Can corporate forest policies achieve global conservation objectives?

  • External
  • Environmental sciences
  • Past Events

ISTP Colloquium with Professor R. Garrett from Social and Political Science and Environmental System Science at ETH Zurich.

Enlarged view: Autumn in the forest ( CC BY-NC 3.0 / o-media.org )
Autumn in the forest (CC BY-NC 3.0 / o-media.org)

ISTP Colloquium

Date, time and venue

Tuesday, 19 November 2019, 17:15-18:30
Universitaetstrasse 41, 8006 Zurich
UNO B 11 ETH Zurich

No registration needed. No registration fee.

About Prof. Rachael Garrett

Rachael Garrett is Assistant Professor of Environmental Policy with dual appointments in the Dept. of Humanities, Social and Political Science and the Dept. of Environmental Systems Science. She is a member of the Institute for Environmental Decisions and the Institute of Science, Technology, and Policy. She has an interdisciplinary training in economics, geography, history, systems thinking, environmental science, and policy analysis. She received her PhD through the Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources at Stanford University in 2013, her MPA in Environmental Science and Policy from Columbia University in 2006, and her BA in History and Environmental Analysis and Policy from Boston University in 2003.  

Dr. Garrett’s research examines interactions between land use, ecosystem services, and economic development at multiple spatial and temporal scales to better understand the drivers and impacts of land change and the effectiveness of existing conservation and agricultural policies. She is particularly interested in how commodity supply chains interact with environmental institutions to shape land use processes, resource distribution, and trade. The applied outcomes of this work are the identification of policies, technologies, and market solutions that will help feed a growing world population without compromising the well-​being of future generations. She is particularly interested in ways that we can scale up sustainable practices in commercial farming systems, which occupy a majority of the world's land base.  

JavaScript has been disabled in your browser