PhD student opportunities in Land Change Science, Water Resources, River 
Processes, and Land Use Policy -- Department of Geography, Texas State 
University

Position Description:  The Land Change and Ecosystem Science (LanCES) 
research network at Texas State University seeks PhD students to 
participate in a variety of research projects. Funding opportunities exist 
for Graduate Assistantships at the Doctoral level ($26,000 over 9 months, 
renewable up to 4 years). These assistantships come with a waiver of out-of-
state tuition and access to health benefits. In addition, the Department 
provides student funding for up to 2 conferences per year. Additional 
potential sources of funding, such as full tuition waivers for Year One and 
research fellowships, are competitively available through the Graduate 
College.

Qualifications: MA/MS in Geography or related field. Excellent writing 
skills and research experience is required. Experience with peer-reviewed 
publication is highly desired.

Research Projects: Potential PhD research projects are: (1) Effect of land 
management policies on water quality in New Zealand rivers [PI: Julian]; 
(2) Ecosystem services assessments in Texas or New Zealand [PI: Julian]; 
(3) Supply, demand, and governance of protected areas in the U.S. [PIs: 
Julian or Weaver]; (4) Quantifying river system alterations and developing 
flow-ecology criteria for environmental flow applications [PIs: Meitzen and 
Jensen]; (5) Examining geomorphic and riparian response to catastrophic 
flooding in the greater Guadalupe River Basin [PI: Meitzen]; (6) Landscape 
and vegetation response to human and physical drivers of change [PIs: 
Jensen and Schwinning] (7) Remote sensing of vegetation phenology [PI: 
Currit]; (8) Urban land-cover dynamics along the US-Mexico border [PI: 
Currit]; (9) Comparative analysis of cooperative and non-cooperative multi-
jurisdictional land use management regimes [PI: Weaver]; (10) Analyzing the 
roles of social norms and conventions in the maintenance and upkeep of 
neighborhood-level common-pool resources [PI: Weaver] 

Location: Texas State University is located in the beautiful Hill Country 
of San Marcos, 30 miles south of Austin and 45 miles north of San Antonio. 
San Marcos is a college town with many natural and cultural amenities. 
Texas State University is an emerging research university with 
approximately 38,000 students. The Department of Geography has 104 graduate 
students and 34 full-time faculty with interests that span the spectrum of 
Geography. More information on the Department can be found at: 
http://www.geo.txstate.edu/.

Contact: Please send a CV, one-page statement of research interests that 
includes which project interests you, contact information for three 
references, refereed publications, and GRE scores to the PI of the project 
you are interested by January 4, 2016. You can also contact the PI for 
additional information about any of the projects: Dr. Nate Currit 
([email protected]), Dr. Jennifer Jensen ([email protected]), Dr. Jason 
Julian ([email protected]), Dr. Kimberly Meitzen 
([email protected]), and Dr. Rusty Weaver ([email protected]).
 
For information on the Land Change and Ecosystem Science (LanCES) research 
network at Texas State University, visit 
http://www.landchangescience.txstate.edu/. For information on the graduate 
program in the Department of Geography, visit 
http://www.geo.txstate.edu/prospective-students/prospective-graduates.html. 

To be fully considered for assistantships and fellowships, the 
Department's full application deadline is January 15.

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