Dear Colleagues,

I'm forwarding this call for applications for your information.

All best,
Lars

Lars H. Gulbrandsen, Ph.D.
Senior Research Fellow
Fridtjof Nansen Institute
P.O. Box 326
NO-1326 Lysaker
Norway

Tel. +47 6711 1932
www.fni.no




Sustainability Science Fellowships at Harvard University
Doctoral, Post-doctoral, and Mid-career Fellowships
Due date for applications: January 15, 2012
The Sustainability Science 
Program<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cid/programs/sustsci> at Harvard 
University invites applications for resident fellowships in sustainability 
science for the academic year beginning in September 2012. The fellowship 
competition is open to advanced doctoral and post-doctoral students, and to 
mid-career professionals engaged in research or practice to facilitate the 
design, implementation, and evaluation of effective interventions that promote 
sustainable development. Some of the most serious constraints to sustainable 
development lie in the interconnections among sectors: energy's growing need 
for water; the impacts of water use on human health; the competition for land 
among food, energy and conservation initiatives; and the cumulative impact of 
all sectoral initiatives on climate and other key environmental services.  A 
central challenge moving forward is to develop an integrated understanding of 
how sectoral initiatives for sustainability can compete with and complement one 
another in particular regional contexts. The 2012-13 fellowship competition 
will therefore focus on regional initiatives pursing an integrated perspective 
on sustainable development in India, China and Brazil. It will also include a 
cross-cutting research initiative to integrate work focused on the theme of 
Innovation for Sustainable Development. Preference in this year's competition 
will be given to applicants whose proposals complement one or more of these 
four initiatives.  The 
Initiatives<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cid/programs/sustsci/grants-fellowships/fellows/fellowships-in-sustainability-science#3>
 (see below), are led by Professors William 
Clark<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/william-clark>, 
Michael Kremer<http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/kremer/>, Henry 
Lee<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/henry-lee>, Paul 
Moorcroft<http://www.oeb.harvard.edu/faculty/moorcroft/moorcroft-oeb.html>, and 
Rohini 
Pande<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/rohini-pande>. 
The Program is also open, however, to strong proposals in any area of 
sustainability science.  In addition to general funds available to support this 
fellowship offering, special funding for the Giorgio Ruffolo Fellowships in 
Sustainability 
Science<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/cid/programs/sustsci/grants-fellowships#3>
 is available to support citizens of Italy, Brazil, China, India or developing 
countries who are therefore especially encouraged to apply. For more 
information on the fellowships application process see 
http://www.cid.harvard.edu/sustsci/fellowship. Applications are due January 15, 
2012 and decisions will be announced by March 2012.

India: Building public-private partnerships to promote sustainable development 
in India

Faculty leader:  Rohini 
Pande<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/rohini-pande>, 
Mohammed Kamal Professor of Public Policy
Sustainable development, by its nature, requires government and private actors 
to work together.  Externalities from rapid growth, such as the depletion of 
subsidized resources, widespread air and water pollution or unsustainable 
energy use, arise from a joint failure of government and industry to create an 
economy where the most profitable action is also best socially.  The India 
Initiative will address sustainability problems in India of both national and 
global import.  The motivation for this research program is to work with 
governments to channel the enterprising potential of the private sector to 
correct such externalities.  The research will address questions in sustainable 
environmental regulation and provide evidence on how public-private 
partnerships can contribute to solving existing challenges.  We focus on three 
research areas.  First, existing environmental regulations are weakly enforced 
by possibly under-resourced regulators, leading to poor environmental quality.  
Second, traditional regulations, even if strengthened, are not the right tools 
to address many of India's pollution problems.  Third, from the perspective of 
sustainability of resource use, India's inefficient and rapidly growing energy 
consumption threatens to undermine its own development by contributing to 
global climate change. The research team will partner with government and 
private institutions in order to conduct field trials of innovative 
environmental policies to provide rigorous evidence on the impact of these 
policies for sustainable development. Doctoral, post-doctoral, and mid-career 
candidates are encouraged to apply.

