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Postdoctoral Research Opportunity

 

Adaptive governance: water, land use and climate change 

in an urbanizing agricultural region

 

A two-year postdoctoral researcher position is available with the Water
Sustainability and Climate (WSC) research group at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison as part of a five-year project funded by the National
Science Foundation. The position requires strong social science training and
ability to couple social research with ecological and hydrologic sciences.
The researcher will have the opportunity to work with an excellent
interdisciplinary research group (wsc.limnology.wisc.edu).

 

This position will investigate the processes of environmental governance
that shape human-environment interactions in the Yahara Watershed of
southern Wisconsin. The WSC project features an integrated model and
scenario development process to compare alternative futures for the
watershed. Postdoctoral research:

1)     First, the postdoctoral researcher will analyze governance processes
and decision-making under uncertainty in the context of climatic,
environmental, and social change. This research will examine decision-making
processes with past and modeled future ecological conditions in the Yahara
Watershed. The researcher will examine the role of governance in scenarios
and identify how modeled future nonstationarity in water, land use,
agriculture, and climate may challenge existing governance regimes. The
researcher will also compare theories of change. 

2)     Second, the researcher will examine stakeholder engagement with the
scenarios. We are interested in knowing whether engagement with scenarios by
local stakeholders can alter perceptions and decision horizons and expand a
space for creative thinking. The scenarios are provocative, plausible,
place-based stories with contrasting social and biophysical conditions
through year 2070.

3)     (optional) Depending on the applicant's skillset, there may be an
opportunity to continue developing a spatial dataset of policy interventions
in the watershed to understand the role of different organizations
(municipal, county, state, and federal agencies and nonprofit organizations)
deploying different tools (acquisitions, regulations, incentives, etc.) to
improve water quality.

 

The postdoc will work closely with an interdisciplinary team spanning
social, ecological, and hydrologic scientists. The project involves six
faculty, two full-time staff members, and numerous graduate and
undergraduate students. The overarching question of our work is:  How will
ecosystem services related to freshwater vary and how can they be sustained
in regional watersheds as climate, land use and land cover, land management,
the built environment and human demands change? As a part of this
overarching question, we ask: How can regional governance systems for water
and land use be made more resilient and adaptive to meet diverse human
needs? In what ways are regional human-environment systems resilient and in
what ways are they vulnerable to potential changes in climate and
freshwaters? The geographic setting for this project is the Yahara
Watershed, an urbanizing agricultural watershed in southern Wisconsin,
containing the city of Madison. Here and elsewhere, human needs for
freshwater are growing as changes in climate, landscapes, the built
environment and institutions alter water flows and quality in sometimes
unpredictable ways. These changes affect ecosystem services related to
freshwater, such as flows of freshwater for domestic, agricultural,
industrial, recreational and other uses; regulation of floods; water
quality; and aspects of human health. To strengthen conceptual frameworks
and improve predictive capacity, our interdisciplinary project will
integrate biophysical and social-economic aspects of regional water systems.
The position will also benefit from connections with the North Temperate
Lakes - Long Term Ecological Research site and network.

Applicants should have strong social science training with a prior degree in
human dimensions of natural resources, geography, political science,
planning, environmental policy, or related field.  Background in water
quality and quantity, agriculture, and/or land use change required. Previous
social science research experience and ability to conduct interdisciplinary
research are required. Experience with mixed qualitative and quantitative
research methods is desired; ArcGIS and spatial analysis is desired but
optional. Strong GPA, GRE scores, and oral and written communication skills
are required. Applicants bringing diverse personal and professional
backgrounds to the research program are encouraged to apply. The position
will be co-supervised by Drs. Adena Rissman and Chris Kucharik.

The 2-year Postdoctoral Research position will begin in Summer 2014. Review
of applications will begin January 13, 2014 and continue until an applicant
is selected.

 

To apply, email to Dr. Adena Rissman at  <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected] the following in a single PDF document: cover letter, CV
with undergraduate/graduate GPA and GRE scores, and unofficial
undergraduate/graduate transcripts.

 

Dr. Adena Rissman and Dr. Chris Kucharik

Water Sustainability and Climate

University of Wisconsin-Madison

http://wsc.limnology.wisc.edu/

http://labs.russell.wisc.edu/rissman/

http://www.sage.wisc.edu/people/kucharik/kucharik.html

 

 

Dr. Adena Rissman

Assistant Professor, Human Dimensions of Ecosystem Management

University of Wisconsin-Madison

608.263.4356

http://labs.russell.wisc.edu/rissman/

 

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