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About the Major

Environmental Studies addresses the challenges of creating a just and sustainable future in the face of the climate crisis, environmental problems, and inequality from local to global scales. At Hamilton, students in Environmental Studies work with interdisciplinary faculty in environmental justice, environmental data science, and climate change, as well as with faculty from other disciplines to develop the skills and perspectives needed to tackle these problems.

Students Will Learn To:

  • Explain the causes of, impacts of, and potential solutions to climate change
  • Analyze how history, power, and identity shape environmental justice
  • Apply appropriate research methods to answer a research question about a pressing environmental problem

A Sampling of Courses

human migration

Changing Arctic Ecosystems

An examination of the primary literature on environmental and climate change in Arctic and sub-Arctic ecosystems. We will investigate the interplay between anthropogenic, physical, and biological processes in high latitude regions. We will explore current research on the cycling of water, carbon and energy throughout high latitude ecosystems and the potential for these regions to amplify global climate change.

Explore these select courses:

What is a carbon footprint? Is it a useful concept? What are the scientific, social and economic implications of measuring environmental impacts through the billion dollar industry of sustainability accounting? In seeking to answer these questions, this course uses the concept of the carbon footprint as a lens through which to understand and critically assess scientific, economic practices and social discourses around sustainability as it is practiced across American and global society today.

Archaeology offers the opportunity to examine social-ecological systems over long time scales. This course explores different ways of conceptualizing these systems and considers major topics such as: decreasing biodiversity, traditional ecological knowledge, human-environment interactions related to food production, social responses to natural disasters and climate change, and resilience and collapse of past societies. We’ll engage with discussions on sustainability and our ecological impact on the environment.

This interdisciplinary seminar examines environmental justice as a movement and concept. We interrogate and discuss the historical role of racism, heteropatriarchy, colonialism and globalization in (re)producing and justifying place-based environmental contamination and toxicity. Through close analysis of case studies in the US and the Global South, students analyze and present on how disenfranchised groups have made political demands, scaled up, forged solidarities, asserted climate justice, challenged state and corporate projects and conducted citizen science in rural and urban settings.

What should humanity’s relationship with the environment look like, and why? Explores theoretical and practical debates surrounding the environmental challenges of our time. Key topics and controversies in the history of environmental political thought will be discussed. Students will be encouraged to develop their own vision of the proper relationship between human society and the environment in the 21st century.

This course will focus on the application of statistical programming for big data associated with ongoing environmental issues. Students will gain experience in statistical programming throughout the entire data life cycle including data management and provenance, analysis, visualization, and communication. Students will learn the fundamentals of applying statistical modelling and machine learning for making predictions and inferences for environmental data. Students will also learn considerations of data science that are unique to environmental data including spatial, temporal, ethical, and justice concerns. Environmental topics will include climate change, pollution, natural disasters, and agricultural impacts.

Meet Our Faculty

Nathan Goodale

Professor of Anthropology, Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs

ngoodale@hamilton.edu

complex hunter-gatherers in the interior Pacific Northwest; the forager/farmer transition in Southwest Asia; rural coastal adaptations in western Ireland

Aaron Strong

Associate Director, Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies

astrong@hamilton.edu

climate change, carbon accounting, climate resilience, renewable energy, and coastal and marine systems

Ryan Almeida

Visiting Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies

ralmeida@hamilton.edu

Conservation Biology, Biodiversity, Applied Ecology, Extinction, Global Wildlife Trade

Brianna Burke

Visiting Associate Professor of Environmental Studies

brburke@hamilton.edu

Native and Indigenous Studies, Environmental Justice, Climate Change studies, Animal Studies, and Environmental Humanities

Kwabena Edusei

Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies

kedusei@hamilton.edu

Environmental philosophy (esp. environmental justice & Indigenous environmental philosophy), decolonial philosophy, soundscape studies, hermeneutics, and philosophy of race

Heather Kropp

Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies

hkropp@hamilton.edu

environmental data science, ecohydrology, ecology, and geospatial analysis

Onno Oerlemans

Elizabeth J. McCormack Professor of Literature

ooerlema@hamilton.edu

Romantic period literature; animals in literature; animal rights; nature writing – literature and environmentalism; cultural and political history of the Adirondack Park

Jason Townsend

Assistant Professor of Instruction in Biology

jtownsen@hamilton.edu

conservation biology, agroecology, ornithology, Nearctic-Neotropical migratory birds, and ecotoxicology

Alma Lowry

Lecturer in Environmental Studies

alowry@hamilton.edu

Alicia Luhrssen-Zombek

Lecturer in Environmental Studies

aluhrsse@hamilton.edu

food system, regenerative agriculture, soil health science, plant nutrition, climate-smart farming, reclamation agriculture for underserved communities, community engagement, food business, entrepreneurship, food safety

Andrea Townsend

Chair and Associate Professor of Biology

aktownse@hamilton.edu

behavioral ecology, disease ecology

Careers After Hamilton

Hamilton graduates who concentrated in environmental studies are pursuing careers in a variety of fields, including:

  • Corps Member, Teach for America
  • Chair, Department of Rheumatology, Cleveland Clinic
  • Trip Leader, Naturalists At Large
  • Alaska Representative, Defenders of Wildlife
  • Policy Coordinator, National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration
  • Clinical Research Coordinator, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
  • Program Assistant, Natural Resources Defense Council

Explore Hamilton Stories

2024 Newly Tenured Faculty

Nine Professors Join Tenured Ranks

Nine faculty members were approved for tenure by the College’s Board of Trustees at its March meeting.

Brianna Burke

Heal the Land and Understand

Hamilton recently welcomed Brianna Burke as a visiting associate professor of environmental studies and the first faculty fellow hired as part of the College’s new interdisciplinary initiative focused on Native and Indigenous studies.

Adam Koplik ’25

Tracking Climate Change Through AI

Artificial intelligence and climate change are among the very foremost hot-button issues of today. This summer, a project by Adam Koplik ’25 and Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies Heather Kropp is using one to explore the other—by employing machine learning to measure vegetation change in the Arctic.

Contact

Department Name

Environmental Studies Program

Contact Name

Nathan Goodale, Program Director

Office Location
198 College Hill Road
Clinton, NY 13323

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