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Applied Biodiversity Science

Applied Biodiversity Science

"Bridging Ecology, Culture, and Governance for effective conservation"  
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Home » Private: Students — old » Featured Students » Craig Hutton

Craig Hutton

After two years, I am still excited to study in the Applied Biodiversity Science program at Texas A&M. It’s the confluence of interests and approaches—and the willingness to talk about them—that make the program what it is.

My own research interests in biodiversity conservation trend toward conservation social science and political ecology; I ask questions about definition, scale, power, access, use, and institutional and organizational arrangement in relation to conservation action. I believe that teasing apart the “answers” to these questions with a critical eye is essential if we are to connect the academic discussions of conservation scientists to the practical decisions made by conservation programmers.

After completing my B.S. In Foreign Service, I spent seven years working in international community development and conservation programming with the U.S. Peace Corps: two years as a volunteer in Ecuador and five years as a staff member working with countries in the agency’s Europe, the Mediterranean, and Asia regions. Following this work, I then completed my M.A. in Geography with focuses on environmental learning in exurbia and community development facilitation. My current research centers on environmental governance, the expansion of large-scale agriculture, and meso-scale institutions in the Chaco region of northwestern Argentina. In 2007, Argentina passed a National Forestry Law requiring a national land-use and planning policy to check increased levels of deforestation and the expansion of well-capitalized agriculture, particularly in the country’s northern regions. I explore the impact and meanings of this law at the provincial and micro-scales, particularly the role of mid-level institutions, and what it means for conserving biodiversity in Argentina’s Salta and Formosa provinces.

Chaco homestead
A traditional homestead (puesto in Spanish) of the dry Chaco landscape. Located south of Joaquín V. González in southeastern Salta province, Argentina

weaving leaves
Weaving leaves for a thatched roof in the community of Baltimore, Department of Madre de Dios, Peru. Amazon Field School
(Photo courtesy Dr. Lee Fitzgerald)

agricultural fields
Large agricultural fields outside of Las Lajitas in eastern Salta province. The transitional zone between semi-arid Chaco lowlands in eastern Salta and the piedmont forests in western Salta mark the region’s agricultural frontier.

reading in a hammock
Catching up on some reading in the field (Photo courtesy David Toledo)

cloud forest
A view of the cloud forest in Calilegua National Park in Jujuy province, Argentina.

El Piquete
Exploring El Piquete, a small community bordering El Rey National Park in Salta province.

 

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Kevin Njabo
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2258 TAMU
College Station, TX 77843-2258
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