Evan Bowness

Evan Bowness

Evan Bowness

PhD with Hannah Wittman, 2021
Canada Research Chair in Sustainability and Equity and Assistant Professor, Western University

Contact Details

ebowness[at]uwo[dot]ca

EvanBowness.ca

Bio

Bowness is a Canada Research Chair in Sustainability and Equity and an Assistant Professor at Western University’s Department of Geography and Environment where he teaches in the Climate Change and Society program. His research group, the Towards Equitable Sustainability Transitions (TEST) Lab, focuses on two key streams: one that critiques and challenges political and economic ‘sustainability’ proposals complicit in perpetuating the overconsumption and inequities that define modernity, and another that supports “Community-Directed Adaptation Research” (C-DAR) with communities on the frontlines of the climate crisis. Before joining Western, Bowness was an Assistant Professor of Community Food Systems at the Trent School of the Environment.

Last updated December 2024

Sameer Shah

Portrait photo of Sameer Shah

Sameer Shah

PhD with Leila Harris, 2021, Assistant Professor of Climate Adaptation, University of Washington

Contact Details

Shs89@uw.edu

https://www.sameerhshah.com https://twitter.com/SameerHShah

Bio

Dr. Sameer Shah (he / him) is a John C. Garcia Professor and Assistant Professor of Climate Adaptation in the School of Environmental & Forest Sciences (SEFS) at the University of Washington. He is also an Affiliate with the UW Center for Studies in Demography in EcologyCenter for Environmental Politics, and Clean Energy Institute. Dr. Shah holds expertise in the human dimensions of climate change vulnerability and adaptation. He aims to understand how systemic marginalization, and climate-related change and disasters interact to create and amplify uneven water, food, and energy insecurities for communities on the frontlines of climate change. In particular, his research develops theoretical, conceptual, and empirical analyses of the equity, justice, and sustainability outcomes of climate adaptation and disaster response at multiple scales. Through research in South/Southeast Asia, the contiguous U.S., and Puerto Rico, he and his collaborators seek to advance interventions that reduce the disproportionately larger climate risks experienced by marginalized groups, and to shape long-term policy strategies that transform the underlying systems that heighten these impacts. At SEFS, Dr. Shah directs the WATERS Research Collaborative (Water, Adaptation & Transformation: Equity, Resilience and Sustainability). He is also a co-founder of the SOLVER (Social Vulnerability and Resilience) Research Laboratory.

Current research

Publications

Last updated September 2023

Erika Luna Perez

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Erika Luna Perez

MSc with Navin Ramankutty & Amanda Giang, 2022
Policy Analyst, International Institute for Sustainable Development

Contact Details

https://www.erikalunaperez.com/ https://www.iisd.org/people/erika-luna-perez www.linkedin.com/in/erika-luna-perez https://twitter.com/erikalunap

Bio

Erika completed her master’s at IRES under the co-supervision of Dr. Navin Ramankutty and Dr. Amanda Giang. During her time at IRES, Erika explored multiple topics around food systems, from gender in agriculture to crop species diversity. The former inspired her to co-found an organization (DAMUSA) promoting the visualization of gender data in food systems. The latter, crop species diversity with a focus on Mexico’s agriculture, became the topic of her master’s thesis. Erika is currently a Policy Analyst at the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), working on Voluntary Sustainability Standards in Agriculture.

Last updated February 2022

Myriam Khalfallah

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Myriam Khalfallah

PhD w/ Daniel Pauly, 2020
Postdoctoral Fellow, UBC IOF

Contact Details

Myriam[dot]Khalfallah[at]gmail[dot]com

https://www.MyriamKhalfallah.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/myriamkhalfallah

Bio

Myriam Khalfallah completed her Ph.D. in March 2020 in Resource Management and Environmental Studies with Professor Daniel Pauly. Her research focused on the environmental, political, and socio-economic scopes of marine fisheries within the countries of the Southern Mediterranean and the Arabian Peninsula. Myriam is currently working on her postdoc at the Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries at UBC.

Last updated February 2022

Giulia Belotti

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Giulia Belotti

MA Student, graduated 2024
Community Engagement Coordinator, 2022-2023

Contact Details

gbelotti[at]student.ubc.ca

https://www.linkedin.com/in/giulia-belotti-596572206/

Research Interests

Cities, Collaborative Governance, Energy policy, Environmental Law and Policy, Public policy and analysis, Urban Sustainbility

Bio

Giulia Belotti (she/her) was an MA student in the Institute of Resources, Environment and Sustainability, supervised by Dr. Milind Kandlikar. Her research interests include multilevel governance of renewable energy policy and the identification of political factors enhancing or hampering clean energy transitions. During her MA, she explored various opportunities for overcoming political barriers to decarbonization efforts by adopting a multilevel governance approach.

She completed her undergraduate degree in Political Science and International Relations at the University of Trento, Italy, with two exchange semesters at Technical University of Munich and University of Calgary. Giulia has been involved in climate activism, being an active member of ThinkOcean Society, an environmental NGO. In 2018, she founded the Italian network of the organization and worked with local communities to tackle climate-related issues through a bottom-up approach.

Giulia believes in the possibility of achieving structural, transformative change within our political systems by adopting coordinated, comprehensive and inclusive policies on various levels of governance and ensuring community participation.

Last updated May 2024.

