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Curriculum Vitae – 2016
Kevin St. Martin, Ph.D. Tel: 848.445.3634
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Fax: 732.445.0006
Department of Geography
54 Joyce Kilmer Drive
Piscataway NJ 08854-8045 Email: [email protected]
Work Experience
Current
Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Rutgers University.
Professor II, Faculty of Biosciences, Fisheries and Economics, Universitetet I
Tromsø, Norway.
Education
1999 Ph.D., Graduate School of Geography, Clark University. Dissertation title: “From
Models to Maps: The Discourse of Fisheries and the Potential for Community
Management in New England.”
Fields of study: economic geography, cartography and GIS, resource geography.
Advisor: Dr. Jody Emel. Other committee members: Drs. Dianne Rocheleau, J.
Ronald Eastman, and Julie Graham.
1989 MSc, University of Massachusetts, Amherst (Geography). Thesis: “An Alternative
Industrial Geography: Overdetermination and the Solid Wood Products Industry.”
1985 BA, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Major: Geography, Minor: Asian
Studies Certificate.
Professional Experience
2016- Professor II, Faculty of Biosciences, Fisheries and Economics, Universitetet I
Tromsø, Norway.
2015-2016 Director of the Graduate Program in Geography, Rutgers University.
2010-2012 Director of the Graduate Program in Geography, Rutgers University.
2008- Associate Professor at Rutgers University, Department of Geography.
2002-2008 Assistant Professor at Rutgers University, Department of Geography.
2001-2002 Assistant Professor at Rutgers University, Joint appointment between the
Department of Geography (51%) and the Center for Urban Policy Research
(49%).
2000 National Research Council (NRC) Associateship Award recipient. Postdoctoral
position at the DOC/NOAA/NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Woods
Hole, MA.
1999 Adjunct instructor at Clark University and at Tufts University.
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Research Associate at Clark Labs for Cartographic Technology and Geographic
Analysis, Clark University.
1993-1998 Coordinator of Idrisi Resource Centers and Research Associate at the Idrisi
Project (GIS research and software development) located within Clark Labs for
Cartographic Technology and Geographic Analysis, Clark University.
1990-1992 Research Associate and UNITAR workbooks coordinator at the Idrisi Project.
Responsibilities included writing and editing GIS educational materials as well as
coordinating final production of workbooks produced in conjunction with the
United Nations Institute for Training and Research.
1989-1990 Teaching Assistant, Graduate School of Geography, Clark University.
Cartography and Remote Sensing.
1986-1988 Research Assistant, Department of Geology and Geography, University of
Massachusetts, Amherst. Research in industrial geography.
Scholarship
Publications
Refereed Journal Articles:
2016 Boucquey, N., L. Fairbanks, K. St. Martin, L. Campbell, and B. McCay. “The
Ontological Politics of Marine Spatial Planning: (Re)Assembling the Ocean and Shaping
the Capacities of ‘Community’ and ‘Environment’,” Geoforum 75: 1-11.
Breslow, S.J. et al. (18 authors including St. Martin, K.). “Conceptualizing and
Operationalizing Human Wellbeing for Ecosystem-Based Management,” Environmental
Science & Policy. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2016.06.023
Hicks, C. et al. (17 authors including St. Martin, K.). “Engage Key Social Concepts for
Sustainability,” Science 352(6281): 38-40.
Fenichel, E., S. Levin, B. McCay, K. St. Martin, J. Abbott, and M. Pinsky. “Wealth
Reallocation and Sustainability Under Climate Change” Nature Climate Change 6(3):
237-244.
2014 Kittinger, J.N. et al. (23 authors including St. Martin, K.). “A Practical Approach for
Putting People into Ecosystem-Based Ocean Planning” Frontiers in Ecology and the
Environment. 12(8): 448-456.
2012 Halpern, B. et al. (33 authors including St. Martin, K.). “An Index to Assess the Health
and Benefits of a Global Ocean” Nature (488): 615-620.
St. Martin, K. (editors review) “Mapping Biocultural and Economic Diversity…
Everywhere” in Why Do We Value Diversity? Biocultural Diversity in a Global Context.
G. Martin, D. Mincyte, and U. Münster eds., (Rachel Carson Center) RCC Perspectives
2012(9): 83-88.
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2010 Murray, G, T. Johnson, B. McCay, M. Danko, K. St. Martin, and S. Takehashi.
“Cumulative Effects, Creeping Enclosure, and the Marine Commons of New Jersey”
International Journal of the Commons 4(1): 367-389.
2009 St. Martin, K. “Toward a Cartography of the Commons: Constituting the Political and
Economic Possibilities of Place” Professional Geographer 61(4): 493-507.
2008 Schroeder, R.A., K. St. Martin, B. Wilson, and D. Sen. “Third World Environments,
Third World Justice? Expanding the Environmental Justice Agenda” Editorial essay for
special issue of Society and Natural Resources 21(7): 547-555.
St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “The Missing Layer: Geo-technologies, Communities,
and Implications for Marine Spatial Planning” Marine Policy 32: 779-786.
St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Creating a Place for ‘Community’ in New England
Fisheries” Human Ecology Review 15(2): 161-170.
St. Martin, K. “Mapping Community Use of Fisheries Resources in the U.S. Northeast”
Journal of Maps 2008: 38-41.
2007 St. Martin, K. and J. Wing. “The Discourse and Discipline of GIS” Cartographica
42(3): 235-248.
St. Martin, K. “The Difference that Class Makes: Neoliberalization and Non-Capitalism
in the Fishing Industry of New England” Antipode 39(3): 527-549.
Pavlovskaya, M. and K. St. Martin. “Feminism and GIS: From a Missing Object to a
Mapping Subject” Geography Compass 1(3): 583-606.
St. Martin, K., B. McCay, G. Murray, T. Johnson, and B. Oles. “Communities,
Knowledge, and Fisheries of the Future” International Journal of Global Environmental
Issues 7(2/3): 221-239.
2006 R. Schroeder, K. St. Martin, K. Albert. “Political Ecology in North America: An
Introduction” Editorial essay for special issue of Geoforum 37(2): 163-168.
St. Martin, K. “The Impact of ‘Community’ on Fisheries Management in the U.S.
Northeast,” Geoforum 37(2) 169-184.
2005 St. Martin, K. “Mapping Economic Diversity in the First World: The Case of Fisheries,”
Environment and Planning A 37: 959-979.
St. Martin, K. “Disrupting Enclosure in New England Fisheries,” Capitalism, Nature,
Socialism 16(1): 63-80.
