Drexel鈥檚 Environmental Collaboratory Will Solve Environmental Problems With a Community-Driven and Justice-Centered Approach
By Emily Storz
The Environmental Collaboratory will support integrated approaches between the often-disparate fields of finance, entrepreneurship, engineering, business, law, policy, public health, medicine, data and information technology, history, infrastructure design and management and civil and human rights.
Vice Provost and Executive Director Mathy Vathanaraj Stanislaus, formerly of the World Economic Forum and a senior official in the Obama administration, will lead The Environmental Collaboratory. Stanislaus鈥 scholarship focuses on climate mitigation and adaptation, the scale-up of clean energy and electric mobility, environmentally just transitions and the power of multi-stakeholder designed solutions.
鈥淭he challenges of today 鈥 as recently highlighted at the United Nations Climate Change Conference, require all of us to work together in fusing our collective expertise, networks and intergenerational insights to create implementable equitable solutions that work on the ground,鈥 Stanislaus said.
鈥淭he Climate Conference鈥檚 focus on climate justice, just transition, community leadership in driving solutions and the leadership role of young people, reinforces the value of The Environmental Collaboratory. I am honored to help realize this with the leaders of today and tomorrow 鈥 our students, the deep expertise of our faculty and researchers and community partners.鈥
The Environmental Collaboratory serves an important and lead role in the advancement of the vision to design the future through the innovative integration of education, scholarship, diverse partnerships, and our global community. The mission of The Environmental Collaboratory is based around three key areas: use-inspired research, social justice-driven civic engagement and community building.
User-Inspired Research: initiates, facilitates and promotes multidisciplinary teams to help advance user-inspired research for the creation of novel solutions to real-world environmental problems. Faculty, staff and students collaborate with external groups in mutually beneficial partnerships that are grounded in scholarship and consistent with Drexel and the Academy鈥檚 roles and missions.
Civic Engagement: identifies research questions in reciprocal partnerships with communities; engages communities in the research process; devises, incubates and delivers implementation strategies with communities; shares outcomes with a wider audience; shapes beliefs and values through public programs and campaigns; and erodes the power-dynamic that commonly characterizes the relationship between 鈥渁cademia鈥 and 鈥渃ommunity.鈥
Community Building: builds a community at Drexel, acting as a place for interested faculty, staff and students to gather, connect and engage with these issues and our communities.
One of the first projects of The Environmental Collaboratory, supported by the inaugural Glenmede Environmental Collaboratory Research Fund, will be an assessment of progress and actions needed to reduce lead poisoning in West Philadelphia. Studies to date have found that while lead poisoning is declining in some areas of Philadelphia, . , assistant research professor in the College of Arts and Sciences and watershed ecology section lead at the Academy, will collaborate with Jerome Shabazz, the executive director of the Overbrook Environmental Education Center, to help understand which practices have led to declines in blood lead level (BLL) concentrations in other areas.
oversees $43.5 billion in assets under management for Private Wealth, Endowment & Foundation, and Investment Management clients from its headquarters in Philadelphia as well as offices in Ohio, Delaware, Florida, New Jersey, New York, Pittsburgh, and Washington DC. Glenmede works with high-net-worth individuals, families, family offices, endowments, foundations, and institutional clients.
鈥淲e are thrilled to partner with Drexel to launch the Glenmede Environmental Collaboratory Research Fund, seeking to effect change on environmental issues right here in our backyard,鈥 said Mark Hays, director of Sustainable & Impact Investing at Glenmede. 鈥淲e believe this year鈥檚 project鈥檚 focus on reducing lead poisoning in West Philadelphia will bring awareness and deliver scalable solutions into an issue with significant effects on our environment and our children鈥檚 health.鈥
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