Skip directly to: Main page content

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Center for the Study of Regional Change

Sections
CSRC: Center for the Study of Regional Change -- Research that Matters for the Region
Document Actions

Executive Committee

by Alida Cantor last modified August 26, 2008 03:31 PM

Photo of Chris BennerChris Benner

Chris Benner is an Associate Professor of Community and Regional Development, and Chair of the Community Development Graduate Group at UC Davis.  His research focuses on the relationships between technological change, regional development, and the structure of economic opportunity, focusing on regional labor markets and the transformation of work and employment patterns.  His applied policy work focuses on workforce development policy, workforce intermediaries, and strategies for promoting regional equity.


Photo of Mary CadenassoMary Cadenasso

Mary Cadenasso is an urban ecosystem ecologist and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Plant Sciences, where she teaches Urban Ecology and Ecosystems and Landscapes and serves on the Executive Committee of the Graduate Group in Ecology.  She is a founding co-Principal Investigator on the Baltimore Ecosystem Study, a National Science Foundation, Long-Term Ecological Research program.  Her research focuses on the testing links between system structure and ecological functioning across multiple systems and scales. She collaborates extensively with hydrologists, biogeochemists, geographers, historians, social scientists, and urban designers.


Photo of Dave CampbellDavid Campbell

David Campbell serves as a Cooperative Extension Specialist and as Director of the California Communities Program (CCP) in the Human and Community Development Department. Dr. Campbell’s research examines the intersection between public policy and community development processes at the local level.  He is currently leading a UCD research team evaluating a Sierra Health Foundation youth leadership development initiative. He is married to a Presbyterian minister and has a 20-year old son attending Whitman College.


handy.jpgSusan Handy

Dr. Susan Handy is a Professor in the Department of Environmental Science and Policy and the Director of the University Transportation Center at the University of California Davis.  Her research interests focus on the relationships between transportation and land use, both the impact of transportation investments on land development and the impact of land development patterns on travel behavior, and she has more than 50 publications on these topics.  She is internationally known for her research on the connection between neighborhood design and walking behavior and is widely respected in the field of transportation planning for her ability to link research to policy and practice.  


Elizabeth Kersten

Clinical Professor at USC Sacramento Center

Former Director of the California Senate Office of Research


RiosMichael Rios

Michael Rios is a professor in the Department of Environmental Design and is affiliated with the Geography and Community Development Graduate Groups.  His research interests focus on public policy, professional practice, and citizen participation in regional planning and urban design. Current CSRC research projects include a comparative study of diaspora communities in the Sacramento region and a multi-year project focused on youth and regional vitality. 


Daniel A. Sumner

Daniel A. Sumner is the Director of the University of California Agricultural Issues Center and the Frank H. Buck, Jr. Professor, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, UC, Davis where he teaches and conducts research and outreach on agricultural economics and policy. Before coming to the University in 1993, Sumner was Assistant Secretary for Economics at USDA.


Stephen Wheeler

Steve Wheeler is the author of Planning for Sustainability and co-editor of The Sustainable Urban Development Reader. His current research is on  the built landscapes of metropolitan regions and planning for climate change. He will be working with the Center on topics of regional growth management, urban design, sustainability, and planning for climate change.

Copyright © The Regents of the University of California, Davis campus, 2005-07. All Rights Reserved.




Powered by Plone CMS, the Open Source Content Management System

This site conforms to the following standards: