Water-Energy Nexus

Christopher A Scott

Christopher
A
Scott
Title: 
Assistant Research Professor of Water Resources Policy, Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Assistant Professor of Geography and Regional Development
Affiliate Faculty, Institute of the Environment
Education: 
PhD, Hydrology, Cornell University, 1997.
Phone: 
(520) 626-4393
Photo of Christopher Scott

Christopher Scott is an assistant research professor of water resources policy at the Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy, with a joint appointment as assistant professor of geography and regional development.

His work focuses on the human and policy dimensions of global change with particular emphasis on river basin management, including surface- and groundwater, urban wastewater reuse, and land use and urbanization impacts on water resources and quality. He has a particular interest in the processes and strategies that enhance stakeholder involvement in water-related decision-making, primarily in South Asia, Mexico, and Arizona.
He holds PhD and MS degrees in hydrology from Cornell University, BS and BA degrees from Swarthmore College, and Professional Engineering registration in New York. He has 10 years of experience living and working in India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Guanajuato, Mexico (with the International Water Management Institute), in addition to two years in Honduras and two years in India with NGOs. He speaks fluent Spanish and Hindi, and working Nepali and German. Prior to his arrival at The University of Arizona in July 2006, he was a senior international project manager with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Silver Spring, Maryland, where he led National Weather Service collaboration with Mexico and India.

Environmental Themes: 

Carl J Bauer

Carl
J
Bauer
Title: 
Associate Professor & Director of Graduate Studies, School of Geography and Development
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Faculty Coordinator, UA Graduate Certificate in Water Policy
Affiliated Faculty, Center for Latin American Studies
Affiliated Faculty, Arid Lands Resource Sciences
Affiliated Faculty, Global Change PhD Minor
Affiliate Faculty, Institute of the Environment
Affiliate Faculty, School of Government & Public Policy
Education: 
PhD, Jurisprudence and Social Policy, University of California, Berkeley, 1995
Phone: 
(520) 621-1917
Photo of Carl Bauer

I work on problems of water rights and water policy at the intersection of law, geography, and political economy. My approach is comparative and interdisciplinary in research, teaching, and outreach. Since the mid 1980s I have focused on issues of water markets, privatization, conflicts, and governance; hydroelectric power, multiple water uses, and river basin development; and the law and political economy of regulation and property rights. In recent years I have turned to environmental flows and the nexus between water and electricity policies, in the context of climate change. My regional expertise is in the Western United States and Latin America, especially Chile where I have lived and worked for many years. I work with graduate students and colleagues, both U.S. and foreign, to study water policies in the Americas as well as Spain, the European Union, Australia, and the international arena in general. I am concerned with empirical issues of law and public policy and I aim to bridge the gap between academic and policy audiences.

My overall goal is to combine legal studies with environmental studies: to integrate different fields of law, history, geography, politics, and economics as they relate to water, land, and nature. This interdisciplinary approach to human-environment relations, grounded in history and the physical world, is what geography means to me. I have concentrated on water resources both because they are important in themselves and because water circulates through and ties together all other natural resources and environmental systems; water is a unique window on the world. More generally (beyond water), I am interested in the relationship between market economics, legal and institutional arrangements, and environment, and I focus my analytical framework on property rights because that is the area where all these fields overlap most closely. I am currently working to strengthen the connections between the fields of geography and law-&-society, two interdisciplinary traditions with surprisingly little interaction.

Before coming to the University of Arizona, I spent seven years as a researcher at Resources for the Future in Washington, DC. I have been a consultant on water law, policy, and economics to international organizations including the United Nations, World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, and Global Water Partnership, and also to foreign governments and universities in Chile, Denmark, and Spain. I have directed the UA Graduate Certificate in Water Policy since it was first implemented in 2007 (http://gcwp.arizona.edu), and I am a member of the Editorial Board for Water Alternatives (http://www.water-alternatives.org).

Environmental Themes: