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The UC Davis faculty has a broad expertise regarding growth. If you need information on a topic not listed, please contact Claudia Morain at the UC Davis News Service, (530) 752-9841, cmmorain@ucdavis.edu.
Growth and the environment
Economics, community and planning
History and politics
GROWTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Impact on agriculture
UC Davis political scientist Al Sokolow is a leading researcher of the effects of population growth and urbanization on California agriculture, particularly the conversion of farmland. He can discuss trends in farmland loss trends; state and local government efforts to protect farmland, farmer-urban neighbor interactions; and particular protection policies and tools, including agricultural easements and the Williamson Act. His expertise extends to other states' agricultural-growth issues and farmland protection policies. He is conducting a national study with the American Farmland Trust on the impacts and effectiveness of agricultural easement programs. Contact: Al Sokolow, Human and Community Development, (530) 752-0979, ajsokolow@ucdavis.edu.
Water wars and other social issues
UC Davis sociologist John Walton can
talk about the history and issues behind Los Angeles securing water
sources from the Owens Valley. An expert on the political economy of
development, Walton can also discuss the broader sociological issues
behind the state's growth and the social rebellions it has produced.
He is the author of "Western Times and Water Wars: State, Culture and Rebellion in California" (1992),
which received an award from the California Historical Society. Contact:
John Walton, Sociology, (831) 659-1519, jtwalton@ucdavis.edu.
Depleting California's resources
American studies professor Michael L. Smith can
discuss how rates of consumption, not just sheer numbers of people,
are affecting California's natural resources. Smith, an American historian
who specializes in the social role of technology, teaches about and
researches the relationship between social and natural environments.
He is author of "Pacific Visions: California Scientists and the Environment, 1850-1915" (1987).
Contact: Michael L. Smith, American Studies, (530) 752-7196, mlsmith@ucdavis.edu.
Human density and mammal extinction
UC Davis anthropology professor Alexander Harcourt can
talk about the relationship between human density and extinctions of
large mammals. He has studied large mammal extinctions in national
parks, including those in California. "We showed that human density around Western parks correlated with rate of extinctions in the parks," Harcourt says. "I would say that's a finding very directly relevant to California's increasing human population." He
studies the biology of extinction, conservation biology and the evolutionary
biology of both human behavior and primate behavior. Contact: Alexander
Harcourt, Anthropology, (530) 752-0670, ahharcourt@ucdavis.edu.
ECONOMICS, COMMUNITY AND PLANNING
California's potential for economic growth
Despite dire prognoses for the state's economic
future, California
tops the rest of the nation in its potential to generate productivity
and wealth, says UC Davis growth economist
Giovanni
Peri. "What drives growth is what California has:
a continued potential for innovation and the human capital gathered
closely together in
places such as the Bay Area," he says. Peri
studies the patents produced
between 1975 and 2000 and which regions and
states in the Western world are most successful
in producing them. Most of the patents,
which capture new ideas, are in the biotechnology,
computer and telecommunication fields. Contact:
Giovanni Peri, Economics, (530) 752-3033,
gperi@ucdavis.edu.
Impact on social services
UC Davis Cooperative Extention Specialist David Campbell can speak to the various impacts on local social service systems from state population growth. He can specifically talk about issues with the social welfare system and how growth affects community development. For example, there is a growing need for intermediary organizations, such as faith-based organizations, that can build bridges between immigrant/refugee groups and local social service systems. Campbell directs the California Communities Program, a UC outreach effort that works with citizens throughout the state to develop their leadership, strengthen community self-governance, and enhance local and regional economies. Contact: Dave Campbell, Human and Community Development, (530) 754-4328, dave.c.campbell@ucdavis.edu.
HISTORY AND POLITICS
Politics of growth
UC Davis political scientist Al Sokolow can talk about the politics of California's population growth, including its geographical and demographic ramifications; consequences for the balance of state and local government responsibilities; possible effects on future political campaigns and gubernatorial agendas; and the relationship to SMART GROWTH principles. He can also compare California with other states in how they have responded to rapid growth. Sokolow has expertise in local and state government, state and local finances, and growth and land use. Contact: Al Sokolow, Human and Community Development, (530) 752-0979, ajsokolow@ucdavis.edu.
State history and growth
UC Davis historian Louis Warren says
the history of California is in many ways the history of growth. He
teaches about particulars of 20th century California history: immigration,
environmental issues and demographic impacts. A specialist in environmental
history, Warren can talk about the no-growth and slowth-growth movements,
as well as anti-tax groups as part of the no-growth trend. Warren,
the UC Davis W. Turrentine Jackson Chair in Western U.S. History, wrote "The Hunter's Game: Poachers and Conservationists in Twentieth-Century America" (1997),
which won the Western Heritage Award for Outstanding Non-fiction Book
from the National Cowboy Hall of Fame and Western Heritage Center.
Contact: Louis Warren, History, (530) 752-1633, lswarren@ucdavis.edu.
Chicanos, labor and the vote
California's changing demographics and term limits have given Chicanos unprecedented power in the state, says UC Davis labor and health economist Adela
de la Torre. Director of the Chicana/o Studies Program at UC Davis, De la Torre can talk about a range of issues regarding the Latino vote in this election, both in California and nationally. These include redistricting, the relationship between Chicano political power and federal manpower and health programs, Hispanic labor and income issues, and the influence of the California Legislature's Chicano Caucus on state resource allocation. Contact: Adela de la Torre (Spanish speaker), Chicana/o Studies, (530) 752-3904, adelatorre@ucdavis.edu.
The Asian influence
Even though there are more Latin American immigrants
in California, Asians are actually the fastest growing minority in
the state, which has implications for education, health care, legal
rights, race relations and other social issues, says Bill
Hing,
UC Davis professor of law and Asian American
studies. California is attracting Asian immigrants from abroad and
other states, as relatives
and friends living in the state have encouraged
them to come. Hing points to the dramatic increase of diversity among
Asians as a major
factor in contributing to the cosmopolitan
quality of life for Californians, especially in the Central Valley.
Hing is author of "Making and Remaking Asian America Through Immigration
Policy" (1994) and "To Be an American" (1997). His new
book, "History of U.S. Immigration Policy," will
be published this year. Contact: Bill Hing,
School of Law and Asian American Studies, (530) 754-9377, bohing@ucdavis.edu.
Claudia Morain at the UC Davis News Service, (530) 752-9841, cmmorain@ucdavis.edu
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Last updated Aug. 15, 2006
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