Don Barber
Geology Associate Professor
Director of Environmental Studies
A marine sedimentologist, Don Barber focuses on coastal geomorphology
and Quaternary climate change.
|
|
Peter Briggs
English Professor
Peter Briggs works on American and English literature, specializing in
18th century British literature. Of special interest to the ES
concentration, he has written about American landscapes and offers a
course on Nature Writing and Environmental Concerns. |
|
Maria Luisa Crawford
Geology Professor Emeritus
Maria Luisa Crawford researches the geological histories of mountain
belts. Among her many awards, she has been honored by the MacArthur
Foundation. |
|
Richard Davis
Anthropology Professor
A Paleolithic Archeologist, Richard Davis conducts fieldwork in Asia and the Aleutian
Islands. He studies human adaptations to the changing environments
of the Pleistocene and Holocene, as well as the development of
technology in a social context. |
|
Victor
Donnay
Math Professor
Victor Donnay studies chaotic properties
of dynamical systems, and is interested in mathematical modeling.
He also is working to improve K-12 math and science pedagogy,
and to bring mathematics to a wider audience. |
|
Jonas Goldsmith
Chemistry
Assistant Professor
Jonas Goldsmith combines the techniques of inorganic, physical
and synthetic chemistry to develop and investigate novel transition
metal complex-based nanostructures |
|
Karen Grief
Biology Professor
Karen Greif studies neural development, and also maintains
an active interest in science policy-making. Her policy course,
Biology and Public Policy, includes environmental issues.
|
|
Carol Hager
Political Science Professor
Carol Hager specializes in comparative politics. While her focus
is on Germany, she also studies environmental politics and environmental
policies in an international perspective.
|
|
|
Gary McDonogh
Growth and Structure of
Cities Professor
Gary McDonough explores global cities using perspectives of
anthropology, geography, social history, planning and mass media.
Recent work includes a study of the nature, land and identity
of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
|
|
Chris Oze
Geology Assistant Professor
Chris Oze is a geochemist specializing in medical geology and the origins of life. |
|
Catherine Riihimaki
Geology Lecturer and
Lab Coordinator
Catherine Riihimaki is a geomorphologist who studies the mechanics
of
glaciers and rivers, focusing on the evolution of mountain landscapes.
|
|
Michael Rock
Economics Professor
Michael
Rock specializes in economic development, and is an authority on the
interaction of development and pollution-control policy in Asia. He has
taught in the US, Thailand and Vietnam.
|
|
David Ross
Economics Associate Professor
David
Ross researches industrial organization and public policies regarding
imperfectly competitive markets. He also studies the environmental
impacts of industries, reflected in his Environmental Economics course.
|
|
Bethany Schneider
English Assistant Professor
Bethany
Schneider works on 19th century US literature, focusing on the
literature surrounding Indian Removal policies of the 1830s and 40s.
She studies the shifting cultural and legal understandings that
radically changed both Native and white senses of belonging and
responsibility to the land.
|
|
Ellen Stroud
Growth and Structure of Cities
Assistant Professor
Ellen Stroud is an environmental historian whose research and
teaching focus on human interactions with the natural world over
the course of U.S. history. She is particularly interested
in resource issues, and in issues of environmental justice within
American cities.
|
|
Neal Williams
Biology Assistant Professor
Neal
Williams is an ecologist; his research studies how landscape changes
affect insect pollinators (such as bees) and pollination.
|
|