2001 St. Martin, K. “Making Space for Community Resource Management in Fisheries,” The
Annals of the Association of American Geographers 91(1): 122-142.
1990 Graham, J. and K. St. Martin. “Knowledge and the 'Localities' Debate: Meditation on a
Theme by Cox and Mair,” Antipode 22(2): 168-174.
Graham, J. and K. St. Martin. “Resources and Restructuring in the International Solid
Wood Products Industry,” Geoforum 21(3): 289-302.
Books and Edited Volumes:
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2015 Roelvink, G., K. St.Martin, and J.K. Gibson-Graham (eds.), Making Other Worlds
Possible: Performing Diverse Economies. University of Minnesota Press.
2008 Schroeder, R.A., K. St. Martin, B. Wilson, and D. Sen, eds. Third World Environments,
Third World Justice? Special issue: Society and Natural Resources 21(7): 547-655.
2006 Schroeder, R.A., K. St. Martin, and K. Albert, eds. Political Ecology in North America:
Discovering the Third World Within? Special issue: Geoforum 37(2): 163-245.
1993 St. Martin, K. ed. Explorations in Geographic Information Systems Technology, Volume
3, Applications in Coastal Zone Research and Management. United Nations Institute for
Training and Research, Geneva, Switzerland.
1992 McKendry, J. E., J. R. Eastman, K. St. Martin, and M. Fulk. Explorations in Geographic
Information Systems Technology, Volume 2, Applications in Forestry. United Nations
Institute for Training and Research, Geneva, Switzerland.
Chapters is Books:
2016 St. Martin, K. and J. Olson. “Creating Space for Community in Marine Conservation
and Management: Mapping ‘Communities at Sea’,” forthcoming in Conservation in the
Anthropocene Ocean, Levin, P. and M. Poe eds. (Elsevier).
2015 Snyder, R. and K. St. Martin. “A Fishery for the Future: The Midcoast Fishermen’s
Association and the Work of Economic Being-in-Common,” in Making Other Worlds
Possible: Performing Diverse Economies, G. Roelvink, K. St. Martin, and J.K. Gibson-
Graham eds. (University of Minnesota Press).
St. Martin, K., Roelvink, G. and J.K. Gibson-Graham. “Introduction: An Economic
Politics for our Time,” in Performing Diverse Economies, G. Roelvink, K. St. Martin,
and J.K. Gibson-Graham eds. (University of Minnesota Press).
2014 Pavlovskaya, M. and K. St. Martin. “Economy,” in Sage Handbook of Human
Geography, Lee, R. et al. eds. (Sage Publications).
2010 St. Martin, K. and M. Pavlovskaya. (anonymous peer reviewed) “Secondary Data:
Engaging Numbers Critically,” in Research Methods in Geography: A Critical
Introduction. Gomez, B. and J.P. Jones III eds. (Wiley-Blackwell), pp. 173-193.
2009 St. Martin, K. and M. Pavlovskaya. “Ethnography” chapter in A Companion to
Environmental Geography, N. Castree, D. Demeritt, D. Liverman, and B. Rhoads eds.
(Wiley-Blackwell), pp. 370-384.
St. Martin, K. “The Difference that Class Makes: Neoliberalization and Non-Capitalism
in the Fishing Industry of New England,” in Privatization: Property and the Remaking of
Nature-Society Relations. B. Mansfield ed. (Blackwell), pp. 133-155, first published in
Antipode 39(3).
2007 St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Environment and Development: (Re)Connecting
Community and Commons in New England Fisheries,” in Connecting People,
Participation and Place: Participatory Action Research Approaches and Methods. S.
Kindon, R. Pain and M. Kesby eds. (Routledge), pp. 51-59.
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St. Martin, K. “Enclosure and Economic Identity in New England Fisheries,” in
Neoliberal Environments: False Promises and Unnatural Consequences N. Heynan, J.
McCarthy, S. Prudham, and P. Robbins eds. (Routledge), pp. 255-266.
2006 McCay, B., T. Johnson, K. St. Martin, and D. Wilson. “Gearing Up for Improved
Collaboration: The Potentials and Limits of Cooperative Research for Incorporating
Fishermen’s Knowledge,” in Partnerships for a Common Purpose: Cooperative
Fisheries Research and Management A. N. Read and T. W. Hartley eds. (American
Fisheries Society), pp. 111-115.
2004 St. Martin, K. (anonymous peer reviewed) “GIS in Marine Fisheries Science and
Decision Making,” in Geographic Information Systems in Fisheries, W. L. Fisher and F.
J. Rahel eds. (American Fisheries Society), pp. 237-258.
1995 St. Martin, K. “Changing Borders, Changing Cartography: Possibilities for Intervention
in the New World Order,” in Marxism in the Postmodern Age, A. Callari, S. Cullenberg,
and C. Biewener, eds. (The Guilford Press), pp. 459-468.
Research Monographs:
2005 St. Martin, K., B. McCay, T. Johnson, and T. Rohrbach. Assessing Recreational Fishing
Communities: A Guide to Research. A Report to the National Marine Fisheries Service.
Fisheries Project, Rutgers The State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
St. Martin, K., T. Johnson, and T. Rohrbach. A Profile of Recreational Fishing in Point
Pleasant, New Jersey. A Report to the National Marine Fisheries Service. Fisheries
Project, Rutgers The State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
2002 McCay, B.J., B. Oles, B. Stoffle, E. Bochenek, K. St.Martin, G. Graziosi, T. Johnson,
and J. Lamarque. Port and Community Profiles, Amendment 9, Squid, Atlantic Mackerel,
and Butterfish Fishery Management Plan: A Report to the Mid-Atlantic Fishery
Management Council. The Fisheries Project, Rutgers the State University, New
Brunswick, New Jersey.
McCay, B. J., J. Lamarque, K. St. Martin, E. Bochenek, T. Johnson, B. Stoffle, and D.
C. Wilson. Port and Community Profiles and Social Impact Assessment, Amendment 13
of the Surfclam and Ocean Quahog Fishery Management Plan: A Report to the Mid-
Atlantic Fishery Management Council. The Fisheries Project, Rutgers the State
University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
2001 Listokin, D., M. Lahr, and K. St. Martin. The Economic Impacts of Historic
Preservation in Missouri. Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers the State University,
New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Other Publications:
2010 The Community Economies Collective. “In Remembrance of Julie Graham” Gender,
Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography 17(4): 419-420.
