J.T. Erbaugh is a postdoc in the EEES PhD program at Dartmouth (https://sites.dartmouth.edu/EEES/). We spoke about his PhD education with Arun Agrawal at the University of Michigan's School for Environment and Sustainability (https://seas.umich.edu/), his time in the field studying agroforestry in Indonesia when he got "hooked", and his subsequent research studying forest policy and governance as an interdisciplinary environmental social scientist!
JT's information:
Personal website: http://www.erbaughresearch.com/en/home/
Google scholar page: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=r_ZTFYIAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao
Other stuff:
Here is the website for ICPSR, which both J.T. and Michael struggled to spell out: https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/
Here is the website on registered reports that Michael mentioned: https://cos.io/rr/. You can hear more about these issues in our earlier interview with Neal Haddaway.
And finally, here is the full reference information for the article led by Oran Young:
Young, O.R., et al. 2006. A portfolio approach to analyzing complex human-environment interactions: Institutions and land change. Ecology and Society 11.
047: Split incentives, Rentlab and moving from government to the private sector with Jacqui Bauer
046: The sociology of science and interdisciplinarity with John Parker
045: Finding our niche and the importance of threshold concepts with Phil Loring
Insight #14: Fiona Nunan on institutional analysis
044: Policy processes and advocacy coalitions with Chris Weible
043: Team science in academia and resource management practice with Kenneth Wallen
042: Rethinking the monetary system for social and ecological equity with Joseph Ament
041: Antarctic marine conservation with Cassandra Brooks
040: Amplification processes and incorporating local knowledge in sustainability research with David Lam
Insight #13: Barry Ness on defining success in transdisciplinary research
039: Water, waste, Covid, and the invisibility of life support systems with Raul Pacheco-Vega
038: Case studies, polycentricity and governance of the Great Barrier Reef with Tiffany Morrison
037: Pracademics and patchiness with Jessica Cockburn
036: A social anthropological view on conservation and interdisciplinarity with Liana Chua
035: Bacteria, public goods, and Interdisciplinarity with Carey Nadell
034: Reflexivity and the digitalization of academia with Klara Winkler
033: Reflections on COVID19 from a sustainability science perspective with Henrik von Wehrden
032: Food systems, applied research, and open science with Meredith Niles
Insight #12: Jeremy Caradonna on the history of sustainability thinking
031: Food as a commons and changing food narratives in a post-COVID19 world with Jose Luis Vivero-Pol
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