About CID
About CID
CID People
CID People
CID Events
CID Events
Research
Research
Student Programs
Student Programs
Publications
Publications
Research Datasets
Research Datasets
Resources
Resources
CID Home
CID Home
About CID
About CID
CID Director
CID Director
Contact Information
Contact Information
Supporting CID
Supporting CID
CID Brochure
CID Brochure
CID Director
CID Director
Faculty Associates
Faculty Associates
Researchers & Visitors
Researchers & Visitors
CID Staff
CID Staff
Student Associates
Student Associates
KSG Directory
KSG Directory
Event Calendar
Event Calendar
Past Events and Conferences
Past Events and Conferences
CID Seminar Series
CID Seminar Series
Research Programs
Research Programs
Faculty Research Projects
Faculty Research Projects
Student Research Projects
Student Research Projects
Graduate Students
Graduate Students
Undergraduate Associates
Undergraduate Associates
ID Study Guide
ID Study Guide
Funding/Internship Opportunities
Funding/Internship Opportunities
Thesis Prize
Thesis Prize
MPA/ID Program
MPA/ID Program
Working Papers Series
Working Papers Series
Annual Brochure
Annual Brochure
Affiliated Publications
Affiliated Publications
Publication Archive
Publication Archive
CID Datasets
CID Datasets
Online Datasets
Online Datasets
Data Products
Data Products
International Statistical Sites
International Statistical Sites
National Statistical Offices
National Statistical Offices
Other Internet Data Resources
Other Internet Data Resources
Global Trade Negotiations
Global Trade Negotiations
Bureau for Research in Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD)
Bureau for Research in Economic Analysis of Development (BREAD)
RISE-Pakistan
RISE-Pakistan
Visitor Information
Visitor Information
Return to CID Home
Return to CID Home

Sustainability Science Program

Home | Overview | People | Activities | Events | Documents
Links | Sponsors | Grants & Fellowships | Stay Informed
Search | Contact Us

Vicki Norberg-Bohm Fellowship Recipients

The Vicki Norberg-Bohm Fellowship, made by the Science Technology and Public Policy Program and the Environment and Natural Resources Program at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, supports Kennedy School of Government PhD candidates conducting early exploratory research on energy or environmental issues. The fellowship is designed to enable doctoral students to expose themselves to a wide range of researchers and research approaches early in their training before they make their ultimate choice of a dissertation topic. The $7,000 award can be used for a variety of activities such as conducting field work, providing support for an internship, or learning a foreign language in a host country. The award is a tribute to the late Dr. Vicki Norberg-Bohm whose work focused on understanding the process of technological change and the role of public policy for stimulating innovation and diffusion of environment-enhancing technologies. For more information on the fellowship, click here. Information on fellowship recipients and their research follows below.

2007 Recipients

Sebastian Bauhoff: Environmental regulation as health policy

Robyn Meeks: Investigations into integrated water resource management and development

Suerie Moon: Access to knowledge, medicines and development

2006 Recipients

Kelsey Jack: Investigating payments for ecosystem services as an example of an incentive-based environmental policy approach

Kira Matus: Exploring green chemistry as a leapfrogging innovation for sustainable development

===============

Sebastian Bauhoff: Environmental regulation as health policy

Sebastian Bauhoff will explore the intersection of environmental and health policies by examining air pollution regulations in different settings. Many countries are struggling to simultaneously meet the needs of environmental protection and population health. Sebastian plans to explore several questions on the intersection of these policy areas: How do policy makers perceive the link between environmental and industrial policies and health policy? Are there possible win-win strategies that contain emissions and improve health? Why is this link not featuring more prominently in policy and research discussions? Sebastian will examine air pollution policies and their implementation in the US, Europe and China. Sebastian plans to use the fellowship to discuss with policy makers and local experts in California, London and Beijing.

Sebastian Bauhoff is a doctoral student in the Health Policy Program, an interdisciplinary program at Harvard. His research interests include statistical methods, development economics and the intersection of health economics with environmental and finance policy. Sebastian spent two years in China researching rural development policies, with a focus on land and health care reforms. He received a Master of Public Administration in International Development from the Kennedy School of Government in 2005 and wrote his thesis on scaling up successful research projects in developing countries, using a school-based deworming program in Kenya as example. Sebastian received a B.Sc. in Economics and Economic History from the London School of Economics.

Return to top   

Robyn Meeks: Investigations into integrated water resource management and development: Linkages between local, national and international levels

Robyn Meeks will explore the linkages between water resource management at the local, national and international levels in developing countries. Her research will involve examinations of both macro level approaches to water resource management, such as integrated water resources management (IWRM), and micro level approaches promoted through decentralization processes in the form of community managed water supply systems. Robyn will perform these investigations by meeting with practitioners, academics, and communities for whom water resource management is a critical issue. This fellowship will support a trip to Stockholm, Sweden and field work.

Robyn Meeks is a PhD student in the Public Policy Program at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. She is interested in water resource management and development, particularly IWRM, transboundary issues, and water supply and sanitation. Robyn taught environmental studies as a Peace Corps volunteer in Kazakhstan and researched tariff collection for rural water supply systems in the Kyrgyz Republic as a recipient of a Fulbright fellowship. In addition, Robyn has consulted for the Water Governance Programme within the Energy and Environment Group of the United Nations Development Programme. Robyn received a B.A. in political science from Brown University and a Master’s in Environmental Management, concentrating in water, science and policy, from Yale University, where she was awarded the Foreign Language and Area Studies fellowship for study of the Russian language. While at Yale, Robyn interned at Resources for the Future, served as the editor of UNDP’s newsletter on public-private partnerships in the urban environment (PPPUE), and conducted research for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Secretariat in preparation for the 2005 Conference of the Parties.

