PhD Position announcement

Three years of funding is available to enroll in the PhD program in 
Environmental Studies Program 
(www.colorado.edu/envs<http://www.colorado.edu/envs>) at the University of 
Colorado Boulder<http://www.colorado.edu/> (CU), beginning in August 2018.  
This includes tuition and stipend for each academic year (mid-Aug through 
April). The PhD student will be involved in a large, interdisciplinary project 
funded by the National Science Foundation, “Sustainable Communities & Gold 
Supply Chains: Integrating Responsible Engineering & Local Knowledge to Design, 
Implement & Evaluate Sustainable Artisanal Mining in Latin America.”  The 
student is expected to contribute to the project execution, travel 
internationally, and conduct fieldwork in Peru and Colombia. S/he will develop 
their PhD dissertation research focused on the human dimensions of 
vulnerability and land use and land-cover change related to artisanal and 
small-scale gold mining (ASGM), with the exact topic to be developed in 
consultation with the advisor and project team.  The successful applicant 
should have a strong interest in human-environment interactions, and interest 
and ability to work in interdisciplinary teams (that include engineers as well 
as social scientists), a strong foundation in social and geographical sciences, 
and experience with statistical modelling. A good knowledge of Spanish and 
ability to work with rural communities are strongly recommended. Applicants 
with a Master’s degree and/or relevant professional experience are encouraged 
to apply. This project brings together scientists and practitioners through 
international partnerships with CU, Colorado School of 
Mines<http://inside.mines.edu/HE-Humanitarian-Engineering-Home>, the United 
States Air Force Academy<https://www.usafa.edu/academic/civil-engineering/>, 
and scholars from Peru and Colombia.  Given the interdisciplinary nature of the 
broader project, we are particularly interested in candidates with an 
interdisciplinary background as well as willingness to conduct participatory 
field research in South America. The student will be mentored directly by Dr. 
Joel Hartter<http://www.jhartter.weebly.com/> and will work closely with Dr. 
Colleen Scanlan 
Lyons<https://behavioralscience.colorado.edu/person/colleen-scanlan-lyons> and 
a team of researchers, students, and practitioners from the US, Colombia and 
Peru. It is expected that their individual projects will require them to spend 
extensive periods in one (or a combination) of the two countries. Willingness 
to engage with local communities, social organizations, mining companies, 
government agencies, and a range of stakeholders is required. During his/her 
studies, the student will also develop strong ties to the Institute for 
Behavioral Sciences<https://behavioralscience.colorado.edu/>, the Governors’ 
Climate and Forests Task Force<https://gcftf.org/>, and the Laboratory for 
Energy and Environmental Policy<http://leepinnovationlab.org/> innovation.



Note: Funding at this time is only for 3 years. Often PhD studies take more 
than 3 years to complete. While support beyond the third year is not 
guaranteed, the advisor will make every effort to find though grants, TAships, 
or other means.



Qualifications

  *   The candidate will have an academic background/degree(s) in Environmental 
Studies/Science, Geography, Ecology, Engineering, Sociology, Anthropology, 
Psychology, or Behavioral Economics, or other relevant degrees.
  *   Master’s degree and/or relevant professional experience.
  *   Strong quantitative and analytical skills are a requirement for this 
position. Experience in mixed methods approaches and qualitative data 
collection and analysis are preferred.
  *   Experience with geospatial tools and analysis, including GIS, and the 
ability to incorporate qualitative data into quantitative analyses.
  *   Interest in human-environment interactions related to mining, 
development, land use, and conservation.
  *   Ability to write grants, write scientific papers.
  *   Fluency in Spanish and English (written and spoken)
  *   Ability to do fieldwork, especially in rural communities, for at least 3 
months in Colombia and/or Peru.
  *   A collegial person who gets along with people from different cultural 
backgrounds.



Preferred Qualifications

  *   Satellite imagery acquisition, processing and analysis
  *   Strong statistical modelling competency
  *   Experience in social science methods
  *   Proficiency in R and/or Python
  *   Interest in mentoring undergraduate engineering students in projects 
related to community development
  *   Professional and/or academic experience with field work and travel in 
Latin America
  *   Self-starter, can work independently, strong communicator, team player
  *   Ability to interact and facilitate conservations with a variety of 
audiences – farmers, miners, engineers, government officials, NGO 
practitioners, and scientists



Are you interested?

If you are considering applying, please send the following: 1) a curriculum 
vitae; 2) statement of your research and professional interests, including your 
interests and qualifications for the research project described below, as well 
as why you would like to enroll in the ENVS program, and why you would like to 
obtain a PhD; 3) GRE scores and percentiles; 4) TOEFFEL scores where relevant; 
and 5) copies or links to any publications (e.g., peer reviewed, professional 
reports, conference proceedings) if relevant to Dr. Joel Hartter 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>).



Due Dates

Full graduate school applications to CU are due December 1, 2017.  More 
information on application to the program 
here<http://www.colorado.edu/envs/graduate-students/ms-phd-programs/applying>. 
I encourage contact with me well ahead of the application deadline.  I prefer 
to discuss research interest with potential graduate students in person, over 
the phone or via Skype before making decisions.



