| Applied Anthropology | Environmental Science | Fisheries & Wildlife | Marine Resource Management | Water Resources |
|---|
| For Graduate School Survival Guide | Resources for Graduate Students | Research Opportunities |
|---|
Ryan Taylor, PhD in Environmental Science, Evaluation of the Intergovernmental Relationships Between National and State Wetland Regulatory Agencies Within wetland Regulatory Units (2007)
Andrea Myhre, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Relationships, Communication, and Power in Willamette Valley Watershed Councils: Toward Building Resilient Collaborative Pathways (2006)
Chris Bates, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Local Resilience, Canola Cropping, and Biodiesel Production (2006)
Lyla Hendrickson, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Working In a Korean Hagwon-A Native English Teacher's View (2006)
Oona McNeil, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Empowering Others and Empowering Ourselves: A Case Study of Community Health Workers in a Mental Health Project (2006)
Jessica Cardinal, Masters in Marine Resource Management, Pacific Walrus in a World of Changing Climate: An Argument for Changing Current Management Practices Based on Observations from King Island Walrus Hunters (2004)
Kim Sykes, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Cape Scene & The Path To A Conscientious Tourism Product (2003)
Jennifer Gibson, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Conservation Programs from the Farmers' Perspective: Where is the Grass Greener? (2003)
Lisa Doolittle, Masters of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Community Perceptions of Flooding, Water Quality, and Riparian Habitat in Thomas Creek Watershed of Oregon (2003)
Lisa Nielson, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Urban Residents and Non-point Source Pollution: An Examination of Practices, Influences, and Values in the Tualatin Watershed (2003). Click for summary publication.
Erik Burke, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Food Systems in the Marys River Region: Proposals for Reinhabitation (2003)
Molly McCormick, Masters in Marine Resource Management, Subsistence in Alaska: with an In-depth Look at the Upper Copper River Fishery (2003)
Kristin Pickering, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, An Anthropological Response to the Call for Cultural Midwives Based on Three Case Studies of Communities (2002)
Jana Donckers, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Advocacy Travel: Creating Social and Ideological Change A Comparison of Travelers to Cuba and Chiapas (2002)
David Primozich, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Using PLACE Mapping to Improve Public Participation in Riparian Action Planning in Tillamook County, Oregon (2001)
Vicki Hoover Krutzikowski, MS in Fisheries Science, Bycatch in the Ocean Shrimp Pandalus jordani Fishery (2001)
Jennifer Leaver, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Where Old West Meets New West: Confronting Conservation, Conflict and Change on Utah's Last Frontier (2001)
Shawna Harvey, Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Eco-Commerce: Making Conservation Profitable, Productive and Possible, non-thesis (2000).
Geoffrey Habron, Ph.D in Fisheries, An Assessment of Community-based Adaptive Watershed Management in Three Umpqua Basin Watersheds (1999).
Karina Lorenz Mrakovcich, Ph.D. in Fisheries, Anthropogenic Activities Associated with the Status of Salmon Stocks in Pacific Northwest Watersheds (1998). Click for summary publication.
Judith A. Steward, Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Perspectives from the Ranching Culture in the 1990s: Addressing Mythological and Environmental Concerns (1998).
Jennifer Gilden, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Changing Symbols and Expectations in an Oregon Timber Community (1997).
Wendy Daeges, Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Ethnocentrism: The Effects of Multiculturalism and Multilingualism, non-thesis (1997)
Nick Hobgood, Master of Science in Marine Resource Management, Analysis of Needs-Based Propoal for a Workshop on Coastal Resources Management for Specialists from Mexico and the US, non-thesis (1997).
Amanda Six, Master of Arts in Applied Anthropology, Nature and Culture in Two Northwest Timber-Dependent Communities (1995).
Paul Salop, Master of Science in Marine Resource Management, Local Project Packaging of the National Estuarine Research Reserve System, non-thesis (1995).
Elizabeth Matthews, Master of Science in Marine Resource Management, The Role of Women in the Fisheries of Palau, non-thesis (1992).
Michael Harvey Lomas, Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Introduction to Russian Folk Dance, non-thesis (1989).
Virginia Marie Betz, Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Measurement and Meaning of Archaeological Diversity (1987).
Patrick Thomison, Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, When Celilo Was Celilo: An Analysis of Salmon Use During the Past 11,000 Years in the Columbia Plateau (1987).
Garry O. Stephenson, Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Pushing for the Highline: the Diffusion of Innovatins in the Oregon Otter Trawl Fishery (1981).
Thomas A. Hatley, Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies, Efficiency of Oregon's commercial Salmon Fisheries: A Historical Perspective (1976).
![]() |
|
|
|
contact infoUpdated: Tuesday, 15-Apr-2008 11:33:32 PDT |
| Court's World | Natural Resources | Research Design | Wealth & Poverty |