Sustainability and Human Behavior Seminar Resources

Amanda Carrico is a research assistant professor at the Vanderbilt Institute for Energy & Environment at Vanderbilt University. She also is a faculty fellow in the Climate Change Research Network at Vanderbilt, where she was a postdoctoral fellow from 2009-2012. She earned a doctoral degree in Social Psychology (2009) from Vanderbilt University; a master of arts in social psychology (2005) from Vanderbilt and a bachelor of arts (2002) from Transylvania University.

Watch video of Carrico's Feb. 11 lecture

Her talk is titled "Grasses & Gases: Psychological and Social Influences on Household Lawn Fertilizer Application and Resultant Nitrous Oxide Emissions."

When: Monday, Feb. 11; 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Where: Room 2024, Dana Building
Question-and-answer session to follow

She will discuss the Nashville Yard Project, which seeks to contribute to the development of research and education capacity of the nonprofits and community-based organizations operating in the Richland Creek watershed area in Nashville, other Nashville watersheds and other urban regions of the United States. The project aims to assist environmental activist groups, homeowners associations and other organizations to help homeowners make more environmentally friendly lawn care decisions.

About Amanda Carrico's research:
My research broadly examines the behavioral dimension of energy use and its contribution to climate change, as well as adaptation to climate change. This includes the application of psychological and behavioral theory to examine conservation and efficiency within the individual and household sector, as well as efforts to quantify the greenhouse gas emissions associated with individual and household behavior. I also have work underway to explore responses to changing environmental conditions among resource-dependent communities in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh to understand the psychological and social factors that facilitate or constrain effective adaptation.

J. Marty Anderies, an associate professor at Arizona State University, gives a talk as part of the Sustainability and Human Behavior Seminar Series. His talk is titled "Behavior, institutions, and the adaptive capacity of small-scale social-ecological systems: A multi-methods approach."
 

Watch video of Anderies' Feb. 26 lecture

  • Tuesday, Feb. 26
  • 2:30 p.m.
  • Room 1028, Dana Building
  • Question-and-answer session follows

J. Marty Anderies is an associate professor with a joint appointment in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change and School of Sustainability at Arizona State University, Tempe, Ariz. Anderies received his Ph.D. in applied mathematics from The University of British Columbia. Before joining ASU, Anderies spent three years as a postdoctoral researcher at the Division of Wildlife and Ecology at the Commonwealth Science and Industry Research Organization (CSIRO) in Canberra, Australia.

Research interests: 
Anderies' research focuses on developing an understanding of how ecological, behavioral, social, and institutional factors affect the robustness/vulnerability characteristics of coupled social-ecological systems. His work combines qualitative insights from present-day, historical, and archaeological case studies of social-ecological systems with formal mathematical modeling and experiments with human subjects to explore how individual decision-making processes interact with governance regimes to influence social and environmental outcomes.

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