2007 Contributor to Visions for a Sea Change. Report of the First International Workshop on
Marine Spatial Planning. Published by the UNESCO Intergovernmental Oceanographic
Commission (ICAM Dossier Series): Paris.
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2006 Danko, M, B.J. McCay, K. St. Martin, and G. Murray. “Cumulative Effects and New
Jersey Marine Fisheries,” The Jersey Shoreline. 24(1): 8-11.
McCay, B. J., C. Pomeroy, K. St. Martin, and B. Walker (authors alphabetically listed).
Peer Review of Ecotrust MLPAI (Marine Life Protection Act Initiative) Products.
Commissioned by the California Fisheries Coalition, Alliance of Communities for
Sustainable Fisheries (CFC/ACSF), Sacramento, CA.
2005 McCay, B. J., T. R. Johnson, K. St. Martin, and D. Wilson. “Social, Cultural, and
Economic Impacts of Working Cooperatively: How is Fishermen’s Knowledge
Incorporated?” Proceedings of the American Fisheries Society 135th
Annual Meeting,
Anchorage, AK, September 11-15, 2005.
Under Review or In Preparation:
Charnley, S. et al. (16 authors including St. Martin, K.). “Best Available Social Science
for Natural Resource Management Decision-making,” under review at Environmental
Science & Policy.
Young, T., E. Fuller, K. Coleman, M.M. Provost, K. St. Martin, M. Pinsky. “Tracking
the Adaptation Strategies of Resource Dependent Communities” for submission to
Conservation Biology.
St. Martin, K. and J. Olson. “Enacting Community in Marine Ecosystem-Based
Management,” for submission to Society and Space.
St. Martin, K. and J. Olson. “The Potentials of ‘Communities-at-Sea’ for Marine
Conservation,” and for submission to Conservation and Society.
St. Martin, K. and R. Snyder. A Cartography of the Commons: Taking Action in a Rights
Based World for submission to the Diverse Economies and Livable Worlds book series,
University of Minnesota Press.
Funded Research
2015 U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. Collaborating Researcher, Collaborative
Fisheries Planning for Virginia’s Offshore Wind Energy Area. April 2015 – October
2015, subcontracted by The Nature Conservancy $15,000.
NOAA, The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program. Co-Principal Investigator (in
collaboration with colleagues at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth and
NOAA/NMFS/Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Woods Hole), Combining
Fishermen's Knowledge with Oceanographic and Economic Models to Locate, Evaluate,
and Predict Gray Meat Outbreaks in Atlantic Sea Scallops, June 2015 – May 2017,
$299,551.
2014 National Science Foundation, Coastal SEES Program. Co-Principal Investigator (Malin
Pinsky, PI and in collaboration with colleagues at Princeton and Yale), Adaptations of
Fish and Fisheries to Rapid Climate Velocities, September 2014 – August 2018,
$1,110,024.
National Science Foundation, Geography and Spatial Sciences Program. Principal
Investigator, (in collaboration with Lisa Campbell at Duke University), Settling
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Uncertainties: Regional Implementation and the Emergence of Stakeholders and
Ecosystems as Objects and Actors in US Marine Spatial Planning. July 2014 – June
2016, $350,000.
Atlantic Sea Scallop Research Set-Aside Program. Collaborating Researcher, Tracking
the Occurrence of Gray Meat in Atlantic Sea Scallops, Placopecten magellanicus. May
2014 – April 2015, subcontracted $6,000.
2012 NOAA, Regional Ocean Partnership Funding Program. Collaborating Researcher, Mid-
Atlantic Mapping and Planning Portal, Stakeholder Engagement to Advance Regional
Ocean Planning. January 2012 – September 2015, subcontracted $19,000.
National Science Foundation, Geography and Spatial Sciences Program. Principal
Investigator, (with Bonnie McCay and in collaboration with Lisa Campbell at Duke
University), Marine Spatial Planning and the Role of Community and Environmental
Actors: A Sea Change in Oceans Governance? July 2012 – June 2013, $125,000.
2008 Marine Ecosystem-Based Management Tool Innovation Fund (an initiative funded by the
David and Lucile Packard Foundation and administered through Duke University’s
Marine Geospatial Laboratory). Principal Investigator, Communities at Sea Mapper, May
2008 – May 2009, $74,108.
2004 National Science Foundation, Ethics and Values Studies program. Co-Principal
Investigator (with Bonnie McCay), Experience Based Knowledge in a Science Policy
Context, March 2004 – February 2008, $180,001.
NOAA, New Jersey Sea Grant program. Co-Principal Investigator (with Bonnie McCay,
Bryan Oles, and Michael Danko), Cumulative Effects and New Jersey Marine Fisheries,
March 2004 – May 2006, $78,500.
2003 National Science Foundation, Ethics and Values Studies program. Co-Principal
Investigator (with Bonnie McCay), Examining the Fate of Experience Based Knowledge
in a Science Policy Process, September 2003 – August 2004, $39,720.
NOAA, New Jersey Sea Grant program. Co-Principal Investigator (with Bryan Oles and
Bonnie McCay), Environmental Knowledge of Commercial Fishermen and Its
Application to Fisheries Management, January 2003 – December 2003, $49,993.
2001 NOAA, Northeast Consortium. Principal Investigator (with Madeleine Hall-Arber), An
Atlas-based Audit of Fishing Territories, Local Knowledge, and the Potential for
Community Participation in Fisheries Science and Management, September 2001 – May
2005, $168,953.
NOAA, Cooperative Marine Education Research. Principal Investigator (with Bonnie
McCay), Recreational Fishing and National Standard 8: Assessing Community Impacts
of Federal Regulations, September 2001 – August 2004, $75,000.
NOAA, Cooperative Marine Education Research. Principal Investigator (with Bonnie
McCay), Spatial Dimensions of Fisheries and Their Implications for Property Rights
Alternatives: A Case Study of Three Major Scalloping Areas, September 2001 – August
2004, $28,000.
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Missouri Department of Natural Resources. Co-Principal Investigator (with David
Listokin and Michael Lahr), Economic Impacts of Historic Preservation in Missouri,
March 2001 – February 2002, $49,820.
Rutgers Research Council. Principal Investigator, A Prototype for an Atlas of Fishing
Territories, Local Knowledge, and the Potential for Community Participation in
Fisheries Science and Management, September 2001 – May 2002, $2550.
Fellowships and Awards
2015 Julie Graham Community Economies Research Fund Fellowship recipient. Award to
participate in the 2015 Community Economies Theory and Writing Retreat, Bolsena,
Italy, August 9-19, 2015.
