Quick Summary
- JMIE Fellows in various disciplines have a common foe: climate change
- Atmospheric scientist Da Yang named a Packard Fellow
- Professor and former astronaut Stephen K. Robinson: Newly elected associate fellow, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
- Neuroscientist Joy Geng, Center for Mind and Brain, inducted into Davis High School Hall of Fame
- Sandra Ernst of College Opportunity Programs feted for volleyball career at Ripon College
- College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences bestows Awards of Distinction
- Wildlife veterinarian Joe Gaydos, director of SeaDoc Society, earns Local Hero Award in Washington鈥檚 San Juan Islands
- Michael Carter, agricultural and resource economics, shares 2019 Publication of Enduring Quality Award
- 鈥淓xperienced planners鈥 contribute to 嘿嘿视频 selection as a 鈥渢op pick鈥 for corporate training sessions
The John Muir Institute of the Environment recently named its 2019 Muir Institute Fellows, an interdisciplinary mix of seven faculty and staff members engaged in the fight against climate change. Each receives $5,000 in research funding.
Launched in 2017, the fellows program recognizes exemplary 嘿嘿视频 faculty and staff whose careers and research epitomize the institute鈥檚 mission: Discover. Research. Solve. Each recipient receives $5,000 to help seed their research.
The new fellows:
- Tessa Hill, professor, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, and associate director of the Coastal and Marine Sciences Institute
- Carson Jeffres, research ecologist, Center for Watershed Sciences
- Mark Lubell, professor, Department of Environmental Science and Policy, and director of the 嘿嘿视频 Center for Environmental Policy and Behavior.
- Majdi Abou Najm, assistant professor, Department of Land, Air and Water Resources.
- Kate Scow, distinguished professor of Soil Science and Microbial Ecology in the Department of Land, Air and Water Resources; director of the Russell Ranch Sustainable Agriculture Facility; and chair of the International Agricultural Development Graduate Group
- Laura S. Van Winkle, professor, Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Cell Biology, School of Veterinary Medicine.
- Ayako Yasuda, professor of finance, Graduate School of Management
Atmospheric Scientist Named a Packard Fellow
Da Yang is among 22 early-career scientists and engineers nationwide to receive the prestigious award this year. Each will be awarded $875,000 over five years to pursue their research. He is the first recipient of the Packard Fellowship in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. [Click to read 嘿嘿视频 news release.]
Former astronaut Stephen K. Robinson, a professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, has been elected an associate fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, recognizing him for outstanding work in the field.
Neuroscientist Joy Geng, associate professor at the Center for Mind and Brain, has been inducted into the Davis High School Hall of Fame.
The Davis Enterprise, reporting on her induction, wrote that the books she read at Davis High served as inspiration for a career that took her to prestigious universities on the East Coast, London and eventually back to Davis.
鈥淚n her senior year English class taught by Mrs. Ballard, Geng said, books like Crime and Punishment and Invisible Man taught her about people with very different lives and sparked her interest in 鈥榯rying to understand what motivates people to behave the way that they do.鈥
鈥淲ith this in mind, she decided to major in psychology at Cornell University and says she is thankful for the way her Davis teachers encouraged her to ask questions. 鈥業 felt like they gave me a chance to be well prepared when I went to college,鈥 she said.鈥
Sandra Ernst, a program assistant in College Opportunity Programs has been inducted into Ripon College Athletic Hall of Fame, Ripon, Wisconsin. The 2003 graduate was a Red Hawk volleyball star, earning first-team all-conference honors three times.
For College Opportunity Programs, administered by the School of Education, she is based in Redding and works with high school and middle school students around Northern California 鈥 students who are typically first-generation-to-college and low-income 鈥 helping them prepare for college through the GEAR UP and TRIO programs.
The College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences recently presented its 2019 Awards of Distinction:
- Alumni 鈥 Carol L. Folt, Ph.D., 鈥82, newly appointed president of the University of Southern California; Vicki Kretsinger Grabert 鈥77, president and principal hydrologist with Luhdorff & Scalmanini Consulting Engineers, Woodland; and Jennifer Fitchhorn-Walker 鈥94 and Ph.D., 鈥00 (veterinary medicine), director of milk quality for Danone North America
- Young Alumni 鈥 Briana Perry Stoops 鈥08, Cred., 鈥09 (agricultural education), and M.A., 鈥10 (education), agriculture teacher at Woodland High School
- Friend 鈥 Harold McClarty, fifth-generation California farmer who built the international tree fruit and grape-growing business HMC Farms
- Faculty 鈥 Richard J. Sexton, professor, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics
- Emeriti 鈥 David E. Ramos, who holds three 嘿嘿视频 degrees 鈥 B.S., 鈥56 (animal science), M.S., 鈥59 (horticulture) and Ph.D., 鈥74, plant pathology 鈥 and went on to work as a UC Cooperative Extension specialist
- Staff 鈥 Carol Hillhouse, associate director, Student Farm
Wildlife veterinarian Joe Gaydos, director of 嘿嘿视频鈥 SeaDoc Society, has been named the recipient of the Local Hero Award from the Friday Harbor Film Festival in Washington鈥檚 San Juan Islands, where he lives and where the SeaDoc Society is based. The society is a program of the university鈥檚 Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center.
The award honors a resident or former resident of the San Juan Islands who has made 鈥渙utstanding contributions to our quality of life, impacting people, animals, the arts, health or the environment.鈥 The award presentation is scheduled for Oct. 27 during the film festival.
Gaydos, a wildlife veterinarian, can often be found addressing diseases in endangered orcas and other marine life, testifying to state agencies about wildlife and ecosystem health, or translating science to the general public through everything from a children鈥檚 book to a YouTube series and numerous public talks.
Professor Michael Carter and co-author Chris Barrett of Cornell University recently received the 2019 Publication of Enduring Quality Award from the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association. Carter is a professor in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics and director of the Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Markets, Risk and Resilience.
The winning paper, appeared in the Journal of Development Studies in August 2006.
The award, among the association鈥檚 most prestigious, recognizes publications that are at least 10 years old and are judged to have had a major long-term impact on the profession.
An article on the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics website explains why Carter and Barrett鈥檚 paper has had a far-reaching impact on the way economists think about poverty traps:
鈥淓mpirical studies typically measure who is poor at a given point in time. Carter and Barrett focus on the question of who is likely to remain poor in the future.鈥
The article continues: 鈥淚t (the paper) develops asset-based poverty measures that help us understand the structure and persistence of poverty. It also presents feasible estimation strategies to identify poverty traps and extends the widely-used Foster-Greer-Thorbecke class of poverty measures.鈥
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Simply put, 嘿嘿视频 鈥渨ill leave your employees impressed,鈥 reads a . The organization listed seven 鈥渢op picks鈥 on the West Coast 鈥 including one other UC campus, Santa Cruz.
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鈥淎 multitude of amenities and unique experiences await your guests when you choose 嘿嘿视频 as your next venue for a West Coast training session,鈥 Unique Venues declared.
Dateline UC Davis welcomes news of faculty and staff awards, for publication in Laurels. Send information to dateline@ucdavis.edu.
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