STEP: The Program in Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy

Princeton University

Woodrow Wilson School
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Contact STEP
Chuck Crosby, Manager - STEP Program
E-mail: ccrosby@princeton.edu
Tel: (609) 258-0293

Michael Oppenheimer, Director
Albert G. Milbank Professor of Geosciences and International Affairs

Acknowledgements:

About Step

 

Princeton University's Program in Science, Technology and Environmental Policy (STEP) is based in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs with strong ties to the  Princeton Environmental Institute.  The program offers a certificate for students enrolled in the Woodrow Wilson School's M.P.A. or M.P.P programs and studies leading to a Ph.D.Many aspects of science and technology policy debates have been tackled with the tools of political and economic analysis that are the traditional strong suits of the Woodrow Wilson School.  In addition to providing a systematic introduction to the field of policy analysis, the goal of the STEP program is to develop a deeper understanding of:

  1.   the nature of scientific, technological and environmental problems and opportunities;
  2.   the specialized methods used for analyzing scientific, technological and environmental issues;
  3.   the dynamics of science and technology in relation to national and international institutions and organizations.
Increasing numbers of students in the School generally, and in the STEP program in particular, have a primary interest in environmental science and technology policy, including global climate change, air pollution, negotiated environmental accords, biodiversity, environmental economics, environmental justice, and the connection between the environment and development. Research in these areas and others such as biotechnology and nuclear-weapons policy is facilitated by the Program's ties with the Princeton Environmental Institute , the  Departments of Ecology and Evolutionary BiologyMolecular Biology , and Geosciences, the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory , the Program on Science & Global Security , and the Office of Population Research .
 
NEWS
New study by STEP researcher Tim Searchinger: biofuels may increase greenhouse gas emissions

A new study published by Science magazine finds that biofuels that use cropland are likely to increase greenhouse gasses because previous analysis of biofuels ignored a crucial factor - the use of land.

 
Searchinger's work has far reaching implications- Time article

" The Clean Energy Scam"

 
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