The Institute of Behavioral Science, CU Population Center (CUPC) and IBS Training Program are excited to announce the winning proposals for various grants. See below for the recipients of the IBS and CUPC Seed Grants, IBS Training Small Grant, Ed and Martha Greenberg Graduate Student Excellence Award, and Summer Research Assistant Support Awards.
IBS Seed Grantees
- “Synergies and tradeoffs between biodiversity, carbon, and livelihoods: smallholder cacao agroforestry in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil” – Peter Newton and Colleen Scanlon-Lyons
- “Masculinity Under Fire: Understanding the role of Masculinity Ideologies in Firearm Ownership and Storage Practices” – Uriel Carrillos and Heidi Tannous
- “Cultural Adaptation and Pilot Test of an Intervention to Improve Hispanic College Student Developmental Outcomes” – Christine Steiger and Katie Massey-Combs
CUPC Seed Grantees
- “Health Impacts of Legal Competency Waitlists for those with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities” – Kate LeMasters (CU Anschutz)
- “On the Move: Forecasting Climate-Driven Internal Displacement Across the Globe” – Zia Mehrabi (with Amanda Carrico, Varnitha Kurli, and Jane Menken)
IBS Training Small Grant Award
- “Land Back and Indigenous Environmental Justice” – Brigid Mark, Natural Hazards Center and Sociology Department
Ed and Martha Greenberg Graduate Student Excellence Award
- “Addressing Power Inequalities Between White and Indigenous Activists in the Movement to Stop Line 3” – Brigid Mark, Natural Hazards Center and Sociology Department
IBS Training Summer Research Assistant Support Award
- “Race, Class, and the Body: A Comparative Ethnography of Boxers and Gamers” – Donald Caviness and Alba Ramos Escobar, Program on International Development and Political Science
- “The Influence of State and Regional Factors on Public Housing Policy Restrictiveness” – Selena Munoz-Jones, Prevention Science Program and Sociology
- “The Role of Inequality and Nostalgia in Explaining Protest Activities In Non-Democratic Countries: Evidence from Lebanon” – Dania Arayssi and Eman Bensreiti, Program on International Development and Political Science
- “The Built-Hazard Interface: A Dynamic Framework for Mapping Hazard Zones” – Aleksander Berg, Population Program and Geography
- “Fighting Words: Anti-Indigenous Rhetoric and Political Violence in Latin America” – Jonathan Cohen, Environment and Society Program and Political Science
- “Your Political Network May Be Physically Defined: Does the Built Environment Shape Who You Discuss Politics With?” – Stone Nelson, Population Program and Political Science
- “Exploring Socioeconomic Influences on Hurricane Preparedness: Findings from the FEMA 2023 National Household Survey” – Musabber Ali Chisty, Environment and Society Program and Sociology
- “Who Speaks for the Economy? Political Voice and Economic Prioritization in India’s Parliament” – Poushali Mohanta, Population Program and Political Science