Current Students

Emmon
Chu - Emmon
graduated from Grinnell College in Iowa
with a BA in Mathematics and Economics. He enrolled in the
Economics
Department in 2007 through the EES program and is interested in
studying
asymmetric information, property rights, and collective action.
Heather
Coleman - Heather
graduated
from UCLA in 2003 with a BS in both Marine Biology and Atmospheric,
Oceanic and
Environmental Science. She came to UCSB in 2003 and spent her
second year here as an
EES Fellow and an Economics MA student, after which she conducted a
cost-benefit analysis of Istanbul's restoration of the Golden Horn
estuary. Now, Heather is examining the effects of Santa Barbara’s
natural
offshore oil seeps on marine populations and communities. She is
translating molecular-scale adaptations and their costs into
larger-scale ecological effects, such as growth, reproduction and
survival. Heather hopes to incorporate both ecological and
economic research techniques into her future career.
Greg DeAngelo
- Greg received his BS in Economics and minors in
Mathematics and Public Policy Analysis from Rochester
Institute of Technology, in New York.
He began the EES program through the
Economics Department in 2005, and is funded largely through a
prestigious
fellowship from the United States Department of Homeland
Security. Through this fellowship, Greg has traveled to
Washington D.C. and met with Senator Boxer to discuss
homeland security issues. Greg is
currently working in the area of law enforcement and
economics. Specifically, he is interested in optimal enforcement
effort,
and he has been working on a method that determines the effect of law
enforcement on public safety - particularly through the lens of roadway
safety.
Zack Donohew - Zack
Donohew
began his PhD at the
Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management in
2007.
Zack's research interests focus on how property rights regimes affect
the
allocation of natural resources. Currently, he is studying water
markets
in the western United States.
A former Doris Duke Conservation Fellow, Zack recently earned an MESc
from
Yale's School of Forestry and Environmental
Studies. He also has a BA from the University
of Oklahoma.
In his spare time, Zack enjoys fly-fishing and helping on the family
farm in
Lone Chimney, Oklahoma.
Christopher Goodwin
- Chris is originally from New Zealand, and he came to the EES
program in 2007. He graduated from the University of Canterbury
with a Bachelors degree in
Forestry Science with First Class Honors.
Chris then attended Virginia Tech where he completed his Masters degree
in Forest Economics. Having now worked in
the private sector for a number of years as an environmental program
manager
and military range planner for the U.S. Army, he has returned to
university
studies at UCSB. His research interests
currently lie in investigating the economics of environmental
certification
schemes, as well as the purchase choices of individuals to provide
public goods—particularly
in forest products, fisheries, and in mitigating climate change.
Corbett Grainger
- Corbett earned his MS in Applied Economics at University of
Minnesota, where his thesis focused on food choice in school lunch
programs. He has a BA in Economics and German from Concordia
College in Minnesota, and he has worked in a national bank developing
bond and derivative valuation models. During his junior year at
Concordia, he was awarded a scholarship to study at Technische
Universitaet Karlsruhe, Germany, and as part of the EES program, he
spent the summer of 2006 as a "Transatlantic Intern" at Ecologic, a
European environmental policy think tank in Berlin. He is
currently working on estimating the impact of redistricting on
environmental legislation in California. For his dissertation, he
is focusing on the incidence of environmental regulation, with a focus
on applications to California climate policy.
Laura
Grant - Born and raised in South Dakota, Laura moved to Idaho in
1999 to pursue her BS in Mathematics from Boise State University. She
remained there for an MS in Geophysics with a hydrology emphasis. Laura
is a Regents Scholar at UCSB. Presently, Laura works with Matthew
Kotchen (Professor, UCSB) determining the effect of Daylight Saving
Time on Residential Electricity Consumption. Her general interests are
time discounting – both theoretically and empirically as it
pertains to
long-term environmental and resource planning decisions – and
inter-/intra-generational equity. Two potential applications are water
resource management and climate change mitigation policies. She also
assists Idaho Conservation League with an economic development and
wilderness proposal for the state of Idaho, traveling to Washington DC
fours times in the past years to talk with legislators about her
hydrological research in relation to the proposal.