Return to top   

Suerie Moon: Access to knowledge, medicines and development

From the globalization of patents to the race for exclusive rights to the human genome, there have been increasing efforts by private actors to restrict access to knowledge, a trend that will have important consequences for equity and sustainable development. At the same time, scholars, entrepreneurs and civil society organizations (CSOs) have been successfully advocating for greater openness and knowledge-sharing. Beginning in the late 1990s, this issue hit center stage as the worsening AIDS pandemic galvanized grassroots groups worldwide to protest against patent monopolies that kept the prices of effective medicines too high for the developing world. Since then, the debate has evolved considerably; today CSOs – including patient groups – are involved in the writing and revision of national patent laws, in shaping WTO rules, and creating new international norms. Nowhere is this debate more vocal and salient than India. CSOs have become involved in determining the contours of India’s new patent regime through several key court cases that have already had an important impact on the availability of key AIDS and cancer drugs. This case raises broader questions, such as: How does the involvement of CSOs impact access to knowledge and the ways in which it is generated? Does CSO involvement signal a trend toward the democratization of (specifically public health related) research? If so, what are the implications for society? Furthermore, how do CSOs, and grassroots patient groups in particular, influence areas such as patentability criteria that are traditionally reserved for technical experts? Suerie plans to use the fellowship to support travel to India and Geneva to interview key actors from civil society, as well as government, international organizations and the private sector, with the aim of further honing these research questions and starting dissertation work.

Suerie Moon is a Pre-doctoral Research Fellow in the Sustainability Science Program at Harvard’s Center for International Development and a doctoral candidate in the Public Policy Program at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Her research interests include the ways in which civil society organizations (CSO) shape policymaking at the global level, and the accountability relationships that develop between and among CSOs and global public institutions. She also works on analyzing the relationship between access to medicines, innovation and intellectual property rights policies, and the implications for equity in public health in the developing world. Moon is currently a contributor to the "Institutional Innovations in Global Health Project" at CID, funded by the KSG Dean’s Acting in Time initiative. The project takes as a case study the historical and contemporary international responses to malaria, in order to draw broader conclusions about effective global health institutions with applicability to other health areas. Prior to coming to Harvard, she was a campaigner, researcher, and writer for the Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) international Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines, where she focused on intellectual property rights, equity prices for medicines, and research and development into ‘neglected diseases.’ She received a Masters in Public Affairs with Distinction from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, and graduated cum laude with a BA in history from Yale University.

Return to top   

2006 Vicki Norberg-Bohm Fellowship Recipients

Kelsey Jack: Investigating payments for ecosystem services as an example of an incentive-based environmental policy approach

Kelsey Jack will increase her understanding of the implementation and study of payments for ecosystem services (PES) interventions in developing countries. Payments for ecosystem services seek to correct the market failure surrounding many environmental goods and services through transfers from beneficiaries to providers in exchange for increasing service provision to socially optimal levels. Exploring innovative PES interventions in Indonesia and Bolivia, together with interviews and interactions with PES researchers and practitioners, will increase her perspective on the questions and challenges facing both of these groups. By the end of the fellowship, she hopes to have defined the most urgent questions and challenges surrounding PES implementation, assessed the value of a comparative research approach, and developed an awareness of both available data and the most pressing data gaps. Support will be used to fund fieldwork in Indonesia and Bolivia.

Brooke "Kelsey" Jack is a doctoral candidate in the Public Policy Program at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. She is interested in individual level decision-making related to natural resources in developing countries, with a focus on the role of institutions in shaping these decisions. Kelsey spent two years with IUCN - The World Conservation Union in Lao PDR, where she worked on issues of conservation and rural livelihoods. She has also done research for the World Resources Institute, for the Dean of New York University Law School, and for the Princeton Environmental Institute. She is a recipient of the Vicki Norberg-Bohm Fellowship and a Center for International Development Doctoral Research Grant. Kelsey received her undergraduate degree in public and international affairs from Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School.

Return to top   

Kira Matus: Exploring green chemistry as a leapfrogging innovation for sustainable development

Kira Matus will explore the potential for green chemistry in the developing world. Much of the new investment in large-scale chemical infrastructure is occurring in the developing world, especially in India, China and Eastern Europe. Kira’s work will explore the following questions: For what reasons, and under what circumstances, can the practices and technologies of these nations “leapfrog” ahead of developed nations? What kinds of innovations, and in which sectors, is innovation most promising? What public policies, regulatory structures, and public-private partnerships could promote innovation in the chemical sector? Kira will take the analytical framework that she has been developing based on US examples, and discuss it with experts in the countries where new infrastructure is being planned. She plans to spend time in China and India discussing technological innovation for development with local experts.

Kira Matus is a doctoral candidate in the Public Policy Program at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Her research focuses on the application of scientific and technical knowledge to the problem of sustainable development in emerging and high-growth urban areas. She received an SM in Technology and Policy from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2005. While at MIT, she was a research assistant in the Joint Program for the Science and Policy of Global Change. As a part of that group, she worked to quantify the economic impacts of the health effects of urban air pollution on the economies of the United States and China. She was a participant in the Alliance for Global Sustainability’s IPOS graduate student symposium in 2004 in Thailand. She co-led a group of high school students on ICEP - a service and exchange trip to Sweden and Russia in 2005. Matus is a 2003 magna cum laude graduate of Brown University where she earned an ScB with honors in chemistry.

Return to top   

 

 

Direct site comments or questions to CID's Webmaster.
Copyright ©2006 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.
Last revised 20 June 2007