Manvi Bhalla

Manvi Bhalla

PhD Student

Contact Details

manvi.bhalla[at]ubc.ca
Website: manvibhalla.com
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.ca/citations?user=1lJ7JVoAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao
LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/manvibhalla/

Research Interests

Collaborative Governance, Environmental and cultural values, Environmental justice, Health

Bio

Manvi (she/her) is an activist-scholar with over 15 years of community organizing experience. She is recognized as one of Canada’s ‘Top 25 Under 25’ environmentalists, ‘Top 30 Under 30’ sustainability leaders and was honoured with the ‘Youth Eco-Hero of the Year’ award in 2022. She co-founded Shake Up The Establishment, a national nonprofit dedicated to climate justice & political advocacy, alongside missINFORMED, a nonprofit focused on health promotion for women and gender-diverse people. Alongside her advocacy work, Manvi is a published health researcher, frequent public speaker and guest lecturer who works to centre anti-colonial approaches. During her MSc, she investigated barriers towards climate action within the public health sector. This research discerned the knowledge and understanding of climate change-related health risks by public health authorities, determined local mitigation, adaptation and risk communication strategies and identified policy recommendations for the Ontario Public Health sector at large. Presently, she is a PhD student at University of British Columbia with SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship funding. Her research works to advance intersectional environmental justice in environmental health policy-making to better serve the holistic health needs of racially, ethnically and gender-minoritized populations. Research methods for this work include critical policy analyses to assess the procedural justice implications of recent CEPA reforms, community-based participatory action workshops to capture urban South Asian communities’ embodied experiences of environmental health risks and to co-develop a submission for the forthcoming NEJ strategy public consultation, and to utilise arts-based methods to co-imagine environmentally just futures with racially-minoritized youth.

Featured Publications

1) Bhalla, M., Boutros, H. & Meyer, S.B. Aunties, WhatsApp, and “haldi da doodh”: South Asian communities’ perspectives on improving COVID-19 public health communication in Ontario, Canada. Can J Public Health 113 (Suppl 1), 46–53 (2022). https://doi.org/10.17269/s41997-022-00712-x

2) Practicing Rest, Recovery, Resistance: An Interactive Dreaming Journal (M. Bhalla & C. Alcena, Eds.; p. 234). Shake Up The Establishment. ISBN: 978-1-7381367-0-4.

Anthony W. Persaud

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Anthony W. Persaud

PhD w/ Terre Satterfield, 2021
Director of the Indigenous Home-Lands Initiative, Ecotrust Canada

Contact Details

persaud[dot]anthonyw[at]gmail[dot]com

https://www.linkedin.com/in/anthony-w-persaud-295b8726/?locale=en_US

Bio

Persaud completed his PhD with Terre Satterfield exploring how institutional innovations can serve to advance housing, economic, and territorial self-governance goals and visions of First Nations in British Columbia. Since graduating he hase continued to work with and for First Nations communities and governments, and currently serves as the Director of the Indigenous Home-Lands Initiative at Ecotrust Canada.

Last updated March 2022

Sandeep Pai

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Sandeep Pai

PhD with Hisham Zerriffi, 2021
Senior Research Lead, Center for Strategic and International Studies

Contact Details

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/ https://www.csis.org/people/sandeep-pai https://twitter.com/Sandeeppaii

Bio

Sandeep Pai is senior research lead with the Energy Security and Climate Change program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. His expertise spans the political economy of energy transitions, coal sector dynamics, energy access, and just transitions. Previously, Sandeep worked as an investigative journalist with leading Indian newspapers such as the Hindustan Times, writing on rural development, energy transition, and political corruption in India and South Asia. In 2016, he was awarded India’s most prestigious journalism award, the Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism award, for his series of stories on corruption in state-owned enterprises. In 2018, he published his first book on global energy transitions, titled Total Transition: The Human Side of the Renewable Energy Revolution. He holds a PhD in resources, environment, and sustainability from the University of British Columbia and a joint MSc degree in environmental sciences, policy, and management from Lund University, Central European University.

Last updated March 2022

Glory O Apantaku

Portrait photo of Glory O Apantaku

Glory O Apantaku

PhD Student

Contact Details

glory.apantaku@ubc.ca

Research Interests

Adaptation, Health, Policy and Decision-making

Bio

Glory Apantaku is a Ph.D. student supervised by Dr. Terre Satterfield and Dr. Mark Harrison. Her research interest is in exploring areas for intersectoral collaboration to address health vulnerabilities to climate change. Glory holds a BSc. in Psychology from the University of Texas at Arlington and an MSc. in Population and Public health from the University of British Columbia. She’s also supported research projects evaluating health policies in British Columbia and exploring priorities for healthcare in rural BC.

Google Scholar

Jack Durant

Portrait photo of Jack Durant

Jack Durant

MA with Daniel Steel & Gunilla Öberg, 2022

Bio

At IRES Jack worked as part of the Egesta Lab studying the expert deliberation surrounding endocrine-disrupting chemical pollution. Supervised by Gunilla Oberg, Daniel Steel and Annegaaike Leopold, Jack’s research project involved a ‘brokered dialogue’ between two experts from different sides of the conversation, facilitating discussion between them and analysing their respective understandings of uncertainty in the field. The study found a substantial difference in the understood forms of uncertainty, as well as the generating factors. Since graduating, Jack has been working at an environmental non-profit in the UK called Youngwilders which facilitates small-scale, youth-led nature recovery projects.

Last updated May 2022