Overall Rating | Platinum - expired |
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Overall Score | 85.05 |
Liaison | Lisa Kilgore |
Submission Date | March 5, 2020 |
Executive Letter | Download |
Cornell University
AC-10: Support for Research
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
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4.00 / 4.00 |
Mark
Lawrence Communications Mgr ACSF |
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indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Student Sustainability Research Incentives
Yes
A brief description of the student research program, including the incentives provided and any positive outcomes during the previous three years:
Cornell Atkinson Center engages undergraduate students, graduate students, professional students, and postdocs each year in a range of sustainability-related funding, training, and networking programs that take students beyond the classroom and into hands-on research and professional experiences on campus and across the globe. Below are highlights of our core student and postdocs programs. In addition to these, students and postdocs often work as research assistants on our faculty-funded grant projects.
Summer Internships - Hands-On Sustainability Experience
Eligibility: Cornell undergraduate and graduate students
Cornell Atkinson summer internships offer immersive, hands-on experience at the intersection of science, policy, community, and industry. These internships expose student scholars and emerging scientists to the inner workings of leading environmental advocacy groups, such as Environmental Defense Fund. Working on cutting-edge sustainability issues in dynamic organizations, interns gain subject matter expertise and workplace skills.
Small Grants Program - Graduate Funding for Atkinson Thematic Areas
Eligibility: Cornell graduate students, professional students, and postdocs; undergraduates interested in working on Small Grants projects are invited to contact us.
Cornell Atkinson’s Small Grants support pioneering research with the goal of creating practical sustainability solutions. These grants prioritize projects that align with the Center's four research areas: increasing food security, reducing climate risk, accelerating energy transitions, and advancing One Health.
Sustainable Biodiversity Fund - Protecting Earth’s Biodiversity
Eligibility: Cornell graduate students, professional students, and postdocs from all disciplines; undergraduates interested in working on Sustainable Biodiversity Fund projects are invited to contact us.
The Sustainable Biodiversity Fund supports innovative research on the most pressing questions in protecting biodiversity. Applicants are encouraged to propose interdisciplinary projects that will convert knowledge into actions that preserve biodiversity and its global ecosystem services.
Collaborative Research Grants - Supporting New Sustainability Collaborations
Eligibility: Cornell graduate students, professional students, and postdocs; principle Investigators must be Research Fellows (please contact us if you are unsure of your status as a Research Fellow).
Cornell Atkinson Center engages undergraduate students, graduate students, professional students, and postdocs each year in a range of sustainability-related funding, training, and networking programs that take students beyond the classroom and into hands-on research and professional experiences on campus and across the globe. Below are highlights of our core student and postdocs programs. In addition to these, students and postdocs often work as research assistants on our faculty-funded grant projects.
Summer Internships - Hands-On Sustainability Experience
Eligibility: Cornell undergraduate and graduate students
Cornell Atkinson summer internships offer immersive, hands-on experience at the intersection of science, policy, community, and industry. These internships expose student scholars and emerging scientists to the inner workings of leading environmental advocacy groups, such as Environmental Defense Fund. Working on cutting-edge sustainability issues in dynamic organizations, interns gain subject matter expertise and workplace skills.
Small Grants Program - Graduate Funding for Atkinson Thematic Areas
Eligibility: Cornell graduate students, professional students, and postdocs; undergraduates interested in working on Small Grants projects are invited to contact us.
Cornell Atkinson’s Small Grants support pioneering research with the goal of creating practical sustainability solutions. These grants prioritize projects that align with the Center's four research areas: increasing food security, reducing climate risk, accelerating energy transitions, and advancing One Health.
Sustainable Biodiversity Fund - Protecting Earth’s Biodiversity
Eligibility: Cornell graduate students, professional students, and postdocs from all disciplines; undergraduates interested in working on Sustainable Biodiversity Fund projects are invited to contact us.
The Sustainable Biodiversity Fund supports innovative research on the most pressing questions in protecting biodiversity. Applicants are encouraged to propose interdisciplinary projects that will convert knowledge into actions that preserve biodiversity and its global ecosystem services.
Collaborative Research Grants - Supporting New Sustainability Collaborations
Eligibility: Cornell graduate students, professional students, and postdocs; principle Investigators must be Research Fellows (please contact us if you are unsure of your status as a Research Fellow).
Cornell Atkinson’s Research Fellows Collaborative Grants provide support for creating new strategic collaborations and strengthening existing collaborations among sustainability scholars at Cornell. The objective of these grants is to stimulate research projects that bring together the complementary skills and interests of the diverse community of Research Fellows and scholars across campus. We especially value novel collaborations that move research toward real-world impact and proposals that relate to the priority themes of Cornell Atkinson.
Research Fellows - Connecting Sustainability Scholars
Eligibility: Cornell graduate students, professional students, and postdocs
With 125 graduate students, professional students, and postdocs from 20+ disciplines, the Cornell Atkinson Research Fellows are a dynamic network of scholars committed to creating a more resilient world. Our programming builds connections among students, Faculty Fellows, external organizations, and the local community to encourage creative, interdisciplinary solutions to pressing sustainability challenges. Cornell scholars interested in sustainability are invited to participate in our events, including research lunches, outreach at Homecoming, workshops, trainings, and an annual cross-campus sustainability event.