2013 Julie Graham Community Economies Research Fund Fellowship recipient. Award to
participate in the 2013 Community Economies Theory and Writing Retreat, Bolsena,
Italy, July 2-14, 2013.
2010 Fulbright-Hays Scholar Award recipient. Project title: Drawing Communities Together:
Assessing the Potential of Participatory Environmental Mapping for Marine Resource
Management and Community Development. University of Tromsø, Norway, January-June
2010.
2009 Public Scholarship and Service Learning Curriculum Development Grant recipient.
Award used to revise GEOG321 (Geographic Information Systems) to include public
service and community engagement modules. $1500.
2003 Bildner Intercultural Fellowship Award recipient. Award used to revise GEOG470
(History and Theory of Geography) to include intercultural content. $4000.
2000 National Research Council (NRC) Associateship Award recipient. Postdoctoral position
at the DOC/NOAA/NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Woods Hole, MA.
Invited Participation
Invited Working Groups:
2014 International Social Science Council, Transformations to Sustability international
working group hub researcher. Project title: Rebuilding Livelihoods to Meet the
Challenges of Climate Change in Post-Crisis Communities. Group active September
2014 – March 2015.
2013 NOAA, Washington Sea Grant, and University of Washington’s School of Marine
Environmental Affairs working group participant. Project title: Advancing a Social
Science Protocol for Assessing Human Wellbeing in Ecosystem-Based Management.
Group active December 2013 – December 2014.
2012 Stanford University's Center for Ocean Solutions working group participant. Project title:
Social-Ecological Resilience in Small-Scale Fisheries. Group active April 2012 - April,
2014.
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2012 Stanford University's Center for Ocean Solutions working group participant. Project title:
Exploring the Human Dimensions Relevant to Marine Spatial Planning. Group active
April 2012 - July, 2012.
2010 National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS), Santa Barbara, CA
working group participant. Project title: A Framework to Assess Ecosystem health in
Support of Ecosystem-Based Management of Coastal-Marine Systems. Group active
January 2010-May 2011.
Invited Keynote Addresses:
2013 Keynote speaker at the MARE People and the Sea VII conference, Amsterdam, June 26-
29.
2012 Keynote speaker at the (no)Boundaries Graduate Student Conference, Pennsylvania State
University, University Park, PA, February 11-12.
2008 Keynote speaker/lecturer at “Sharing Ocean Space: Visions, Knowledge, Strategies, and
Tools” a course in the political ecology series at the Norwegian College of Fishery
Science, University of Tromsø, Norway, April 23-25.
2006 Keynote speaker at the “Sea Use Management and Marine Spatial Planning” workshop,
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Paris,
November 7-11.
2004 Key note speaker at the “Spatial Planning for the Sustainable Management of the Seas”
workshop hosted by the Maritime Institute at the University of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium,
January 15-16.
Invited Speaker Series and Workshops:
2017 Seminar series speaker, Department of Geography, University of Delaware, Newark, DE,
TBD.
2016 Participant at “The Social Dimensions of American Offshore Wind Energy: Towards a
Research Agenda,” University of Rhode Island, October 24.
Seminar series speaker, Department of City and Regional Planning, Cornell University,
Ithaca, NY, October 13.
Guest lecturer in the Fisheries Management course, Fisheries College, University of
Tromsø, Norway, March 14-18.
2015 Speaker and participant at “Building the Future of Fisheries: Designs for Government,
Market, and Community,” Yale University, April 3.
Seminar series speaker, George Perkins Marsh Institute and the Graduate School of
Geography, Clark University, Worcester, MA, March 12.
2014 Participant at the “Social Transformations to Sustainability” workshop, International
Social Science Council, Potsdam, Germany, November 17-19.
Guest lecturer in the Fisheries Management course, Fisheries College, University of
Tromsø, Norway, March 17-19.
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2013 Speaker and participant. “Nature-Society Workshop,” Clark University, Worcester, MA,
September 27-28.
Seminar series speaker, Economic Sociology Laboratory, Higher School of Economics,
Moscow, Russia, April 23.
Guest lecturer in the Fisheries Management course, Fisheries College, University of
Tromsø, Norway, March 10-13.
2012 Speaker and participant at the “Future of Sami Fisheries Research” workshop, University
of Tromsø, Norway, October 8.
Organizer and speaker, “GIS for Social Science” workshop, Tórshavn, Faroe Islands, May
22-24.
2011 Seminar series speaker, Institute of Marine and Coastal Science, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick, NJ, November 28.
Speaker and participant at “Geographies of Justice: An Interdisciplinary Symposium,”
Penn State University, September 30-October 1.
Speaker and participant at the “Fisheries Leadership and Sustainability Forum,” Stanford
University, Palo Alto, CA, September 21-23.
Guest lecturer in the Center for Oceans Solutions short course on Marine Policy, Hopkins
Marine Laboratory (Stanford University), Monterey, CA, August 14-15.
Participant at the “Atlantic Wind Energy Workshop” hosted by the U.S. Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement (BOEMRE), Washington D.C., July
12-14.
Speaker and participant at the “Why Do We Value Diversity? A Cross-Disciplinary
Workshop on Biocultural Diversity in Global Context” hosted by the Rachel Carson
Center for Environment and Society, Munich, Germany, June 4-5.
Steering Committee member, speaker and participant, The Role of Social Sciences in
Ecosystem-Based Management, a CINAR (Cooperative Institute for the North Atlantic
Region) workshop held at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Woods Hole, MA,
May 2-4.
Speaker and participant at the “Social Science and Chesapeake Bay Restoration”
workshop, hosted by the Scientific and Technical Advisory Committee of the Chesapeake
Bay Program, Annapolis, MD, March 10.
Seminar series speaker, DukeFish Spring Lecture Series, Duke University Marine
Laboratory, Beaufort, NC, February 24.
2010 Speaker and participant at the “Local Resources, Markets, and Economic Growth”
workshop hosted by the Center for Northern Peoples and Kåfjord municipality,
Manndalen, Norway, June 21.
Seminar series speaker, Fisheries College, University of Tromsø, Norway, April 23.
Speaker at the “Fulbright Seminar 2010,” Oslo, Norway, February 11.
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Seminar series speaker, “Favllis Research Forum 2010,” Sami Center, University of
Tromsø, Norway, February 4.
2009 Speaker and participant at the “Sami Rights in Coastal Landscapes and Seascapes: Rights
to Natural Resources and New Management Principles” conference and PhD course,
University of Tromsø, Norway, April 22-24.
