I tried this tool to explain my research using the 1,000 most used words in the English language. It was a fun exercise, but might sound a bit like gobbledygook!
I study how people decide how to live and work. My work looks at how those who lead decide to help or make it hard for the rest to handle the problems caused by lasting changes made to the world. Simply put, I seek to better understand both how and why people do what they do. I do this in three ways.
First, I look at how things made by those who lead change how we take care of the land and share water in a way that is good for everyone. Second, I study how people change how they live when they face problems like not enough water or harder times growing food, as well as how these problems are not the same for everyone. Third, I look at how what people do and the world around them are coupled together and how this relationship can change how well people can deal with these problems, especially for those who already face more hard times.
I especially work in places where people grow food and care for animals outside the US, but I also study ways people use land, water, and power (the kind that makes my coffee) in the US. I often find that the problems across these different situations often look the same, which connect the different parts of my work together.
I study how people decide how to live and work. My work looks at how those who lead decide to help or make it hard for the rest to handle the problems caused by lasting changes made to the world. Simply put, I seek to better understand both how and why people do what they do. I do this in three ways.
First, I look at how things made by those who lead change how we take care of the land and share water in a way that is good for everyone. Second, I study how people change how they live when they face problems like not enough water or harder times growing food, as well as how these problems are not the same for everyone. Third, I look at how what people do and the world around them are coupled together and how this relationship can change how well people can deal with these problems, especially for those who already face more hard times.
I especially work in places where people grow food and care for animals outside the US, but I also study ways people use land, water, and power (the kind that makes my coffee) in the US. I often find that the problems across these different situations often look the same, which connect the different parts of my work together.