Jennifer Cherrier, associate professor in the School of the Environment
at FAMU, has been selected as a 2013
Leopold Leadership Fellows. Cherrier is one of 20 environmental
researchers from across North America to be awarded. She is first
fellow to be selected from FAMU.
“Over the years, I have come to
realize two things regarding environmental stewardship,” Cherrier said.
“As scientists, we need to produce high-quality and defensible science,
and we must be able to convince others of its relevancy - how it fits
into the big picture. I am thrilled to have been selected as a 2013
Leopold Leadership Fellow and can't wait to get started taking full
advantage of this incredible opportunity.”
Based at the Stanford
Woods Institute for the Environment, the Leopold Leadership Program
provides outstanding academic environmental researchers with skills and
approaches for communicating and working with partners in NGOs,
business, government and communities to integrate science into
decision-making. The program is funded by the David and Lucile Packard
Foundation and by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.
This
year's fellows come from 17 institutions in Canada, Mexico and the
United States. They will receive intense leadership and communications
training to help them engage effectively with leaders in the public and
private sectors who face complex decisions about sustainability and the
environment.
The
2013 fellows are conducting innovative research in a wide range of
disciplines, including ecology, marine science, economics, behavioral
science, entomology, engineering and planning. They join a network of
175 past fellows who are engaged in broad-based efforts to solve
society’s most pressing sustainability challenges.
The fellows
were chosen for their outstanding qualifications as researchers,
demonstrated leadership ability and strong interest in sharing their
knowledge beyond traditional academic audiences. Fellows participate in a
week-long training session followed by a year of practicing skills that
will advance their efforts to lead change. The fellowship also offers
peer networking and mentoring through the Leopold Leadership Network of
program advisers, trainers and past fellows.
“Academic scientists
work hard to understand environmental problems and develop potential
solutions, but to actually help solve problems requires two-way
communication and partnerships between scientists and decision-makers,"
said Scientific Director Pamela Matson, dean of Stanford’s School of
Earth Sciences and senior fellow at the Stanford Woods Institute for the
Environment. “The Leopold Leadership Program trains academics to close
the gap between knowledge and action.”