Synthesizing Environmental Research Results

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The National Science Foundation has funded a national center for environmental synthesis. Credit: University of MD.

NSF Grant Launches Center for Synthesizing
Environmental and Related Research Results

Award to develop solutions to
today's environmental challenges

To help identify solutions for today's most pressing environmental challenges, the National Science Foundation (NSF) recently funded a national synthesis center in Annapolis, Md., through a $27.5 million award to the University of Maryland. The center is the newest in a series of synthesis centers--centers that bring together and meld research from many disciplines of science--funded by NSF over the last 15 years. It is the first of these centers to integrate the natural sciences and social sciences, previous centers focused on natural sciences only. The National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center, known as SESYNC, will be home to research on such issues as water availability, sustainable food production, and the interaction between human activities and ecosystem health.

Sesync3 wikimediacom.jpg Today's environmental challenges need a new scientific approach, one that melds expertise.
Credit: WikiMedia Commons


The center is grounded in the philosophy that solutions to urgent environmental problems require cooperation among natural and social scientists and policy-makers. The award will allow this multidisciplinary center to draw on the expertise of environmental, social and computational scientists, engineers and public policy experts through extensive national and international partnerships.

"SESYNC provides an unprecedented opportunity for researchers to combine information, ideas and concepts from disparate science and engineering fields into solutions for the complex environmental problems now confronting society," said Joann Roskoski, NSF acting assistant director for Biological Sciences. "It will foster the development of tools and approaches to educate people at all levels about the importance of synthesizing research results," said Roskoski, "and will involve policy-makers, environmental managers and the private sector in the translation of scientific synthesis into societal benefit."

To address global environmental problems, fundamental, discovery-driven synthesis research must be combined with a commitment to communicate scientific insights to decision-makers and stakeholders, scientists at the new center believe.

At SESYNC, scientists and policy-makers will co-identify relevant research needs and ways to ensure that the products of fundamental discovery are linked to interactions among social and environmental scientists and decision-makers at all levels.

SESYNC will support projects that enhance our understanding of how humans can thrive in the environments on which they depend.

Sesync2 iiee.jpg The National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center will synthesize
information on the environment.
Credit: India Institute of Ecology and Environment
Projects will address questions such as: what is the relationship between cultural values and conventions and the sustainability of natural resources like water? How do societies manage resources that cross human-defined political boundaries? How can governance systems effectively address these issues?

Complementing these syntheses, education and outreach research and activities will be integrated throughout the center's programs, with the goal of expanding the ability of researchers, students and stakeholders to integrate environmental science with social science research and knowledge.

The center's innovative goals will be accomplished through collaboration among environmental scientists and computer scientists at the University of Maryland at College Park; scientists and public outreach specialists at University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science; scientists at Resources for the Future; social scientists at the University of Michigan; educators at Coppin State University, Gallaudet University and Washington State University at Vancouver; and international partners in both developed and developing countries.

Through a partnership with computer scientists at the University of Maryland, the center will also advance the latest developments in information technology designed to foster collaboration among scientists and to place scientists and policy-makers on the same information plane.

Additional support for SESYNC is from the State of Maryland and the University System of Maryland.

August 2, 2011

-NSF-

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(2011). Synthesizing Environmental Research Results. Retrieved from http://editors.eol.org/eoearth/wiki/Synthesizing_Environmental_Research_Results