The Science & Justice Research Center is proud to announce the recent campus approval of the Science & Justice Certificate Program. This certificate provides recognition to current graduate students who have developed collaborative research methods for exploring the meeting of questions of science and knowledge with questions of ethics and justice. For more pedagogical information on the nationally and internationally recognized Science & Justice Training Program, please read Experiments in Collaboration: Interdisciplinary Graduate Education in Science and Justice originally published in PLOS Biology.
Graduate students interested in the Science & Justice Training Program, please visit: Science & Justice Training Program.
Faculty interested in supporting the Science & Justice Training Program or for more information on our Broader Impacts Initiative, please read: Broader Impacts.
Please join us in congratulating the following graduate students on their achievements in completing the Science & Justice Certificate Program.
- Tracy Ballinger, Biomolecular Engineering/Informatics
- Celina Callahan-Kapoor, Anthropology
- Zachary Caple, Anthropology
- Ian Carbone, Physics
- Gene A. Felice II, Digital Arts and New Media
- Elaine Gan, Digital Arts and New Media
- Kelly Gola, Psychology
- Elizabeth Hare, Anthropology
- Colin Hoag, Anthropology
- Kathleen Uzilov, Earth and Planetary Sciences
- Martha Kenney, History of Consciousness
- Sophia Magnone, Literature
- Alexis Mourezna, Philosophy
- Andrew Murray, Sociology
- Jennifer Liss Ohayon, Environmental Studies
- Miriam Olivera, Environmental Studies
- Katy Overstreet, Anthropology
- Derek Padilla, Physics
- Felicia Peck, Politics
- Micha Rahder, Anthropology
- Costanza Rampini, Environmental Studies
- Kate Richerson, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
- Benjamin Roome, Philosophy
- Tiffany Wise-West, Environmental Studies