About the Environmental Studies Program: The Environmental Studies 
Program<http://www.colorado.edu/envs/> at CU-Boulder is a hub for facilitating 
interdisciplinary collaboration in environment and sustainability. 
Environmental Studies courses integrate the academic divisions of natural 
science, social science, and humanities, providing skill and knowledge 
applicable to the pursuit of solutions to environmental challenges faced 
globally, nationally, regionally, and locally. The program provides 
interdisciplinary academic training for undergraduate and graduate students, 
guidance for students with career aspirations in environment and sustainability 
venues, promotes diverse professional education experiences, fosters 
fundamental and applied research, forms meaningful connections with communities 
beyond the university, and integrates innovative, interdisciplinary programs 
unified by the themes of environmental research.



About the University of Colorado and City of Boulder: CU 
Boulder's<http://www.colorado.edu/envs/> innovative academic programs, hands-on 
opportunities and rigorous course work will prepare you for a complex global 
society. While interacting with our faculty, which includes Nobel laureates, 
MacArthur "Genius Grant" fellows, U.S. Professor of the Year awardees and 
National Medal of Science winners, you'll develop a broad understanding of the 
world, strong leadership skills and an enhanced ability to think critically. 
Live in spectacular surroundings and learn in a campus environment full of 
extraordinary opportunities.



Boulder<https://bouldercolorado.gov/> is located 30 minutes northwest of 
Denver, nestled in the foothills where the rolling plains meet the Colorado 
Rocky Mountains. The City of Boulder sits 5,430 feet above sea level and enjoys 
over 300 days of sunshine a year. Boulder offers something for everyone, from 
hiking or biking through our 300 miles of trails and 45,000 acres of open space 
and nearby world class skiing, to people watching at an outdoor cafe or 
microbrewery on Pearl Street, to catching your favorite local band at the Fox 
Theater. It was also ranked #1 in the Bloomberg Brain Concentration 
Index<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-10/the-smartest-americans-are-heading-west-as-computer-chips-replace-cow-chips>
 in 2017.



About the project: This project brings together cutting edge engineering, 
social science scholarship, and community development to make artisanal and 
small scale gold mining (ASGM) more sustainable. ASGM is common in mineral rich 
developing countries. This type of mining produces about 30% of the gold in the 
world used in jewelry, finances, electronics, aerospace, and medicine. ASGM 
causes large-scale deforestation, air/water contamination, and chronic human 
diseases, especially from the mercury used to process the ore. Despite these 
impacts, ASGM is a critical livelihood strategy for millions of people 
worldwide. Existing efforts to introduce sustainable ASGM practices, primarily 
through mercury-free processing technologies, have not achieved long-term 
sustainability because they are believed by miners to be inefficient or 
uneconomical. This project will break this trend by educating US engineers to 
co-design, implement and evaluate sustainable and culturally appropriate ASGM 
technologies and practices with miners and affected communities in Colombia and 
Peru. For the first time, US engineering faculty and students will work with 
Colombian and Peruvian faculty, students, and mining communities to develop 
improved technologies and techniques, coupled with social organizations, to 
make ASGM cleaner, safer, and more sustainable. While tackling this complex 
international problem, this project will contribute to developing a global US 
engineering workforce.

ASGM systems are simultaneously social, technical, and ecological, involving 
miners and communities, geologic deposits, ecosystems, technologies, and 
scientific and engineering expertise. This project will break new scholarly 
ground by developing an integrated, community-centered approach to discovering 
how the multiple dimensions of ASGM production systems influence one another, 
in order to design, implement, evaluate, and ensure long-term sustainability of 
ASGM practices. Using a combination of social science, human-centered design, 
and engineering methods, this project will make at least 4 key scholarly 
contributions: 1) identifying the local knowledge that miners and affected 
communities hold on mercury exposure, on techniques for minimizing this 
exposure, and on environmental remediation strategies; 2) advancing engineering 
and social science research on the role of local knowledge in participatory 
environmental monitoring; 3) widening the ASGM social science and engineering 
literatures to include remediation; 4) testing criteria for Engineering for 
Sustainable Community Development in the real world. This project will also 
test how engineering students from two different educational models (training 
in humanitarian engineering vs. expanded curriculum in the humanities & social 
sciences) compare in how they understand the social context of engineering and 
how they work with non-US peers and communities. Through the project's 
affiliation with the Alliance for Responsible Mining, the Governors' Climate 
and Forests Task Force, and the networks of its Advisory Board, the project can 
expand its impact beyond Colombia and Peru into other countries as well as 
beyond gold mining into other minerals like cobalt.


Joel Hartter
Associate Professor
MENV Faculty Director
Environmental Studies Program
University of Colorado
Sustainability, Energy, and Environment Complex
4001 Discovery Drive
Boulder, CO 80309-0397

Masters of the Environment: www.colorado.edu/menv<http://www.colorado.edu/menv>
Environmental Studies Program: 
www.envs.colorado.edu<http://www.envs.colorado.edu/>
Personal website: www.jhartter.weebly.com<http://www.jhartter.weebly.com/>
Communities and Forests in Oregon (CAFOR) Project: 
www.cafor.weebly.com<http://www.cafor.weebly.com/>
Population, Environment, & Climate in the Albertine Rift (PECAR) Project: 
www.albertinerift.weebly.com<http://pecar.unh.edu/>

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