Speaker (via video link) at the “Ways of Knowing the Sea: The Integration Project”
workshop, Memorial University, Newfoundland, Canada, February 5-6.
2008 Speaker and participant at the “Geospatial Technology, Wildlife Conservation, and
Community” workshop, Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India, December 14-17.
Speaker and participant at the “Socioeconomics, Markets, and Space: Performing
Markets” workshop, Hirschberg, Germany, October 16-18.
Public lecture series speaker, Gulf of Maine Research Institute, Portland, ME, March 13.
2007 Participant at “The Science of Marine Reserves in the Gulf of Maine,” a COMPASS (Communication Partnership for Science and the Sea) advisory meeting held at the University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, December 6.
Panel participant at a public screening and panel discussion of the film Fishing for the
Future sponsored by the Island Institute, Rockland, ME, August 16.
Participant at “Using Case Studies to Advance a Practical Framework for Ecosystem-
Based Management in Marine Systems,” a COMPASS (Communication Partnership for Science and the Sea) workshop held at Oregon State University, Portland, OR, April 4-6.
2006 Seminar series speaker, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Northeast
Fisheries Science Center, Woods Hole, MA, December 18.
Seminar series speaker, Department of Natural Resources, University of New Hampshire,
Durham, NH, December 6.
Seminar series speaker, Department of Geography, Hunter College, CUNY, New York,
NY, May 11.
2005 Speaker and participant at the “Mapping Human Activity in the Marine Environment:
GIS Tools and Participatory Methods” workshop hosted by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration’s National Marine Protected Areas Center, MPA Science
Institute, Monterey, CA, November 30 – December 1.
The 2005-2006 Geography Lecture, Department of Political Science, College of
Charleston, Charleston, SC, November 16.
Seminar series speaker, Duke University Marine Laboratory, Beaufort, NC, October 12.
Colloquium speaker, Department of Geography and Regional Studies, University of
Arizona, Tucson, AZ, February 25.
2004 United States delegate and workshop participant, Working Group on Fisheries Systems
(WGFS), International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), April 26-30,
Lowestoft, United Kingdom.
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2003 Colloquium speaker, University of Massachusetts, Department of Geosciences, Amherst,
MA, November 7.
2002 Participant in the “Workshop on Social and Economic Measures of Fishing Community
Participation in Fisheries” organized by the Office of Science and Technology of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), Silver Spring, MD, April 23 – 25.
2001 Speaker and participant at the Social Science Workshop, New England Fisheries
Management Council, Gloucester, MA, May 22-23.
2000 Participant at the “Second Social Research and Ecological Knowledge Systems Seminar.”
St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, June 19 – 23.
1999 Participant and workshop leader at the “Social Research and Ecological Knowledge
Systems Seminar.” St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, May 22 – 29.
Conference Organization
2004 Organizer (with R. Schroeder and B. Wilson), Environmental Justice Abroad a
conference held at the Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick,
NJ, October 16.
2003 Organizer (with R. Schroeder and K. Albert), Political Ecology at Home, a conference
held at the Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, March
29.
Conference Participation
Papers and Panels (authors listed only when multiple):
2016 St. Martin, K. and J. Olson. “From Commons as Local Development to Commoning as
Global Process: Ontological Interventions in Marine Policy and Planning.” The American
Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, March 29-April 2.
Panelist: “A Research Agenda for a 'Radical' Marine Spatial Planning.” The American
Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, March 29-April 2.
2015 Aligning Small Scale Fishing with the ‘Solidarity Economy’: Expanding Research and
Political Possibilities. MARE People and the Sea VIII. Amsterdam, June 24-26.
Diverse Economies for Liveable Worlds: The Ethics of Small Scale Fishing. The
Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, April 21-25.
2014 “Instituting ‘Sectors’ in New England Fisheries: Producing Governable Fishermen or a
New Foundation for Economic Difference?” Second World Small-Scale Fisheries
Congress, Merida, Mexico, September 21-25.
“Metrologies for Other Worlds: Indicators of “Wellbeing” and Other Tools for
Performing Economic Diversity.” The Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, Tampa, FL, April 8-12.
2013 Panelist: “Take Back the Economy book panel.” Rethinking Marxism, Amherst, MA,
September 19-22.
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2012 “Performing Diverse Economies and Enacting Economic Alternatives: The Case of
Community Supported Fisheries.” Embeddedness and Beyond: Do Sociological Theories
Meet Economic Realities, Moscow, Russia, October 25-28.
St. Martin, K. and J. Olson. “Enacting Community in Marine Ecosystem-Based
Management.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New York,
NY, February 24-28.
Panelist: “Unnatural Neoliberalisms? Debating ‘Post-Neoliberalism’ and ‘Alternatives’ to
Neoliberal Natures.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New
York, NY, February 24-28.
Panelist: “Alternative and Non-Capitalist Political Ecologies Opening Plenary.” Society for
Applied Anthropology Annual Conference, Baltimore, MD, March 27-31.
2011 “Performing Alternatives to Neoliberal Natures: The “Case” of Marine Resource
Governance.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA,
April 12-16.
Panelist: “The Shock of the Poetic: Critical Dialogues with Magical Marxism.” The
Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, April 12-16.
“Enacting Human Dimensions of Ecosystem-Based Management in Maine and Norway.”
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Annual Meeting,
Washington, DC, February 18-21.
2010 Sarmiento, E. and K. St. Martin. “Difference and Domination: The Search for Alterity in
Fisheries and Food Networks.” The Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, Washington, D.C., April 14-18.
Snyder, R. and K. St. Martin. “Mapping Maine’s Working Waters: Drawing
Communities Together.” Maine Sea Grant Symposium 2010: Marine Science that
Matters, March 22.
St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Mapping Communities: Linking People to Ocean
Spaces.” American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Annual Meeting,
San Diego, CA, February 18-22.
2009 St. Martin, K. and R. Snyder. “Alternative Markets and Community Economies in New
England Fisheries.” Rethinking Marxism, Amherst, MA, November 5-8.
St. Martin, K. and R. Snyder. “Fishing for the Future: Enacting Alternative Markets and
Community Economies in the Fisheries of New England.” The Association of American
Geographers Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, March 22-27.
J. Myers and K. St. Martin “Integrating Community Use of Fisheries into Marine
Ecosystem Based Management.” The Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, March 22-27.
Panelist: “Displacing the Natural: Links between Political Ecology, Industrialization, and
Consumption.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Las Vegas,
NV, March 22-27.