China:  Energy in China: Environmental implications and management for 
sustainable development
Faculty leader: Henry 
Lee<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/henry-lee>, Jassim 
M. Jaidah Director, Environment and Natural Resources Program
The China Initiative will address the environmental implications of 
electrification and other energy policies in China and explore how China can 
manage these implications.  Fellows will work to identify and promote policies 
that will contribute to thoughtful use of China's natural resources (e.g., 
water, land) and/or the adoption of cleaner and less carbon-intensive 
industrial and energy technologies. Research areas include, but are not limited 
to: analyzing the impact of energy and industrial policies on water scarcity; 
assessing barriers to the development or deployment of cleaner energy 
technologies; and studying the impact of industrialization on health and 
fragile ecosystems.  Post-doctoral and mid-career candidates, especially those 
who speak Chinese, are particularly encouraged to apply.

Brazil: Sustainable Development of the Amazon and its surrounding regions: The 
interplay of climate, hydrology, and land use

Faculty leader:  Paul 
Moorcroft<http://www.oeb.harvard.edu/faculty/moorcroft/moorcroft-oeb.html>, 
Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology
Ongoing agricultural expansion and other land use changes in Amazonia and the 
surrounding regions are expected to continue over the next several decades as 
global demand for food and biofuel increases and regional economies expand. The 
conversion of natural forest and cerrado ecosystems to pastureland and 
agricultural crops creates warmer and drier atmospheric conditions than the 
native vegetation. In addition, human induced climate change arising from 
increasing levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is also expected to 
push the Amazon region towards a warmer and drier state. In a number of recent 
climate modeling studies, the Amazon has been shown to exhibit two contrasting 
states for the water cycle and ecosystems of the region: a moist forested 
state, and an alternate drier and warmer state with sparser vegetation.  This 
has raised the question of whether deforestation and conversion to agricultural 
land cause the atmosphere-vegetation-hydrologic system of the Amazon to switch 
from its current moist state to the warmer and drier one?  And if so, will this 
new state have sufficient precipitation to sustain the native forest and 
productivity of adjacent agricultural areas?  In this study we propose to 
answer these questions by developing a coupled vegetation-atmosphere model to 
investigate the stability of the Amazonian hydrologic system ("rivers in the 
sky" as well as flows on the ground) to scenarios of land use and climate 
change .  We expect to come closer to capturing the true response and 
thresholds of the Amazonian system than previous studies because our model has 
a more realistic representation of the dynamic response of the native 
vegetation, and the study will incorporate a range of land change scenarios.   
By doing so we will be able to answer the question: How much deforestation is 
too much? Post-doc candidates who have experience with integrated 
land-water-climate models and/or experience analyzing patterns and trends of 
land use and land use change are particularly encouraged to apply.

Innovation for Sustainability: Enhancing the Production of Essential Global 
Public Goods
Faculty leaders:
William 
Clark<http://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/faculty-staff-directory/william-clark>, 
Brooks Professor of International Science, Public Policy and Human Development
Michael Kremer, <http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/kremer/> Gates 
Professor of Developing Countries and Professor of Economics
This Initiative seeks to transform our understanding of the processes governing 
innovation in the production of global public goods (GPGs) needed for a 
transition toward sustainability.  In particular, we aim to discover how 
innovation systems can be designed that will simultaneously stimulate needed 
inventions and promote widespread and equitable access to the fruits of those 
inventions. The last two decades have served up a surprising number of ad-hoc 
operational experiments in improving the production of sustainability GPGs on 
topics as different as anti-retroviral medicines for HIV/AIDS, the development 
of gene banks, and the deployment of famine early warning systems.  Those 
experiments, however, are generally poorly described, little known beyond their 
respective sectors and therefore not contributing as much as they might to 
understanding or promoting the production of GPGs essential for sustainability. 
 This project is an effort to move to the next level of integrated and 
synthetic understanding. We propose a 3 track approach: 1) Reconceptualizing 
innovation of global public goods for sustainability: We will construct, apply, 
evaluate and revise an integrated framework for understanding the innovation 
process involved in the production of sustainability GPGs.  2) Comparing 
sectoral experiences: We will analyze a global cross-section of ad hoc 
experiments in new ways of providing sustainability GPGs using a template.  3) 
Conducting in-depth empirical studies: We will carry out a set of detailed 
empirical studies to test specific hypotheses about successful production of 
sustainability GPGs that arise from our sectoral comparisons. This research 
will employ our conceptual framework to pose similar questions across sectors 
and countries about how the system of GPG provision has responded to the full 
range of "push" and "pull" mechanisms that we will have identified through our 
sectoral comparisons.  Doctoral, post-doctoral, and mid-career candidates are 
encouraged to apply.

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