Please distribute widely:

Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Boston University

Boston University’s Global Development Policy Center (GDP Center) seeks a 
post-doctoral fellow for a research project on the implications of Chinese 
foreign investment on global biodiversity, land use change, and indigenous 
people landscapes.

Successful candidates will come to Boston University for all or part of the 
2020/21 academic year to engage with this project and pursue their own related 
research agenda.

Candidates should have a solid understanding of biodiversity and ecological 
conservation issues and regimes and be able to demonstrate competency in:

1. Open-source spatial data processing and visualization (R, Python & QGIS)
2. Ecosystem service mapping (InVEST)

The following skills are also a plus:

3. Simulating policy instruments (Python)
4. Rigorous conservation impact evaluation skills (R, STATA, Matching)
5. Knowledge or interest in Chinese policy and language

Applications are due on January 20, 2020.  Please send a CV and contact 
information for references to Kevin P. Gallagher ([email protected])

--
Kevin P. Gallagher, PhD.
Professor of Global Development Policy

Director, Global Development Policy Center
Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies
Boston University
53 Bay State Road
Boston, MA 02155

www.bu.edu/gdp
(617) 353-9348
twitter: @KevinPGallagher

[cid:039AD7B2-421F-4B9B-AFA8-C7E11C8CD1CB]

From: <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> on behalf of 
Kate Neville <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Reply-To: "[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Wednesday, November 20, 2019 at 12:23 PM
To: gep-ed <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: Alice Cohen <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: [gep-ed] CfP Dimensions of Political Ecology 2020: citizen science

Dear GEP-ed colleagues,

Please see the call for papers below for a panel on citizen at the Dimensions 
of Political Ecology conference, planned for Feb 27-29, 2020, at the University 
of Kentucky (conference details here: https://www.politicalecology.org/).

Submissions for the panel, along with any questions, can be directed to Alice 
Cohen: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.

There's a tight submission deadline -- conference participants must register 
for the conference by Dec 1, so Alice will confirm the panel by the end of next 
week.

Thanks and all the best,
Kate


-------
Dr. Kate J. Neville
Assistant Professor
Department of Political Science and School of the Environment
University of Toronto
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



Political Ecologies of Citizen Science (please see 
https://www.politicalecology.org/single-post/2019/10/29/Political-Ecologies-of-Citizen-Science
 for an electronic CfP):

This session explores the political ecologies of citizen science, or 
community-based monitoring (CBM).  Citizen science and CBM programs are 
increasingly popular models of environmental governance around the world and 
have been used to monitor a range of systems, including forests, water, fish, 
and climate.  Accordingly, a handful of review papers have sought to highlight 
the various benefits, challenges, and governance models associated with their 
uptake (see, for example, Bonney et al 2014; Carlson and Cohen 2018; Conrad and 
Hilchey 2011; Kosmala et al 2016; Whitelaw 2003). While these reviews have been 
pragmatic in their recommendations and in supporting scholars and practitioners 
in implementing and understanding the possible forms of CBM, they have largely 
been silent on the power structures implicit in these management and governance 
models.   Moreover, they say little on the ontological underpinnings of such 
systems, and often posit ‘science’ – homogenous, hegemonic, and apolitical – as 
the common language spoken by community members and policy makers. The 
literature on citizen science and CBM often presents the desired end goal as 
data sharing for policy making. This session problematizes these assumptions, 
and queries the social, political, and ecological implications of this 
ascendant model of resource governance.

To that end, this session seeks papers that explore the political ecologies of 
citizen science and CBM.  We are especially interested in theoretical or 
case-study based papers that examine any of the following:


  *   The funding arrangements (and their implications) for citizen science and 
CBM;
  *   Issues around the intellectual property resulting from citizen science;
  *   The relationship between Indigenous or Traditional Knowledge and citizen 
science or CBM programs; and
  *   The science/policy nexus in the context of citizen science or CBM 
programs.


Interested participants should send a 200-word abstract to Alice Cohen 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) as soon as possible. 
Participants must register for the conference by December 1st.

With best wishes,
Alice

Alice Cohen, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Earth & Environmental Science
http://ees.acadiau.ca/cohen.html

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