• Jude Fernando

    Jude Fernando

    Jude Fernando is completing a book, Political Economy of NGOs: Modernizing Post-modernity, which examines the controversial social roles of micro-credit NGOs in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh and their links to the state, based on his long-term fieldwork in the 1990s. He was principal investigator for the project, “Sustainable Development and Civic Society,” funded by…

  • James Murphy

    James Murphy

    Jim Murphy’s research elucidates the structures, agencies, relationalities, and spatialities shaping contemporary economic geographies and examines the prospects for more just, sustainable, and resilient forms of development in the Global South (esp. Africa).  This work draws on concepts, theories, and epistemologies from a variety of fields including: economic geography, development studies, sociology, science and technology…

  • Deborah Martin

    Deborah Martin

    I am an urban geographer with interests in the meanings and understandings of place, local politics, legal geography, qualitative methodologies, and social movements (particularly neighborhood activism). My research focuses on the United States, including past research in the Twin Cities of Minnesota, and Athens, Georgia, as well as cities in Massachusetts.  My work has examined…

  • John Rogan

    John Rogan

    John Rogan joined the faculty as Assistant Professor in Fall 2003. Dr. Rogan received his Ph.D. (Geography) degree from the joint doctoral program at San Diego State University and the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he was funded by a research grant from NASA’s Land Cover and Land Use Change Program. He received M.A.…

  • Florencia Sangermano

    Florencia Sangermano

    Florencia Sangermano is a geographer specialized in geographic information science (GIS), remote sensing, landscape ecology, and ecoacoustics applied to conservation. Her research focuses on climate and land cover change impacts on ecosystems and biodiversity through the lens of geospatial analysis, with the objective of supporting conservation planning and ecosystem management. Her current research evaluates the…

  • Sang Hoo Bae

    Sang Hoo Bae

    Dr. Bae received a B.S. from Pusan National University in 1998 and a Ph.D. from Michigan State University in 2003. He has been teaching at Clark since 2003.  Dr. Bae’s research and teaching focuses on industrial organization, microeconomic theory, game theory, and econometrics.

  • David Bell

    David Bell

    David Bell is an international and comparative educationalist and psychologist who has worked extensively in Southern Africa in the field of education, empowerment, social transformation and community development and program evaluation. Prior to moving to the United States in 1997, he worked in both formal and non-formal education and in a range of community empowerment…

  • Wayne Gray

    Wayne Gray

    Wayne B. Gray holds the John T. Croteau Chair in Economics.  He’s taught at Clark since 1984, when he received his Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University.  Professor Gray is also a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and the Executive Director of the Boston Federal Statistical Research Data Center.  His research…

  • Timothy Downs

    Timothy Downs

    Tim Downs is a specialist in environmental science and engineering with over 30 years field experience designing and managing collaborative projects in the UK, the United States, Latin America and Africa. His research focus is on how humans change the environment, how those changes impact their health, wellbeing, and the ecosystems they inhabit, and how…

  • David Hibbett

    David Hibbett

    David Hibbett is a Professor of Biology at Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts. USA. He received a B.S. in Botany from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and a PhD in Botany from Duke University. He held postdoctoral fellowships at the Tottori Mycological Institute (Japan) and the Harvard University Herbaria. He joined the faculty of Clark Universty…