University of California, Davis names Its Four Environmental Fellows
The UC Davis Institute of the Environment has named four Environmental Faculty Fellows for 2023: Michele Barbato and Jasquelin Pena of the College of Engineering, and Jamie Hansen-Lewis and Emily Schlickman of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.
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The fellowship program, for early and mid-career faculty members, provides $10,000 in unrestricted funding to each fellow to advance their research and/or to use for professional development.
Fellows are encouraged to build teams with graduate Earth Scholars and/or undergraduate Sustainability Scholars to provide immersive, hands-on experiences in cutting-edge sustainability and environmental justice issues while developing leadership, team-building and communication skills.
Institute of the Environment faculty fellows Michele Barbato, Jamie Hansen-Lewis, Jasquelin Pena and Emily Schlickman, headshots, UC Davis faculty
From left: Michele Barbato, Jamie Hansen-Lewis, Jasquelin Pena and Emily Schlickman.
Here are the new Environmental Faculty Fellows and their fellowship projects:
Michele Barbato, professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering — The House of the Future: Affordable and Sustainable Technologies for Wildfire-Resilient Housing. Institute pillars: Building Resilience and Sequestering Carbon.
Jamie Hansen-Lewis, assistant professor, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics — Fighting Fire With Fire: Does Clean Air Policy Abate Prescribed Fires? Institute pillar: Building Resilience.
Jasquelin Pena, associate professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering — A Community-Engaged, Rapid-Response Study on the Impacts of the Caldor Fire on Water and Soil Resources in the Cosumnes River Watershed. Institute pillars: Managing Water and Building Resilience.
Emily Schlickman, assistant professor, Landscape Architecture + Environmental Design, Department of Human Ecology — Two projects on the theme of Communicating Climate Change: Design by Fire and the California Climate Art Trail. Institute pillars: Building Resilience and Taking Action.