Chris
Guo - Chris was
born in 1981 and grew up in Richmond, VA. He attended Harvard College
as an undergraduate, during which time he completed coursework in the
natural sciences, econometrics, natural disasters, and environmental
risk. He graduated in 2003 with a degree in economics and moved to New
York to work for a large commercial bank with an up and coming
investment banking division. Chris also found time after graduating to
travel through Hawaii, Europe, Costa Rica, and Mexico studying their
coastlines. In 2006 he began his PhD in the EES program with
research interests in ecology, energy, and natural resource management.
Grant
Jacobsen Grant began his PhD in the EES Program through
the Economics
Department at UCSB in2005. For his undergraduate studies, Grant
attended The
College of William and Mary, where he majored in Economics and
graduated in 2005. He is interested in studying microfinance and the
role of reputation in decision-making. After Grant's first year in the
EES program, Grant traveled to Islamabad, Pakistan in the summer of
2006 to work with the National Rural Support Programme (NRSP). Most of
his time with NRSP was spent in their rural microfinance division
researching the impact of weather shocks on loan repayment. Grant's
research advisor is Prof. Kotchen.
Erin Larive Erin
received a B.A. in Mathematics and a B.A. in Economics from the
University of Kansas in May, 2005. The following fall, Erin began her
Ph.D. studies in the EES program through the Department of
Economics. As part of the EES program, she spent a summer working
in the National Center of Environmental Economics at the EPA, and an
additional summer at UCSB learning about the biology of vector borne
diseases under Dr. Armand Kuris (Professor, UCSB). Currently she is
working on estimating the overall economic impact of an increase in
Onchocerciasis (River Blindness) infection rates and studying the
ecological dynamics of vector borne disease prevention.
Julian Neira -
Originally from Colombia, South America, Julian earned his
undergraduate degree in Applied Economics from the College of St.
Scholastica
in Duluth, Minnesota. Prior to EES, Julian spent a semester
interning for FINCA International, a microfinance organization in
Washington
D.C, while studying economic policy at American University.
During the summer of his junior year in college, he was a research
fellow at
the University of Nebraska - Lincoln's
Bureau of Business Research, where he participated in projects
assessing
prospective industries in rural Nebraska
and environmental impacts of highway investments. Julian enrolled in
the
Economics Department in 2007, where he is the current recipient of the
Thormalen Fellowship. Julian’s current research interests are broadly
in the
area of water markets, environmental valuation, and urban planning,
particularly as related to developing countries.
Dominic
Parker - Dominic Parker began his research as a EES fellow and PhD
student
at the Bren School in 2005. His current research
focuses on private land conservation, economic development on American
Indian reservations, and the economics of public bureaucracies (with a
specific interest in those that manage natural resources). Prior to
enrolling at UCSB, Parker was a researcher at the Property &
Environment Research Center in Bozeman, Montana. Additionally, he has
worked as a consultant for the Public Utilities Board of Singapore
(with Terry Anderson) and as a consultant for KPMG LLP in Portland,
Oregon. He holds a MS degree in applied economics from Montana State
University. Nick's research advisor is Prof. Deacon.

Bonnie
Queen Bonnie graduated from The College of William and Mary with a
BA in Economics. Bonnie was the recipient of the Robert A. Barry
Award in 2005, given to the top economics student. She is also a
member of Phi Beta Kappa. Bonnie published an honors thesis on
the impact of historical areas on housing prices. She enrolled in
the Economics Department in 2007 through the EES program and she is
interested in studying environmental and developmental economics.
Rebecca
Toseland - Originally from Upstate New York, Rebecca graduated from
Yale University in May 2007 with a BA in Economics and Environmental
Studies. While at Yale, Rebecca was a Research
Assistant at the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy.
Her Senior Research Project modeled the impacts of environmental
regulation on air pollution control in Post-World War II Japan.
Rebecca entered the EES program through the Economics Department
in fall 2007. Her current research interests
include water resource management, green markets, and incentives for
the provision of corporate social responsibility.
Elizabeth
Witham - Elizaeth was born and raised in northwestern Washington
State, on the border of the Olympic National Park. She attended
MIT for her undergraduate, and graduated in 2005 with an SB
in Environmental Engineering and a minor in Political Science.
After graduation Elizabeth moved to Washington D.C. to work for
the Homeland Security Institute, the Department of Homeland Security's
think tank. Presently, she is interested in a wide range of
issues in Environmental Economics, including, but not limited to,
natural resource economics and questions of climate change.
