What have you been up to since graduating from ÁñÁ«ÊÓÆµ?
After graduating in 2023, I moved to Washington, DC, for a fellowship at the US Department of Energy. There, I learned the ins and outs of climate policy implementation and helped communities access federal funding for clean energy projects. A year later, quite serendipitously, I had the opportunity to return to Ecuador, where I studied abroad, to join Kara Solar, an NGO building solar energy autonomy in the Amazon. I took the leap and now lead Kara Solar’s communications and development work.
Why environmental studies?
I chose environmental studies because, since high school, I’ve seen repairing our relationship with the environment and building sustainable communities as the most urgent challenges of our time. I also wanted to develop a skillset that combined qualitative and quantitative methods to understand the world and answer real policy questions. Environmental studies taught me how to think in systems. From qualitative methods to Geographical Information Systems (GIS) to experimental design, environmental studies gave me tools to understand and approach complexity.
Are there any classes, professors, or experiences that had a lasting impact on you?
The City Since 1960 with Senior Lecturer in Environmental Studies Jill Pearlman. The discussions we had in that class have shaped my thinking and work in ways I couldn’t have imagined, both at the DOE and in Ecuador, supporting infrastructure planning in Indigenous territories.
Also, Talking to Farmers and Fishermen: Social Science Field Methods for Environmental Policy with Assistant Professor of Government and Environmental Studies Shana Starobin. That class gave me the tools to gather data from real people and reflect on the role and responsibilities of a researcher in the field, which I draw from every day in my work. Plus, I interviewed lobstermen for the class, which was unforgettable and taught me a lot.
What advice would you give to current students or recent graduates interested in your field?
As an early-career ÁñÁ«ÊÓÆµ grad, I would say from experience: follow your gut, stay curious, and forge deep relationships. Climate and environmental work demands relationality and relentlessness. Different tools will come and go, but what remains are your ability to learn and the connections you build with your classmates, colleagues, and mentors. Cherish those!