Dear Ecolog list members,

I am seeking 2-3 PhD students for next year to start an interdisciplinary 
natural resource management of public lands and protected areas lab. I'm 
posting to this list in hopes that some of you may have Masters or advanced 
undergraduate students with a strong background in ecology who would like to 
build on their existing skill set with novel social science and 
interdisciplinary research methods. I have outlined two specific foci in the 
call below. These are intentionally quite broad and by no means exhaustive so I 
would encourage ecology students with related socio-ecological research 
interests to get in touch.


Best,

Jeff


PhD Student Assistantships: Natural resource management of public lands & 
protected areas

The emerging School of Management at University of California, Merced is 
seeking 23 highly qualified applicants who are committed to pursuing a PhD 
focused on research related to natural resource management in the Sierra 
Nevada, in one of two areas:

1) Landscape values mapping, indicators of human well-being, and resilience. 
The PhD student will engage with the literature on human well-being, cultural 
ecosystem services, and resiliency in socio-ecological systems to co-design 
research that seeks to better understand the links between climatically-induced 
stressors (e.g. drought, fire, tree disease), vulnerability that may emerge 
from overreliance on an undiversified portfolio of ecosystem service types, and 
the adaptive capacity of recreational and resource-dependent land users. The 
student will have an interest in environmental planning as it relates to USFS 
and NPS natural resource management plans. GIS capabilities are greatly 
preferred, and database management or experience with participatory mapping are 
an additional plus.
2) Diversity in the outdoors, conservation engagement, and rural economies. The 
PhD student will engage with the literature on environmental justice, 
conservation psychology, and diversity in the outdoors to co-design research 
that seeks to better understand the links between access to nature for youth 
and economically underserved populations, conservation practices and 
environmental behaviors, and rural economic development proximate to public 
lands. The context for this research emanates from the Department of Interior 
and Obama administration campaign to increase diversity in public lands 
attendance and management, and highlight the role that protected areas provide 
in sustaining rural economies. Experience with database management, stakeholder 
engagement, and GIS are greatly preferred.

Potential candidates should be highly motivated to engage with research on one 
(or a combination) of the themes outlined above. Those interested should 
highlight their experience relevant to the above position(s). Candidates should 
demonstrate an ability and willingness to collaboratively conduct: literature 
reviews, research design (theoretical, methodological, empirical), digital data 
collection and analysis (e.g. census, zoning, environmental data), field data 
collection (e.g. hydrological, ecological), stakeholder group engagement, GIS 
data collection and analysis, and writing of peer-reviewed manuscripts.

The successful candidates will apply through the Environmental Systems Graduate 
Group and work under the guidance of Dr. Jeffrey Jenkins.

Expectations
• Participate in group lab activities, and contribute to a vibrant university 
community by actively engaging with interdisciplinary researchers in the 
natural and social sciences.
• Research duties: Conduct literature reviews, contribute to research design 
and analysis, support GIS data collection and analysis, contribute to or lead 
academic peer-reviewed publications, present at conferences, and support 
website design.
• The position is in large part funded through teaching assistantships, and 
candidates should be comfortable with balancing these instructional duties 
throughout their graduate career.
• Maintain good graduate standing and make satisfactory progress toward 
completion of the PhD degree (normative time approximately 5 years).

Qualifications
• Potential candidates must meet admission standards and be fully accepted into 
the Environmental Systems Graduate Group program (http://es.ucmerced.edu/) - 
priority deadline December 15th, 2016, regular deadline January 15th, 2017.
• Candidates must have highly positive recommendations from previous positions.
• Prior undergraduate and/or graduate research experience in human-environment 
geography, political ecology, environmental studies, environmental sociology, 
environmental planning, conservation psychology, or a related discipline is 
preferable as are familiarity with GIS, database management, and stakeholder 
communication.

Resources
• UC Merced is home to the Sierra Nevada Research Institute which focuses on 
sustaining natural resources and promoting social well-being 
(http://snri.ucmerced.edu/).
• UC Merced administers the Yosemite Field Station, which is part of the UC 
Natural Reserve System. In addition, the Sierra Nevada Research Institute 
administers the Sequoia Field Station at Sequoia and Kings Canyon National 
Parks.
• UC Merced is currently expanding academic program offerings and building new 
physical infrastructure as part of the 2020 Project 
(http://merced2020.ucmerced.edu/).

Those interested should contact Jeffrey Jenkins ([email protected]) for 
more information.




Assistant Professor

University of California, Merced

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