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Publications
2024
Learning for Environmental Governence: Insights for a more Adaptive Future
Water Management in Ancient Maya Cities
Advancing a Net Zero Urban Water Future in the United States Southwest: Governance and Policy Challenges and Future Needs
U of A experts on saving migratory species
2023
Estimating landowner’s willingness to accept payments for nature-based solutions in Eastern North Carolina for flood hazard mitigation using the contingent valuation method
From niche-innovation to mainstream markets: Drivers and challenges of industry adoption of agrivoltaics in the U.S.
Stakeholder engagement in the co-production of knowledge for environmental decision-making
Diagnosing Individual Barriers to Collective Learning: How Governance Contexts Shape Cognitive Biases
Evaluación del proyecto de saneamiento transfronterizo en Ambos Nogales. Identificación de lo homogéneo y lo diverso [Cross-border sanitation project evaluation in Ambos Nogales. Identifying the homogeneous from the diverse]
Beyond engagement: Enhancing equity in collaborative water governance
Pagination
2021
Pagination
2020
Pagination
For Archival Publications, click years to expand content.
Barter's award-winning essay, "Defining the Necessary Role and Appropriate Level of Risk in Helicopter-Accessed Wilderness Skiing," was chosen by faculty reviewers as the best submission in this year's competition.
The Fisher Prize, established through an initial endowment by former Pima County Superior Court Judge Lillian S. Fisher, is awarded annually by the Udall Center to a student in the UA law college or to a UA graduate student for an essay addressing an environmental law or public policy topic. The competition is judged each year by faculty in the law college.
Since 1997, the Udall Center has awarded the Fisher Prize to 25 UA students. The Center publishes selected prize-winning papers in its monograph series.
Native Nations and U.S. Borders: Challenges to Indigenous Culture, Citizenship, and Security
Starks, Rachel Rose, Jen McCormack, Stephen Cornell. 2011. Native Nations and U.S. Borders: Challenges to Indigenous Culture, Citizenship, and Security. Tucson, AZ: Udall Center Publications.
Transboundary Ecosystem Services - A New Vision for Managing the Shared Environment of the U.S. and Mexico
Suggests a novel approach to the management of the U.S.-Mexico transboundary environment, framing the conservation of the natural resources shared by the two countries in terms of shared ecosystem services and presenting three cases as examples.
Science and socio-ecological sustainability: Examples from the Arizona-Sonora border
Morehouse, B., D. Ferguson, G. Owen, A. Browning-Aiken, P. Wong-Gonzales, N. Pineda, M. Wilder, and R.G. Varady. 2008. Science and socio-ecological sustainability: Examples from the Arizona-Sonora border. Environmental Science and Policy, 11(3):272-84.
Climate, Water Management, and Policy in the San Pedro Basin: Results of a Survey of Mexican Stakeholders near the U.S.-Mexico Border
Browning-Aiken, A., B. Morehouse, A. Davis, M. Wilder, R. Varady, D. Goodrich, R. Carter, D. Moreno, and E. Dellinger McGovern. 2007. Climate, water management, and policy in the San Pedro Basin: Results of a survey of Mexican stakeholders near the U.S.-Mexico border. Climatic Change 85(3-4):323-41.