Dear colleagues,
Please help me spread word about this position I have available:

https://sites.google.com/a/umn.edu/egg/positions-open?authuser=0

I have 3 years of funding available for a PhD student who will work with me 
to study the politics of forest planning in Minnesota. In particular, the 
student will work as my research assistant to understand the interactions 
between scientific & local knowledge, citizen engagement, and bureaucratic 
politics in producing forest plans across Minnesota's diverse forest tenure 
systems, with a focus on understanding the forest & environmental justice 
implications of these plans. Minnesota has an unusual level of 
institutional diversity in its forest management, encompassing nearly all 
forest tenure systems common in the US, including national forests and 
parks, one of the largest systems of state forests in the country, 
extensive county forests, tribal forests, and a mix of industrial and 
non-industrial private forests. Minnesota forests thus provide an ideal 
laboratory for the comparative study of how institutions mediate the 
relationship between science, citizen engagement, and bureaucratic 
decision-making. Changing politics means that many traditionally 
underrepresented groups (e.g. immigrants from Southeast Asia, Africa, and 
Latin America, members of Minnesota's several tribes) are increasingly 
making their voices heard, although current forest management & public 
engagement strategies may not effectively meet their needs.

The student will contribute to the comparative study of these institutional 
arrangements and their effect on forest management decision-making, forest 
quality, and environmental justice, while working towards their PhD in the 
highly ranked graduate program In Natural Resource Science & Management at 
the University of Minnesota (https://www.nrsm.umn.edu/). Funding will be 
provided through a mixture of Teaching and Research Assistant positions. 
The PhD student will be expected to develop an independent research project 
for their PhD dissertation which will connect with the broader interests of 
the Environmental Governance Group (https://sites.google.com/a/umn.edu/egg/), 
either building on work in Minnesota and/or comparing with other sites 
studied by the Group (e.g. other Lake States, S. Asia, or Latin America).

The ideal applicant will hold a masters degree in public policy, public 
affairs, political science, forestry, environmental studies, or a related 
field with a substantial background in qualitative and quantitative social 
science methodology and at least some familiarity with forestry. The 
candidate will also have experience working with diverse communities 
including both traditional forest stakeholders and those that have not 
traditionally been represented in US forestry decision-making. The 
candidate will have demonstrated their ability to write and implement 
social science research methodologies, to work independently, and to live 
and work in remote areas with harsh climates such as those typical of 
northern Minnesota. I will consider exceptional candidates with only a 
bachelor's degree. If you meet most, but not all criteria described above, 
please be explicit about your strengths in your cover letter.

Note that some additional fellowship funding may be available to US 
citizens and permanent residents who are students of color or who bring 
diversity to the NRSM graduate program (for details see 
https://www.grad.umn.edu/diversity-faculty-staff/dove, 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/14AnnA5SQU3qUJfbs_NgosTP6AIn2xDQj/view). If 
you meet these criteria, please mention this in your cover letter.

To apply, send the following in a single .pdf file in this order to 
[email protected] prior to or on November 26, 2018:

1. Cover letter describing your qualifications for this position, including 
your academic & professional background, experience working with diverse 
communities, writing and research abilities, ability to work independently, 
and experience working in remote areas with harsh climates.

2. CV, including your contact information

3. Transcripts for bachelor's and master's degrees (unofficial transcripts 
are fine for this stage).

4. GRE scores. English language proficiency exam scores if you have not 
obtained a degree in an English speaking country (for details on this 
requirement see 
https://www.grad.umn.edu/admissions-application-instructions/toefl). Test 
scores can be unofficial.

5. A list of contact information for 3 professional or academic references 
who can speak to your abilities as a writer, researcher, and independent 
worker, as well as your fit to the requirements of this call.

Once I have reviewed the applications & interviewed finalists, I will 
select the student I will accept into the NRSM program, and ask that 
student to make an official application to the NRSM graduate program 
(deadline December 15). Official transcripts and test scores will be 
required for the application.

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