Invitation to lunch (Feb 11), re: Faculty Search – Natural Resource Economics

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Dear LFS and Forestry graduate students,

As part of the University-wide Black Faculty Cohort Hiring Initiative, the Faculties of Forestry and Land and Food Systems are conducting a search for an Assistant Professor in Natural Resource Economics (see Job Ad). Our last two candidates will be interviewed next week. We would like to invite you to lunch with the 3rd candidate, as follows:  

Tuesday, Feb 11, 12:00-1:00pm, MacMillan 350 (Protensia Hadunka)

Please RSVP to lfs.recruiting@ubc.ca and include any dietary restrictions by 4pm on Friday, Feb 7

You are also invited to attend their research and teaching seminars. We would welcome your feedback following the interviews, as per forms below.

 

Protensia Hadunka (Feb 10-11)

Protensia Hadunka is a Ph.D. candidate in Agricultural and Applied Economics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, specializing in Agricultural and Environmental Economics. His research examines the intersection of agricultural markets, climate change, and food security, applying causal inference to address key environmental and economic challenges. He investigates how climate shocks impact agricultural productivity, land use decisions, and deforestation. Hadunka has led extensive field research, designing and managing large-scale, nationally representative surveys in Zambia. He collaborates with policymakers and international organizations, including the International Growth Center (IGC) and the Zambian Presidential Advisory Board, providing policy recommendations on agricultural resilience and market stability.

Teaching Demonstration: Decentralized Policies in Environmental Economics: Exploring Liability, Property Rights, and Market Solutions

February 10th, 11:00am-12:00pm

FSC-2916 (CAWP Caseroom)

Research Talk: Agricultural Production Shocks, Natural Resources, and Welfare

February 11th, 9:30-11:00am

FSC-1222 (2424 Main Mall)

Abstract:

Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is home to some of the highest rates of deforestation in the world. One driver may be negative agricultural shocks that lead households to consume natural

resources as a coping mechanism. This paper uses the introduction of a novel agricultural pest to estimate the effect of a negative agricultural shock on charcoal production and deforestation, and to test whether adaptation strategies mitigate this effect. Using four years of primary household panel data from across Zambia I find a positive and significant effect of FAW on charcoal production and deforestation. The estimates indicate that as the FAW intensity increases from 0 to the median level the probability of a farmer producing charcoal by 16%, leading to an increase in deforestation of 13.6%. When methods to mitigate FAW damage are available, farmers are less likely to resort to charcoal production as a coping strategy. Having the ability to reduce the share of maize, diversify the crops produced, use pesticides, or migrate for off-farm employment are associated with a lower propensity to switch to charcoal production in response to FAW. I find that households cut 13 additional trees due to FAW, but this increase is reduced by 4 – 5 trees when coping strategies are implemented.

Feedback Form: https://ubc.ca1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_3WAAv8e4QtmHzqS

 

Yacouba Kassouri (Feb 13-14)

Yacouba Kassouri holds a PhD in Economics and works as a postdoctoral fellow in the Biodiversity Economics group at the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) in Leipzig, Germany. His research interests lie in the field of environmental and natural resource economics with a concentration on urban biodiversity conservation and the economic linkages between nature, human, and social welfare. As an applied environmental economist, he is particularly interested in understanding the human-nature nexus using modern econometric methods for causal inference and various non-market valuation techniques. In his current research, he proposes an alternative life satisfaction valuation approach that allows the use of causal inference tool to recover the shadow price for local environmental public goods, and explores potential trade-offs among natural landscape protection and the provision urban open spaces.

Teaching Demonstration: Economics of Timber Harvesting

February 13th, 12:00-1:00pm

McM 258 (2357 Main Mall)

Research Talk: Life satisfaction shadow price for environmental public goods

February 14th, 9:30-11:00am

FSC-1222 (2424 Main Mall)

Abstract:

Unpacking people’s self-rated life satisfaction to price environmental public goods is promising to inform well-being-improving decisions. Yet, previous contributions

yield inconsistent estimates of the income-life satisfaction conversion rate, leading to an overvaluation of non-market environmental goods. This paper develops and implements a new valuation framework for calculating the life satisfaction shadow price for environmental goods in a two-step regression procedure. Using restricted georeferenced longitudinal survey data on life satisfaction, we find that the two-step valuation approach produces smaller shadow prices (with and without instrumenting for income) compared to the individual level valuation (one-step regression). We provide strong empirical evidence that the overvaluation bias reported in the existing life satisfaction literature can be largely explained by the level of valuation rather than the endogeneity of income, as previously exposed in the literature. Exploiting variations in labor demand shocks across industries in a shift-share instrumental variable strategy, we demonstrate that although the instrumental variable approach significantly increases the size of the income coefficient, the resulting shadow prices remain relatively similar to those obtained without instrumenting for income. The valuation framework championed in this study knits together research on the causal linkages between humans and nature with studies on non-market environmental valuation.

Feedback Form: https://ubc.ca1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_4Gf3yrAgP3rAiCa

 

 

Melanie Train

Human Resources Manager-Faculty | Faculty of Land and Food Systems

The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus

248-2357 Main Mall | Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z4

Phone 604-822-3105 | Fax 604-822-6394

Email:  melanie.train@ubc.ca

Office: M/W/F: Remote: T/Th

Invitation to Graduate Students to join the Inaugural Research Mingling event by GSS-UBC

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We are specially inviting your graduate students to the Inaugural Research Mingling event happening next week on February 12th from 4pm to 6pm. at GSS Loft, NEST.

We encourage all graduate students to join this FREE vibrant mingling session even if they do not have a topic to share.

