Rose Bern
Rose Bern is a first year social psychology Ph.D. student in the Eastwick Attraction and Relationships Lab. She is particularly interested in the role that erotic intimacy plays in the maintenance of both long-term and short-term relationships. Her work is grounded in non-dominant perspectives within relationship science, as she aims to interrogate heteronormative (i.e., the belief that heterosexuality is the only natural sexual orientation) and mononormative (i.e., the belief that romance and sex should only exist within a monogamous partnership) frameworks. Ultimately, she strives to do community psychology focused work that promotes the wellbeing of marginalized groups.
Marc Dadigan
Marc Dadigan is a third-year PhD student in Native American Studies as well as a longtime journalist and oral historian. He is the Associate Editor and Indigenous Affairs beat reporter for Shasta Scout, an emerging non-profit news organization that is experimenting with participatory journalism. His research focuses on chronicling Indigenous movements to restore fisheries and watersheds as well as decolonizing California water history.
Alice Dien
Alice Dien is a Ph.D. student in Biological Systems Engineering. Her research focuses on designing and evaluating desiccant drying systems that reduce food losses through more energy-efficient drying. As part of the UC Davis D-Lab team, Alice works with local and international community partners on projects related to interdisciplinary education and global engineering challenges. Projects Alice has previously contributed to include those related to sustainable agriculture, renewable energy, energy efficiency, and off-grid power.
Aakansha Jain
Aakansha Jain is a second year PhD student in the Transportation Technology and Policy Graduate Group at UC Davis. Her research interests lie at the intersection of transportation policy and social justice. Through her work she would like to explore how transport disadvantage and travel experiences affect social inclusion and well-being of disadvantaged population groups/communities by using a mixed-methods approach.
Hollis Jones
Hollis Jones is a PhD student in UC Davis’ Ecology Graduate Group advised by Dr. Anne Todgham. Her research focuses on the interaction between an increasingly unpredictable climate and domestication in commercial and conservation aquaculture species. As a NSF NRT Sustainable Oceans Fellow she has collaborated with Hog Island Oyster Co. to develop science-informed strategies for more sustainable oyster aquaculture. Prior to joining the Todgham Lab, she completed a masters at LSU that focused on the impacts of combined stressors on eastern oysters in the Gulf of Mexico and a Knauss Fellowship with NOAA working to facilitate research to application projects.
Gabi Kirk
Gabi Kirk is a PhD Candidate in Geography with a Designated Emphasis in Feminist Theory and Research. Working between political ecology, feminist geography, and geographies of colonialism, her dissertation project examines how Palestinian farmers and sustainable development organizations in the northern West Bank use agro-ecology in projects of identity formation and struggles for sovereignty. She also studies the settler-colonial history of agricultural science, examining the transnational circuits of agricultural and infrastructural expertise between California and Palestine from the 19th century onward. She has a personal and intellectual interest in interrogating Zionist claims to “Jewish indigeneity” through environmentalism. She is a co-founder of UC Davis's Political Ecology Lab and the Jadaliyya Environment Page, an organizer of the Left Coast Political Ecology Network and member of CRTMIL (Critical Militarization, Policing, and Security Studies working group) at UC Davis.
Amelia Lawless
Amelia Lawless is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker with a background in public health and she is in her final year as a PhD student in the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing. Her professional background and interests are mainly in advocating for the most vulnerable populations of California, especially those who are or have been incarcerated. After working as a clinician and an administrator in the California state prison system, she developed a deep passion for understanding and improving the conditions that clinicians work in and inmates experience in setting of incarceration along with working on opportunities for decarceration. She is currently engaged in a Grounded Theory qualitative study with clinicians who work in rural jails in California. As a developing Scholar Activist, she is hopeful that they can continue to engage in interdisciplinary measures for social and racial justice.
Tyler Méndez Kline
Tyler Méndez Kline is a 4th year linguistics PhD candidate at UC Davis. He specializes in sociolinguistics with a primary focus on Latinx/Hispanic language discourse, sociophonetics, and language contact. His dissertation examines the role of prosody in bilingual narrative practices within U.S. Mexican Spanish-speaking communities. Beyond that, he is also interested in human-computer interactions, social media discourse, and sociolinguistic perception in bilingual communities. Outside of research, he enjoys cooking, going to the beach, and spending time with loved ones.
Andrea Odell
Andrea Odell is a 2nd year PhD student in the Ecology Graduate Group at UC Davis advised by Dr. Marissa Baskett. Her research uses mathematical and statistical modeling to investigate the importance of ecological nuance in fishery sciences in an effort to improve the management and conservation of commercially-valuable species. Her work spans across systems, from the highly-regulated US West Coast groundfish fishery to the data-poor coral reef fisheries throughout Oceania, where she hopes to be mindful of and encompass the unique characteristics of each fishing community in her research. To do so, she engages in interdisciplinary and community engagement training as an NSF NRT Sustainable Oceans Fellow and now as a Public Scholars for the Future Fellow.
Gaurav Thapa
Gaurav Thapa is in his second year of the Geography Ph.D. program. His research interest is in digital geographies that lie within the intersecting fields of environmental justice, political ecology, and community engagement. Gaurav’s dissertation is situated in the semi-urban Pokhara, Nepal and Nepalgunj, Nepal where he is studying the participation in community mapping projects and their effect on community members. Further, Gaurav is trying to understand the social and political context around which specific projects and participants flourish. Gaurav completed his Master’s in Applied Geography from New Mexico State University and his Honours in Bachelor of Arts degree from University of Toronto, St. George Campus.
Meghan Zulian
Meghan Zulian is a third-year Ph.D. candidate in the Earth and Planetary Science graduate group, based at Bodega Marine Laboratory. Her research focuses on detecting changing ocean chemistry and its impacts on coastal benthic ecosystems. Inspired by her internship and ongoing work with the California Ocean Protection Council, she evaluates the quality of California’s monitoring networks at locations and times relevant to culturally, ecologically, and economically important coastal species. She is also working with conservation organizations and environmental managers to develop bio-indicators of changing ocean chemistry and establish best practices for coupled biological-chemical monitoring programs. Before beginning her Ph.D. here at UC Davis, Meghan received her Master’s in Earth Science from the University of Toronto and her undergraduate degree in Geological Sciences from Queen’s University, Canada. Meghan is excited to participate in the Public Scholars program. She looks forward to learning the theoretical and practical skills to build trust, nurture relationships, and conduct community-led collaborative research, a sharp pivot from historical relationships among geoscientists and communities.