Kenny Broad

Region:
North America
Scholar Date:
1992

Kenny Broad is an environmental anthropologist who studies the relationship between humans and their environment. He is currently a professor of environmental science and policy and Director of the Abess Center for Ecosystem Science and Policy at the University of Miami. He received his Ph.D. in anthropology from Columbia University in 1999 and in 2011 he was chosen as the Rolex National Geographic Explorer of the Year, with the late Wes Skiles. Broad was a National Geographic 2006 Emerging Explorer and was elected a Fellow National of the Explorers Club in 2009. He is a licensed U.S. Coast Guard captain and commercial helicopter pilot. Since 1992, he has participated in over 20 National Geographic expeditions and grants, including extreme scientific and filmmaking projects on every continent – from studying cocaine distribution patterns to tracking venomous snakes to exploring the deepest caves on the planet – to gather information that sheds light on little known environmental and cultural subjects. He has published dozens of interdisciplinary papers on social and natural science topics, and regularly collaborates with ecologists, climatologists, hydrologists, psychologists, and a host of other -ologists across disciplines. He served on the National Geographic Society Expeditions Council, is on the Nat Geo Live Speakers Bureau, and has traveled as an expert on many Nat Geo Expeditions travel excursions. Broad served as co-director of Columbia University Center for Research on Environmental Decisions for over 15 years.

Current and Past Scholars :
OW-USS Past Scholars

Steven Barnett

Region: North America Scholar Date: 1990 Steve is currently Director of Program Management at the Health & Safety Institute and President of the Our World-Underwater Scholarship Society. After his scholarship year, he worked as an underwater

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OW-USS Past Scholars

Josh Stewart

Region: North America Scholar Date: 2010 to 2011 Joshua Stewart was born and raised in New York City, far from the sandy shores of the tropical oceans he now loves. His initial interest in the marine

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