Postdoctoral Fellowships - Sustainability Innovation Leaders
Eligibility: Completion of a Ph.D. before the fellowship start date; all disciplines welcome to apply
At Cornell Atkinson, collaborating defines our approach to catalyzing change. The Cornell Atkinson Postdoctoral Fellowships in Sustainability and the new Cornell Atkinson-Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) Postdoctoral Fellowships forge connections between postdocs and external partners, including government agencies, for-profit businesses, nonprofits, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). In the last five years, Cornell Atkinson has supported postdoctoral fellows in ambitious, cross-disciplinary research while building a core group of leaders capable of transforming sustainability public opinion, products, practices, and policies.
Sustainability Leadership Program - Training for Sustainability Impact
Eligibility: Cornell Atkinson, Joint Cornell Atkinson-EDF, and EDF Postdocs are eligible for all program workshops. If you do not have one of those Postdoc Fellowships but are interested in participating, please contact us.
New Sustainability Leadership Program, designed in partnership with EDF, supports the development of skills in interdisciplinary, cross-sector, and community collaboration; science communication; policy impact; and career design. The training aims to help Postdocs develop into leaders who prioritize listening, responsivity, respect, and equality in their research and collaborations. Starting in 2019, participants who complete the program will earn a Sustainability Leadership Certificate.
Faculty Sustainability Research Incentives
Yes
A brief description of the faculty research program, including the incentives provided and any positive outcomes during the previous three years:
The Academic Venture Fund (AVF) is our incubator for the next generation of sustainable solutions. Since 2008, the AVF has worked to seed original, interdisciplinary research that is not likely to find funding elsewhere because the projects are novel, risky, need early data to establish traction, or involve new teams working together.
The AVF provides roughly $1.5 million in funding annually, typically supporting 10 to 15 projects a year across a range of themes, including food security, climate risk, energy transitions, and one Health.
AVF projects often draw in external partners from industry, government, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), as well as local leaders and community members.
Data shows that the AVF program continues to engage an average of 25 new faculty colleagues each year in the awarded projects.
The Cornell Atkinson Rapid Response Fund (RRF) facilitates urgent or time-sensitive research, workshops, and other activities within a broad range of sustainability initiatives. The RRF positions faculty to seize unique opportunities for small research projects with funding of up to $10,000. RRF awards can be used to generate preliminary results needed to compete for targeted external funding or to help finance sustainability-related events. RRF proposals are evaluated by the Cornell Atkinson leadership team on a rolling basis.
Cornell Atkinson brings together experts and innovators to deliver large-scale, long-term sustainability solutions. Through the Innovation for Impact Fund (IIF), we support basic and applied research with a clear pathway to impact and an emphasis on actionable, short-term results.
IIF issues calls-for-proposals that are designed with our partners—leading players in practice, policy and products—to jointly develop and test evidence-based solutions to some of the world's more intractable sustainability problems. Successful IIF projects create interdisciplinary teams with both Cornell and external partners, demonstrate new concepts, pilot applications of scientific discoveries, and implement real-world practices that can shape development policy or programming, develop tools, and build research and development capacity.
Recognition of Inter-, Trans- and Multi-Disciplinary Research
Yes
A brief description of the institution’s support for interdisciplinary, transdisciplinary, and multidisciplinary research, including any positive outcomes during the previous three years:
Cornell University has a large number of centers encouraging collaboration across disciplines and with external collaborator (including the Cornell Atkinson Center); this approach to research is highly valued and often considered as a strong supportive activity in cases of faculty tenure and promotion.
The Cornell Atkinson Center's faculty funding supports Cornell faculty in the natural sciences, as well as in the social sciences, humanities, and arts who are working in the sustainability arena. Positive outcomes include studying the motivating roles of humor and anger in promoting climate change action and develop messages that use emotion to increase political engagement (https://as.cornell.edu/news/atkinson-center-names-2018-19-ssha-faculty-fellows).
Additionally, the Center's Academic Venture Fund (AVF) stimulates interdisciplinary research in sustainability at Cornell and promotes activities with the potential to attract external partners in industry, government, NGOs, and foundations. The AVF provides over $1.5 million in funding annually. The fund typically supports 10-15 projects a year across a range of energy, environment, and economic development concerns and supported 12 projects in 2018.
One example is “Doing More with Less: Sustainable Livestock and Wildlife Management”, which has the following description: The Pamir Mountains of Tajikistan support a fragile ecosystem of limited resources that is increasingly at risk due to unsustainable numbers of livestock. Wild ungulates, in particular, are threatened by grazing competition and disease, which also impact the endangered snow leopards that hunt them. This project aims to develop a self-sustaining veterinary support system that will help Pamiri communities achieve the same or greater productivity from maintaining smaller, healthier livestock herds, with a reduced environmental footprint. (http://www.atkinson.cornell.edu/grants/avf/).
Library Support
Yes
A brief description of the institution’s library support for sustainability research, including any positive outcomes during the previous three years:
The Cornell University Library system offers Library Guides for assisting with research in many departments, including Environment and Natural Resources (see the following link for a list of departments and sample guides: http://guides.library.cornell.edu/lghome).
Optional Fields
Additional documentation to support the submission:
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Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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