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2008 Murray, G., T. Johnson, B. McCay, K. St. Martin, S. Takehashi. “Cumulative Effects,
Creeping Enclosure, and the Marine Commons of New Jersey” International
Associations for the Study of Commons (IASC), Cheltenham, UK, July 14-18.
“Marine Spatial Planning as a Cartography of the Commons.” International Associations
for the Study of Commons (IASC), Cheltenham, UK, July 14-18.
“Toward a Cartography of the Commons: Constituting the Political and Economic
Possibilities of Place.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting,
Boston, MA, April 15-19.
Panelist “Diverse Economies 3: Toward a Dialog with Political Ecology.” The
Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, April 15-19.
Panelist “Ethical Political Ecology I.” The Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, Boston, MA, April 15-19.
2007 “Quantitative and Critical GIS Methods to Foster Community Participation in Natural
Resource Management.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, San
Francisco, CA, April 17-21.
Panelist “Working Nature: Labels, Rents, and Fetishes.” The Association of American
Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 17-21.
2006 St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Mapping Resilience in the Fishing Communities of
New England.” Society for Human Ecology – XIV International Conference. Bar Harbor,
ME, October 18 – 21.
St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Charting Fishing Communities at Sea: Revealing New
Potentials for Participation in Fisheries Science and Management.” ICES 2006, Fishing
Technology in the 21st Century. Boston, MA, October 30 – November 3.
Murray, G., B. McCay, and K. St. Martin. “Cumulative Effects and the ‘Human
Environment’: An Oral History Approach.” American Fisheries Society, Annual Meeting.
Lake Placid, NY, Sept. 10-14.
St. Martin, K., D. Wilson, B. McCay, and T. Johnson. “Scale, Knowledge and
Participation in Ecosystem Approach Management Strategies: Lessons from North Sea
and Northeastern US.” The ICES Symposium on Fisheries Management Strategies.
Galway, Ireland, June 27-30.
“Fishermen, Territory, and the Inhabitation of Neoliberal Space.” The Association of
American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, March 7-11.
Panelist “Politics of Participation.” The Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, Chicago, IL, March 7-11.
“Counter Mapping and the Production of Alternative Subjects and Spaces.” Indigenous
Cartographies and Representational Politics – An International Conference. Cornell
University, Ithaca, NY, March 2-5.
2005 Hall-Arber, M. and K. St. Martin. “Mapping Fishing Communities At Sea.” American
Fisheries Society 135th
Annual Meeting, Anchorage, AK, September 11-15.
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McCay, B. J., T. R. Johnson, K. St. Martin, and D. Wilson. ”Social, Cultural, and
Economic Impacts of Working Cooperatively: How is Fishermen’s Knowledge
Incorporated?” American Fisheries Society 135th
Annual Meeting, Anchorage, AK,
September 11-15.
“GIS and the (Re)production of a Fisheries Commons.” The Association of American
Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April 5-9.
St. Martin, K. and J. Wing. “The Possibility of Heterodox GIS.” The Association of
American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April 5-9.
Panelist, “Feminists in our Midst: How Feminism has Infiltrated the Discipline.” The
Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April 5-9.
2004 “Re-Mapping the Commons and Constituting a Community-based Economy: The Case of
Fisheries.” International Association for the Study of Common Property (IASCP),
Oaxaca, Mexico, August 9-13.
St. Martin, K. and T. Johnson. “Inventing Communities of Fishers in the Northeast U.S.:
Emerging Methods for Fisheries Impact Assessment.” International Association for the
Study of Common Property (IASCP), Oaxaca, Mexico, August 9-13.
“How (Non)Capitalism Works: The Production and Maintenance of a Fisheries
Commons.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Philadelphia,
PA, March 14-19.
2003 “Re-Inserting Community and Re-Inhabiting the Commons: Constituting a Community
Economy Discourse in Fisheries.” Marxism and the World Stage, Amherst, MA,
November 6-9.
“Fixing the Commons.” Political Ecology at Home, a conference organized by the
Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, March 29.
Stoffle, B. and K. St. Martin. “It Can’t Stand Alone: The Necessity of a Multidisciplinary
Approach to the Study of Fishing Communties and The Development of Fishery Policy.”
Society for Applied Anthropology, Portland, OR, March 19-23.
“The Globalization of Fisheries and the Conditions of Global Resistance.” The
Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, March 5-8.
“Political Ecology in the Regions IV: North America.” The Association of American
Geographers Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, March 5-8.
2002 “The Emergence of “Community” in Fisheries’ Policy: A New Challenge for Social
Science.” The American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA,
November 19-24.
2001 “Emerging Communities, Emerging Geographies: A New Paradigm for Fisheries Science
and Management?” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New
York, NY, February 27-March 3.
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“Making Space for Non-Capitalism: GIS, Community, and the Mapping of Fisheries
Resources.” GIS and Critical Geographic Research, Hunter College, New York, NY,
February 25.
2000 “Mapping the Spatial Practices of Fishermen and its Implications for Management.” The
Marine GIS Technology Conference/Workshop at the Fish Expo/Workboat Atlantic
Conference, Providence, RI, October 12-13.
“Emerging Geographies, Emerging Communities: Transforming Fisheries Science and
Management in New England.” Marxism 2000, Amherst, MA, September 21-24.
“Overlaying Communities and Ecosystems: Assessing the Potential for GIS in Fisheries
Management.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh,
PA, April 4-8.
1999 “Uncharted Waters: The Non-Capitalist Spaces of Fishing.” The Association of American
Geographers Annual Meeting, Honolulu, HI, March 23-27.
1998 “GIS Against Capitalism?” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting,
Boston, MA, March 25-29.
Panelist, “Beyond the Technology Debate.” The Association of American Geographers
Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, March 25-29.
1997 Panelist, “GIS and Social Theory: From Critique to Dialogue.” NESTVAL Meeting, Salem
State College, Salem, MA, November 7-9.
“Mapping Class in New England Fishing.” Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, Fort Worth, TX, April 2-6.
1996 “Maps and Class: Making Space for Other Class Processes.” Politics and Languages of
Contemporary Marxism conference, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA,
December 5-8.
“Mapping Cultural and Economic Processes in New England Fisheries.” NESTVAL
Meeting, Clark University, Worcester, MA, November 1-3.
“Maps as Metaphor or Method: Postmodern Economics and Fisheries Management.”
Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Charlotte, NC, April 9-13.
