
SMEA Student Selected as 2023 Bonderman Fellow
SMEA student Courtney Skalley has been selected as a member of the 2023 Bonderman Fellow cohort. The Bonderman Travel Fellowship was created by UW alumnus David Bonderman in 1995 to fund global journeys as a way of inspiring individual transformation. The 2023 Fellows cover a wide variety of interests including:
Afro-futurism and presentism
Black diasporic history and culture
Counterculture formation as a tool for human connection
Linguistics and dialects
Musical events and concert culture
The relationship between a place’s natural resources and its cuisine, clothing, and culture
The role of the bicycle in community-building
Courtney is a second-year SMEA student with an interest in sustainable fisheries management.
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Anne Beaudreau Featured on Juneau Afternoon Broadcast
SMEA Associate Professor Anne Beaudreau was recently featured on Juneau’s KTOO Juneau Afternoon discussion on selective sports fisheries for marked hatchery salmon alongside presenters from Juneau Libraries and SMEAKMG. The full episode is available here.
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Q&A with Alumna Connie Sullivan
Alumna Connie Sullivan graduated from the School of Marine and Environmental Affairs in 2012. Connie currently works as the Clean Boating Coordinator for Oregon Sea Grant and enjoys working with the boating community to ensure our waterways stay clean. Read on to learn more about Connie’s career and what advice she has for current SMEA students.
How did your time in SMEA prepare you for your work?

Ocean Nexus Center Publishes Blog
The Ocean Nexus Center, directed by SMEA Professor of Practice Yoshi Ota, has introduced a new blog focusing on human dimensions of ocean space. New articles are posted every Friday through July 31st. You can read the first few articles at the links below:
Introducing Human Dimensions of Oceans: From a Sociological Perspective
Introducing Environmental Sociology and its Importance for Ocean Space
Degrowth, Environmental Sociology, and the Blue Economy
More than Mermaids: Reclaiming the Lost Feminist Voice in the Sociology of Oceans
Aquaculture and Political Economy: Food System as Social Structure

SMEA Alumni Thesis Work Published in Ecology & Society
An article titled, “Indigenous food sovereignty through resurgent self-governance: centering Nuu-Chah-nulth principles in sea otter management in Canada” from SMEA alumni Lindsey Popken’s (’21) thesis work has been published in Ecology & Society. The research was published as part of a special feature on Collaborative Management, Environmental Caretaking, and Sustainable Livelihoods. The full article is available here.
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SMEA Capstone Video Yupiit School District Summer Fish Camp 2022
Recent SMEA graduates, Amelia Wells and Kellie Cutsinger (’23), completed their capstone “Community-Based Mitigation and Adaptive Strategies for River Flooding and Erosion in Alaska Native Communities” with advisor Dr. Cleo Woelfle-Hazard and in collaboration with Iowa State University. As part of their work, a video was created highlighting the communities they collaborated alongside. A message from their Capstone community partner is shared below as well as a link to the completed video project.
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Book by Kelly and Klinger highlighted by King5
SMEA Associate Professor Ryan Kelly and UW’s College of the Environment Senior Communications Director John Meyer were featured in King5’s Evening segment last month. The segment highlights Northwest life and focused on Kelly and Meyer’s book, Between the Tides in Washington and Oregon: Exploring Beaches and Tidepools. The book, co-authored with SMEA professor Terrie Klinger, is described by King5 as, “…the ultimate guide to exploring different areas at low tide.”
You can read the full article and view the news clip here.

SMEA Director Nives Dolsak Publishes Article in PLOS Climate
SMEA Director and Professor Nives Dolsak has co-authored a journal article published in PLOS Climate. The article titled, “Varieties of just transition: Public support in South Africa’s Mpumalanga coal community for different policy options” reviews public support for “Just Transition” (JT) through four policy types: individual compensation, financial support to local governments, individual reskilling, and upgrading local infrastructure. The primary focus is on South Africa for its large coal mining sector, and features in-depth interviews with over 50 coal miners, Eskom power planter workers, and community members within the Mpumalanga province.
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SMEA Alumni Publish Piece in Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
SMEA alumni Robinson Lowe and Darby Swayne (’22) have published a paper co-authored with their former capstone partners. The paper entitled, “At the end of the day, you need to do something”: discourses on prioritization of stormwater solutions” uses Q-methodology research, a mixed-method approach, to investigate differences in prioritization of stormwater solutions currently considered in the region. The article published in Frontiers in Sustainable Cities also explores how emergent perspectives may affect decisions surrounding stormwater management.
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Congratulations SMEA Class of 2023!
On Thursday, June 8th, 2023 the School of Marine and Environmental Affairs held its graduation ceremony.
A welcome was given by SMEA Associate Director, Ryan Kelly, followed by opening remarks from the College of the Environment Dean, Maya Tolstoy, and special keynote speaker Stephen Metruck, Port of Seattle Executive Director. Graduating students Andrea Richter-Sanchez and Kurt Ellison were nominated as class speakers.