Dear
Members,
We are
pleased to share the
announcement for Sustainability Science Fellowships at Harvard University-
Doctoral, Post-doctoral, and Mid-career Fellowships.
The Sustainability
Science Program at Harvard University invites applications for resident
fellowships in sustainability science for the academic year beginning in
September 2013. 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 is to
develop an integrated understanding of how sectoral initiatives for
sustainability can compete with and complement one another in particular
regional contexts. The 2013-14 fellowship competition therefore focuses on
regional initiatives pursing an integrated perspective on sustainable
development in India, China and Brazil. It also includes 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 (see below), are led by Professors William
Clark, Henry
Lee, Paul
Moorcroft, and 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 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.hks.harvard.edu/centers/mrcbg/programs/sustsci/fellowships. Applications are due January 15, 2013 and decisions will be announced by
March 2013.
Governance
Innovations for Sustainable Development: Building Public-Private Partnerships in
India
Faculty leader: Rohini Pande, Mohammed Kamal Professor of Public Policy
Project director: Michael Greenstone
Faculty leader: Rohini Pande, Mohammed Kamal Professor of Public Policy
Project director: Michael Greenstone
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 is partnering 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.
Faculty leader: Henry
Lee, Jassim M. Jaidah Director, Environment and Natural Resources
Program
Project directors: Edward Cunningham, Laura Diaz Anadon, Venkatesh Narayanamurti
Project directors: Edward Cunningham, Laura Diaz Anadon, Venkatesh Narayanamurti
The China Initiative addresses the environmental implications of energy
policies in China and explores how China can manage these implications. Fellows
work to identify and promote policies that will contribute to the 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; the technical, environmental, and
economic implications of greater electrification of urban areas generally, and
commercial and transportation systems specifically; and the environmental and
structural impact of policies and programs affecting the electric utility and
coal industries. Post-doctoral and mid-career candidates, especially those who
speak Chinese, are particularly encouraged to apply.
Faculty leader: Paul
Moorcroft, Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology
Project director: John Briscoe
Project director: John Briscoe
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 (sometimes referred to as "rivers in the
sky", as well as accompanying river flows on the ground) to scenarios of land
use and climate change. By doing so we will be able to answer the question: How
much deforestation is too much? Post-doctoral 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.
Faculty leader: William
Clark, Brooks Professor of International Science, Public Policy and Human
Development
Project directors: Laura Diaz Anadon, Kira Matus, Suerie Moon
Project directors: Laura Diaz Anadon, Kira Matus, Suerie Moon
Meeting sustainable development goals will require harnessing and
maximizing the potential of technological innovation. Examples of such
technologies include carbon capture and storage systems, more efficient
irrigation methods, essential medicines, household water purification devices,
and manufacturing processes that minimize waste and pollution. While some needed
innovations can be fostered through existing public and private mechanisms at
the national level, such efforts have proven inadequate to meet global
sustainability goals, particularly with regard to meeting the needs of the
world’s poorest, most vulnerable or marginalized in current and future
generations. Too often, technologies are either not developed at all for lack of
a sufficiently profitable market, or if developed, are not accessible or
well-adapted to end-user needs. This initiative seeks to advance knowledge and
understanding of how to equitably improve the functioning of the “global
innovation system” for sustainable development technologies. We are conducting a
comparative study of how well the system functions to meet five sustainable
development needs (food, energy, health, manufactured goods, and water), with a
special focus on equity and access. The initiative examines specific cases of
“system interventions” (e.g., policy interventions, institutional innovations,
new approaches to shaping the innovation process) intended to strengthen the
global innovation system, with the broader aim of developing policy
recommendations that draw from, and are generalizable across, multiple sectors.
The findings will contribute to realizing the potential of science and
technology to meet the most pressing sustainable development challenges.
Doctoral, post-doctoral, and mid-career candidates are encouraged to
apply.
Nancy Dickson
Sustainability Science Program
Kennedy School of Government, Harvard
University
Cambridge, MA , USA
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