About Social Ecology
The School of Social Ecology is an interdisciplinary academic unit
whose scholarly research and instruction is informed by and contributes
to knowledge in the social, behavioral, legal, environmental, and
health sciences. The School is comprised of four departments: Criminology, Law and Society; Environmental Health, Science and Policy; Psychology and Social Behavior; and Planning, Policy, and Design.
Social Ecology faculty apply scientific methods to the study of a wide
array of recurring social, behavioral, and environmental problems.
Among issues of long-standing interest in the School are crime and
justice in society, social influences on human development over the
life cycle, and the effects of the physical environment on health and
human behavior. While the field of ecology focuses on the relationships
between organisms and their environments, social ecology is concerned
with the relationships between human populations and their environments.
Social Ecology's faculty is multidisciplinary, including psychologists
with a variety of specialties (e.g., developmental, social,
environmental, and health psychology); criminologists; sociologists;
political scientists; lawyers; urban and regional planners and
economists; environmental health scientists; and program evaluation
experts. The School's research and teaching is distinguished by an
emphasis on the integration of the concepts and perspectives of these
multiple disciplines. This focus is based on the School's core belief
that the analysis and amelioration of complex societal problems
requires interdisciplinary efforts.
Many Social Ecology faculty are involved in developing policies and
interventions directed toward improving the functioning of individuals,
families and other groups, organizations, institutions, and
communities, while other faculty in the School focus their efforts on
the complex environmental issues confronting our society. Social
Ecology undergraduate students benefit from the multidisciplinary
instructional expertise of the School's faculty in the classroom and
are afforded opportunities to engage in field-based learning, as well,
through the School's well-established and highly regarded field studies
program. Graduate students work closely with the faculty in the
classroom and on important research projects that enhance their
research skills.