See the flyer above and the sign-up link attached here:

https://www.showpass.com/gss-research-mingling/

Please feel free to share the event with the various graduate student groups in your program.

Thank you.

Warm regards,

Patricia.

 

Patricia Unung (She/Her/Hers)

Vice President University and Academic Affairs

E: vpacademic@gss.ubc.ca

Opportunity for Graduate Students to Join the Human Library Event!

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We are excited to share an incredible opportunity for your graduate students to engage in meaningful conversations and share their research and lived experiences through our upcoming Human Library events of the Graduate Student Society.

This initiative aims to foster knowledge exchange, real human interaction, and community building while creating a supportive space for mental well-being. By participating, students can gain new perspectives to improve their research and studies and engage in enriching discussions in a relaxed and inclusive environment.

We invite your department’s students to participate as Human Books or Readers:

???? Human Books: Share personal stories and expertise—receive a $25 honorarium per session.

???? Readers: Engage in inspiring conversations—stand a chance to win prizes and enjoy meals.

We would greatly appreciate your support in spreading the word within your department and encouraging your GAA team to promote this event among students.

Additionally, for future events and initiatives supporting graduate students, we would appreciate it if you could share your GAA’s main contact with us so that we can send them more information directly.

Attached, you will find two event posters:

???? One inviting students to become Human Books

???? One encouraging students to join as Readers to learn from Human Books

Please help us share these posters within your department and among students.

Thank you for helping us create a more connected, open, and understanding academic community!

 

Best regards,

 

Patricia Unung (She/Her/Hers)

Vice President University and Academic Affairs

E: vpacademic@gss.ubc.ca

 

Orkhon Gantogtokh

Academic Policy Assistant

E: academicpolicy@gss.ubc.ca

Sponsorships to attend Calgary conference

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Your chance to attend a Calgary food and agriculture conference

LFS is sponsoring one student to attend the Advancing Women in Agriculture Conference (AWC) on March 16-18, 2025 in Calgary through a UBC Student Sponsorship. AWC is for women who are passionate about food and agriculture, bringing professionals and students together from across North America to build leadership skills, and support personal and professional development.

Female undergraduate and graduate students in LFS can apply for the UBC Student Sponsorship. If selected, hotel accommodations, registration, and airfare/travel costs will be covered! There are also partial sponsorships available, so check it out! 

To be eligible for student sponsorships, including the UBC Student Sponsorship, you must complete the online application by Saturday, Feb. 15, 2025.

What is it like attending?  See an Instagram reel from last year’s sponsored student: https://www.instagram.com/reel/C6E4VtQiivl/

For questions, please contact Karen Lee (karen.lee98@ubc.ca). Apply now!

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Karen Lee (She, Her, Hers)
Director of Marketing and Communications
Faculty of Land and Food Systems
The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory
2357 Main Mall | Vancouver British Columbia | V6T 1Z4 Canada
Phone 604 827 5297 | Cell 604 312 6343
karen.lee98@ubc.ca | @ubcLFS
http://www.landfood.ubc.ca

Weaving Relations Course Journal Club Discussion Sessions Hosted by AWP EDI.I Committee

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Hello LFS Grads,

The Animal Welfare Program (AWP) EDI.I Committee will be hosting another series of journal club sessions for collaboratively discussing the Weaving Relations course modules. Typically, the AWP Journal Club is used to read interesting research articles and discuss them together, but from February-April we will use journal club sessions to take the Weaving Relations course together, to learn more about Indigenous contexts and relations in Canada, and discuss what we learn collectively to enhance our learning experience.

We welcome anyone from LFS to join us in these biweekly discussions, whether you are new to the course or have taken in before!

Weaving Relations is a self-led Canvas course, developed jointly by the Faculty of Applied Science and the Faculty of Land and Food Systems, that explores Indigenous histories, people, and contexts, as well as settler colonialism in Canada, through the lens of Indigenous-Canadian relationships.

Register for course here: https://www.landfood.ubc.ca/weaving-relations/#:~:text=At%20this%20time%20we%20require,option%20on%20the%20third%20screen

Weaving Relations journal club sessions will be held every two weeks, on Tuesdays 4-5pm, where we will discuss about two modules of the course. Everyone will be expected to complete around two modules of the Weaving Relations course in their own time in the two weeks prior to each journal club session to promote informed discussions. We expect to have all 7 modules completed together by April. An outcome of the final module will be creating your own personal Land Acknowledgement.

The first discussion Weaving Relations journal club session will be on the Introduction section and Module 1 of the Weaving Relations course, and will take place at MCML 180 and through Zoom from 4-5pm Tuesday Feb 11.

Please fill out this form if you are interested in attending these discussions. By signing up here with your name and email, you will receive reminders and the Zoom link for Weaving Relations Journal Club sessions.

Sign up form:https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeKGmuxCBZVKljrc3ajt1RX7GKUIimgrjcFyBXo7NhXPOHZkw/viewform?usp=dialog

Weaving Relations Journal Club Sign-Up

docs.google.com

 

Timing: 4-5pm PST Tuesdays (every second week) starting February 11, 2025

Hybrid location: join us in-person in Room 180 of the MacMillan Building or online through Zoom

Recurring Zoom link: https://ubc.zoom.us/j/63998107483?pwd=WorTjcVLTwaNibFmaV0kfb5N0y3VX3.1

Meeting ID: 639 9810 7483

Passcode: 163728

 

Contact Sarah (sarah.kappel@ubc.ca) or Amalia (amalia.urloiu@ubc.ca) for more information.

 

Faculty of Land and Food Systems Graduate Student Council

lfsgrads@gmail.com