Two PhD students sought at SNRE, University of Michigan, for SLUCE project 

The School of Natural Resources and Environment (SNRE) at the University 
of Michigan is seeking applications from qualified, motivated, prospective 
PhD students to work on dissertation research related to the SLUCE II 
project (Spatial Land Use Change and Ecological effects.)  This is a 
collaborative, interdisciplinary research project involving six faculty 
members in the area of coupled human-natural systems.  The project links 
agent-based modeling of human behaviors driving land use / land cover 
change (LULCC), preferences for vegetation cover and vegetation 
management, land market modeling, field work, remote sensing, and 
ecosystem modeling of landscape carbon balance in low-density human-
dominated landscapes (suburban and exurban residential landscapes).  The 
project uses 13 townships in southeastern Michigan as a model system and 
seeks to explore thresholds in land use / land cover change and landscape 
carbon balance that could potentially be altered with policy levers.  Two 
new PhD student positions are available, one working with Prof. Dan Brown 
and the other with Assoc. Prof. Bill Currie.  Both students will work in 
the broad areas of geographic information science, land use / land cover 
change, coupled human-natural systems, modeling, and landscape carbon 
balance.  The student working closely with Dr. Brown will focus more 
directly on understanding and modeling patterns and drivers of LULCC, 
especially with agent-based modeling, while the student working closely 
with Dr. Currie will focus more directly on measuring and modeling 
vegetation management and landscape carbon balance.  

For more information about this research see 
http://www.cscs.umich.edu/research/projects/sluce/, http://www-
personal.umich.edu/~danbrown/, and http://www-
personal.umich.edu/~wcurrie/.  If you are interested, contact Dr. Brown or 
Dr. Currie via email with a letter of interest, describing your research 
interests and how they fit with our overall scholarly themes.  

SNRE has both a regular PhD program and a fully funded PhD program.  All 
PhD applicants are automatically reviewed for all funding options.  Strong 
candidates will be invited to visit the campus, after which time offers of 
admission or financial support will be made, generally comprising a 
mixture of support through research assistantships, fellowships, and 
teaching assistantships. The fully funded PhD program is highly 
competitive, accepting only 6 to 8 new PhD students per year across the 
entire School. Normally, students do not enter this program without having 
first completed a Masters degree, although there are exceptions. Students 
should apply by January 5 to receive best consideration for admission and 
support in fall 2009, although later applications will also be reviewed; 
for more information see 
http://www.snre.umich.edu/prospective_students/apply_now.

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