Environmental Science


 

Jennie C. Stephens


Assistant Professor of Environmental Science and Policy
Coordinator of the Graduate Program in Environmental Science and Policy

International Development, Community and Environment

Clark University
Worcester, MA 01610-1477

(508) 793-8846 phone
email: jstephens@clarku.edu
Click here to read a profile of Jennie Stephens

 

Education
B.A. Environmental Science & Public Policy, Harvard, 1997
M.S. Environmental Science & Engineering, Caltech, 1998
Ph.D. Environmental Science & Engineering, Caltech, 2002

Research and Teaching
Research interests: climate change mitigation, technologies and policies for carbon management, sustainability science, energy technology innovation, CO2 capture and storage, renewable energy, universities as change agents for sustainability, climate change education

Jennie Stephens' research, teaching, and community engagement focuses in various ways on accelerating a societal transition toward sustainability, with a particular focus on climate change mitigation. Jennie has particular interest in energy technologies with potential to contribute to a stabilization of atmospheric CO2 concentrations. She focuses on understanding non-technical factors influencing the deployment of renewable energy, particularly wind power, and also in understanding the social dimensions of carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology. Other components of Jennie’s work include climate change education, campus sustainability, and universities as change agents in sustainability.

Courses
EN 101 Sustainability Science, Environment Society and Technology

EN 103 The Sustainable University

IDCE 30205/EN 207 Climate Change, Energy, and Development

IDCE 30226/EN 266: Energy and Social Change Research Seminar

Selected Publications
Stephens, J.C. & A.C. Graham. 2008. Climate Science to Citizen Action: Urgent Need to Energize Non-Formal Climate Science Education. EOS. American Geophysical Union’s Publication. Vol. 89. No. 22. p. 204-205.

Stephens, J.C., E.J. Wilson, & T.R. Peterson. 2008. Socio-Political Evaluation of Energy Deployment (SPEED): An Integrated Research Framework for Analysis of Energy Technology Deployment. Technological Forecasting and Social Change. Vol. 75, p. 1224-1246.

Stephens, J.C.; M.E. Hernandez, M. Román, A.C. Graham, & R.W. Scholz. 2008. Education as a Change Agent for Sustainability in Different Cultures and Contexts. International Journal for Sustainability in Higher Education. Volume 9, Issue 3.  p. 317-338.

Stephens, J.C. & D.W. Keith, 2008. Assessing Geochemical Carbon Management. Climatic Change. Vol. 90, No. 3. p. 217-242.

Stephens, J. C. (2008, in press). Social and Economic Drivers for Considering Deliberate Carbon Storage. Book chapter in AGU Monograph, The Science and Technology of Carbon Sequestration: Assessment and Verification of Natural and Deliberate Carbon Sinks B. J. McPherson and E. Sundquist (editors), American Geophysical Union.

Stephens, J.C. 2006. Growing Interest in Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) for Climate Change Mitigation. Sustainability: Science, Practice, and Policy. Fall 2006. Vol. 2, Issue 2.

Stephens, J.C. & B. van der Zwaan. 2005. The Case for Carbon Capture and Storage. In Issues in Science and Technology. Fall, 2005. p. 69-76.

Stephens, J.C. and J.G. Hering. 2004. Factors Affecting the Dissolution Kinetics of Volcanic Ash Soils: Dependencies on CO2, pH and organic acids. Applied Geochemistry. Vol. 19, No. 8, p. 1217-1232.

Stephens, J.C. and J.G. Hering. 2002. Comparative Characterization of Volcanic Ash Soils Exposed to Decade-Long Elevated Carbon Dioxide Concentrations at Mammoth Mountain, California. Chemical Geology. Vol. 186 No. 3-4, p. 301-313.

Stephens, J.C. 1997-98. Factors limiting the acceptance and use of innovative environmental technologies: A case study of the Solar Aquatics System™ (SAS) technology for wastewater treatment. Journal of Environmental Systems. Vol. 26, No. 2, p. 163-170.

Awards
Jennie Stephens has been awarded a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant from the Science and Society program to support collaborative research on Diffusion of Emerging Energy Technologies within a State Context, a collaboration among Clark University, the University of Minnesota and Texas A&M.

Stephens was selected among 100 young scientists from around the world to participate in the 2nd International Young Scientists’ Global Change Conference in Beijing, China, November 7-8, 2006. This conference was sponsored and organized by START, global change SysTem for Analysis, Research, and Training and all participants were fully funded to travel to Beijing and present their research.

Jennie Stephens' Curriculum Vitae

Jennie Stephens' Personal Webpage