Sessions Organized:
2015 “Making Other Worlds Possible VII: How Values, Ethics, and Commons Practices
(Re)Format Markets and Economies.” The Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, Chicago, IL, April 21-25.
2011 “For Julie Graham: Celebrating Julie Graham's Contributions and Exploring the Future of
Her Work” and “For Julie Graham: Performing Diverse Economies.” The Association of
American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, April 12-16, 2011.
2008 “Geotechnologies, the Commons, and Property Rights.” International Associations for
the Study of Commons (IASC), Cheltenham, UK, July 14-18.
“Diverse Economies 2: Constituting the Potential of the Commons.” The Association of
American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, April 15-19.
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“Diverse Economies 3: Toward a Dialog with Political Ecology.” The Association of
American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, April 15-19.
“Producing Neoliberal Environments: The Role of Geotechnologies in Contemporary
Enclosures and Resistance.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting,
Boston, MA, April 15-19.
2007 “Locating the Diverse Economy: Communities, Commons, and Sites of War.” Paper
session at The Association of American Geographers, Middle States Division, Annual
Conference, Reading, PA, November 16-17.
2005 “Political Ecologies as Diverse Economies.” Paper session at The Association of
American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April 5-9.
“The Possibility of Heterodox GIS, I and II.” Paper and panel sessions at The Association
of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April 5-9.
1998 “Beyond the Technology Debate.” Panel session at The Association of American
Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, March 25-29.
1997 “GIS and Social Theory: From Critique to Dialogue.” Panel session at the NESTVAL
Meeting, Salem State College, Salem, MA, November 7-9.
Discussant:
2015 “Disastrous Political Ecologies: Critical Perspectives on Disaster.” The Association of
American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, April 21-25.
2014 “Post-structural Interventions I: Geo-analytics and a New Epistemology of Poverty .” The
Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Tampa, FL, April 8-12.
“Methodologies and Governance in the Anthropocene .” After 400 PPM: Science,
Politics, and Social Natures in the Anthropocene: A Workshop for Junior Scholars, New
Brunswick, NJ, March 27-28.
2011 “Food and Alterity in a Diverse Economy: Exploring a Politics of Possibility.” The
Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, April 12-16, 2011.
2007 “Locating the Diverse Economy: Communities, Commons, and Sites of War.” The
Association of American Geographers, Middle States Division, Annual Conference,
Reading, PA, November 16-17.
“Politics and the Life Aquatic.” The Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, San Francisco, CA, April 17-21, 2007.
2006 “Feminist Political Ecology.” The Association of American Geographers Annual
Meeting, Chicago, IL, March 7-11, 2006.
2005 “Privatization: Property, Nature, Bodies, and Subjectivities.” The Association of
American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, April 5-9, 2005.
2002 “Transformative Commodities and Political Food: Skills, Consumption and Geographic
Knowledge.” Association of American Geographers Middle States Division Fall 2002
Meeting, Montclair State University, NJ, October 11-12.
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Posters:
2006 Murray, G., B. McCay, and K. St. Martin. “Cumulative Socio-Economic Effects of
Management Measures: An Oral History Approach” ICES 2006, Fishing Technology in
the 21st Century. Boston, MA, October 30 – November 3, 2006.
St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Integrating GIS and Qualitative Research Methods to
Map Fishing Communities at Sea” Geographic Information Systems and Ocean Mapping
in Support of Fisheries Research and Management, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Cambridge, MA, April 11, 2006.
Professional Service
Editorships
2014- Editor, Diverse Economies and Livable Worlds book series, University of Minnesota
Press.
Associate Editor, MAST (Maritime Studies), Springer.
Committee and Steering
2016 Finance Committee, American Association of Geographers (2016 – 2018).
Coordinating Committee, Community Economies Collective (2013 – 2016).
Steering Committee, Julie Graham Community Economies Research Fund (2013 –
present).
Ecosystem Based Fisheries Management Plan Development Team of the New England
Fisheries Management Council (2013 – present).
Science and Statistical Committee, New England Fisheries Management Council –
Committee which establishes fishing limits and related policy for the regional
management council (2011 – present).
International Council for the Exploration of the Seas (ICES) Expert Group member
(Working Group on Maritime Systems) – Working group tasked to examine fisheries
management systems from social science perspective (2006 – present).
2013 Science Advisor to COMPASS (Communication Partnership for Science and the Sea)
COMPASS organizes and supports scientist’s engagement with national marine policy
development (2009 – 2013).
2012 Steering Committee, “Characterization of Spatial Patterns of Commercial Fishing
Activity in New England,” a project funded by the Northeast Regional Ocean Council.
2011 Executive Committee, Development of a Conceptual Framework for the Contribution of
the Social Sciences to Ecosystem-Based Fishery Management, a CINAR (Cooperative
Institute for the North Atlantic Region) working group – Committee of scientists working
to inform regional marine management and governance.
2007 Social Science Advisory Committee of the New England Fisheries Management Council
(2002-2007).
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2002 Scallop Plan Development Team of the New England Fisheries Management Council
(2001-2002).
Peer Review - Journals
ACME, An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies (2005).
Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Blackwell (1999, 2003, 2005, 2006,
2007, 2014a,b).
Antipode, Blackwell (2005, 2007, 2012).
Applied Geography, Elsevier (2014).
Biological Conservation, Elsevier (2010).
Cartographica, University of Toronto Press (2005).
Coastal Management Journal, Taylor and Francis (2015).
Ecological Applications, Ecological Society of America (2011).
Environment and Planning A, PION (2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015a, b).
Environment and Planning D, PION (2013, 2014).
Fish and Fisheries, Wiley (2009).
Fisheries Research, Elsevier (2012a,b).
Geoforum, Elsevier (2003a,b,c 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014a,b).
Human Geography: A New Journal, Institute for Human Geography (2009, 2011, 2012).
MAST (Maritime Studies), Springer (2012, 2015, 2016).
Northeastern Geographer, Salem State University (2008).
Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift/Norwegian Journal of Geography, Routledge (2014).
Ocean and Coastal Management, Elsevier (2007).
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Academy of Sciences (2009, Direct
Submission Editor 2014).
Professional Geographer, Blackwell (2006, 2009).
Rethinking Marxism, Guilford Press (1996, 1997).
Social and Cultural Geography, Taylor and Francis (2009).
The Geographical Review, The American Geographical Society (2006).
Peer Review - Other
2016 State University of New York (SUNY), Buffalo, tenure package.
2014 University of British Columbia, external dissertation reviewer
City University of New York (CUNY), dissertation proposal reviewer
Too Big to Ignore (TBTI) working group book project, chapter reviewer
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2013 University of Washington, Bothell, tenure package.
