the world, which focused his attention on the naturalization of gender and on the ways beauty links previously isolated cultures into global hierarchies. In the long run he hopes to bring these theoretical interests to bear on his household consumption work, looking at the way gendered experience is learned through processes of decision-making and consumption of food and clothing. He has recently published a textbook entitled Economies and Cultures: Foundations of Economic Anthropology, which brings the field up to date with the anthropology of the 1990s and beyond.




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Last Updated: April 04, 2004
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