GRADUATE ASSISTANTSHIP, HUMAN DIMENSIONS OF NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT – Ph.D. 
in Environmental Systems at University of California, Merced

Seeking a PhD student who is eager to work in an interdisciplinary setting on 
research related to climate change planning and recreational visitor use 
management in parks and public lands of the Sierra Nevada.

Keywords: Sierra Nevada, wildland urban-interface, parks and protected areas 
management, complex systems, political ecology, land use planning

Possible research tasks that the graduate student may assist on include a 
combination of the following: 1] geovisualization of future climate change 
scenarios given trade-offs between different land use management practices 
(e.g. adaptation, restoration, passive) through image alteration, cartographic 
editing techniques, and other comparative methods (experience with Photoshop a 
plus); 2] carrying out surveys about the changing landscape of the 
wildland-urban interface, specifically related to the social and economic 
impact from climate induced disturbances like wildfire, tree mortality, and 
variable snow pack and hydrological conditions on tourism dependent communities 
that rely on climatic certainty; 3] assessing environmental education 
curriculum and developing natural resource communication materials for use in 
National Park youth outreach, including historically underrepresented 
populations; 4] conducting literature reviews on coupled socio-ecological 
systems, wildland-urban interface land use planning and policy at various 
scales, cognitive processes and biases associated with complex environmental 
change, and protected areas management; 5] analysis of archival material (e.g. 
photos, text, maps) from parks, forests, and other agencies to better 
understand changing environmental conditions, socioeconomic factors, and 
shifting management priorities; 6] collection and analysis of geographic 
information systems (GIS) data layers to model changes in infrastructure and 
development, along with provisioning of environmental services and benefits in 
the Sierra Nevada.

The successful candidate will have a strong background in geography or a 
closely aligned field such as environmental studies or planning, proficiency 
with geographic information systems analysis and other interdisciplinary social 
science methods, and experience working with stakeholders from a diverse set of 
backgrounds and perspectives. A Master’s degree or professional equivalent is 
strongly preferred. Additionally, preference will be given to those who have 
experience with public lands and natural resource agencies, professionally, 
academically, recreationally, or otherwise.

The doctoral training will be anchored in the Environmental Systems graduate 
program (http://es.ucmerced.edu) and cross over with opportunities and 
resources in the Management of Complex Systems department 
(http://mist.ucmerced.edu). The assistantship provides a 9-month stipend, 
in-state tuition waiver (residency must be acquired in 1-year), and health 
insurance through a combination of research assistantships and teaching 
assistantships. Normative time for a Ph.D. is approximately 5 years, and 
students must be willing to independently seek out and apply for fellowships to 
support individual research opportunities during the summer months and later 
years of the program.
The Ph.D. student will work under the direct supervision of Dr. Jeffrey Jenkins 
as part of a research group. The application deadline for Fall 2018 is January 
15th, 2018. Interested students are encouraged to get in contact at their 
earliest opportunity ([email protected]) with cover letter of interest 
highlighting relevant experience, C.V., GRE status/scores, and transcript 
information (if available) before applying.

For background about the University of California’s growing Merced campus 
please see the 2020 Plan (http://merced2020.ucmerced.edu), for further details 
about graduate study please see the Graduate Division website 
(http://graduatedivision.ucmerced.edu), and for information about ongoing 
faculty research throughout the region please see the Sierra Nevada Research 
Institute (http://snri.ucmerced.edu).

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