New School, external dissertation reviewer.
2012 National Science Foundation, Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement grant
proposal.
National Geographic Society, grant proposal.
University of Tromsø, Norway, external dissertation reviewer.
2011 National Science Foundation, grant proposal.
2009 University of New Hampshire, external dissertation reviewer.
2008 Memorial University, Newfoundland, tenure package.
Australian National University, external dissertation reviewer.
Blackwell Publishing, book proposal review.
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (Canada), grant proposal.
Belgian Government, the Belgian Science Policy (BELSPO), Science for a Sustainable
Development, research proposals.
2007 North Carolina Sea Grant, research proposal.
2006 The Marine Life Protection Act (California) Initiative’s assessment study of proposed
marine protected areas.
2003 American Fisheries Society, proceedings publication.
Professional Association Membership
Member of the Community Economies Collective (CEC).
Member American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).
Member of the Association of American Geographers (AAG).
Member of the Association for Economic and Social Analysis (AESA).
Member of the International Association for the Study of the Commons (IASC).
Community Engagement
2012- Working with students in GEOG321 (Introduction to GIS) and GEOG421 (Advanced
GIS) who are developing service learning projects with area community organizations
through the CESEP (Civic Engagement and Service Education Partnerships) project.
2006 Research project display (An Atlas-Based Audit of Fishing territories, Local Knowledge,
and Community Participation in Fisheries Science and Management) at the Working
Waterfront Festival, New Bedford, MA, September 23-24.
2002 Project presentation (An Atlas-Based Audit of Fishing territories, Local Knowledge, and
Community Participation in Fisheries Science and Management) at the Northeast
Consortium’s 2nd
Annual Project Participants’ Meeting, Portsmouth, NH, October 24.
Interviews
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2010 Swedish government report on Marine Spatial Planning & The Ecosystem Approach.
2008 Research featured in National Fisherman article “Charting At-Sea Communities.”
University and Departmental Service
2016 Merit PEC
Graduate School New Brunswick, Teaching Award Committee
2013-2015 Advisory Committee for Appointments and Promotions to Associate Professor
2013 New Brunswick Faculty Council
2012 Tenure Review Package Reading Committee
2012- CESEP (Civic Engagement and Service Education Partnerships) Faculty Advisory
Council
2012- Graduate School New Brunswick, Teaching Award Committee
2010- Graduate School New Brunswick, Social Sciences Area Committee
2008 Presenter at University Tenure and Promotion Workshop
2005-2009 Liaison to Rutgers University, OIRT
2005-2007 Livingston College Fellow, Executive Committee
2004- Geospatial Information Science Certificate Program participant
2004- Department of Geography Web Page Committee
2003-2004 Faculty of Arts and Sciences Curriculum Committee
2003-2005 Faculty of Arts and Sciences Nominating Committee
2003-2004 Livingston College, Global Futures Symposia, Coordinating Fellow
2002- Human Dimensions of Environmental Change Certificate Program participant
2002-2007 Livingston College Fellow
2002-2009 New Brunswick Faculty Council
2002- Department of Geography Curriculum Committee
2002- Department of Geography Computer Committee
2001- Participant in the RUGIS (Rutgers University Geographic Information Science)
Teaching
Supervision and Mentoring
Advisees:
Sean Tanner (PhD); Divya Karnad (PhD); Jonah Walters (PhD).
Nathaniel Gabriel (PhD 2012); Eric Sarmiento (PhD 2015); Luke Drake (PhD 2015).
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John Wing (MA 2003); Michael Davenport (MA 2004); Michael Mohamed (MA 2006);
Scott Salmon (MA 2011); Daniel Danza (MA 2012).
2016 Mentor to David H. Smith Conservation Research Fellow (Talia Young).
Undergraduate Honors Thesis advisor (Jared Schenkel).
Graduate Directed Readings (Jonah Walters).
2015 Postdoc Supervision (Eva Papaioannou, Sarah Wise)
Graduate Directed Readings (Sangeeta Banerji, Helen Olsen)
Undergraduate Directed Research (Yunpeng Lyu).
Aresty Faculty mentor (Jessica Bagtas, Steven Gryszel)
Undergraduate Honors Thesis advisor (Michael Endicott).
2013 Postdoc Supervision (Noelle Boucquey)
2009 Aresty Faculty mentor (Andre Gharapetian)
Courses Taught
2014- GEOG421 (Advanced Geographic Information Systems), Department of Geography,
Rutgers University.
2009- GEOG607 (Geography, Space, and Social Theory), Department of Geography, Rutgers
University.
2005- GEOG606 (Rethinking Economy), Department of Geography, Rutgers University.
2001- GEOG321 (Geographic Information Systems), GEOG470 (History and Theory of
Geography), GEOG601 (Geographic Perspectives), Department of Geography, Rutgers
University.
1999 Adjunct instructor (Spring ’99), Environmental Studies 193, “Environmental
Applications of GIS.” Environmental Studies Program, Tufts University, Medford, MA.
Adjunct instructor (Fall ‘98 and Spring ‘99), Geography 190, “Introduction to GIS.”
Clark University, Graduate School of Geography, Worcester, MA.
1997 Visiting instructor (June ’97), Course SS97, Übung 453110, “Fuzzy Set Theory and
Decision Making with GIS.” Department of Geography, University of Salzburg, Austria.
Other Teaching Experience
1997 Guest lecturer, “The New GIS? Fuzzy Set Theory and Decision Making with GIS.”
Department of Geography, University of Klagenfurt, Austria, June 20.
1995 Lecturer at MAST GIS '95: An Advanced Study Course on “GIS Applications to Coastal
Science and Engineering” Cork, Ireland, September 2-16.
WELL/GIS Workshop on “Spatial Thinking,” organized by the College of Surveying and
Land Management, University of Forestry, Szekesfehervar, Hungary, June 6-10.
Workshop on “GIS and Coastal Zone Management,” International Symposium on GIS
and Computer Mapping for Coastal Zone Management, Cork, Ireland, February 3-5.
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1994 Workshop on “GIS and Remote Sensing in the Coastal Zone,” presented in conjunction
with Coastal Zone Canada '94, Halifax, Nova Scotia, September 20-23.
Workshop on “Introduction to NCGIA Core Curriculum and Idrisi,” organized by the
College of Surveying and Land Management, University of Forestry, Szekesfehervar,
Hungary, September 5-9.