Stacy Lynn

Interviewing local women in Kenya
Giraffe closeup
Research group at Kalama Community Wildlife Conservancy, Kenya
African students with animal posters done in local style
African field crew in front of Land Rover

Biography

Stacy Lynn

Dr. Lynn is a Research Scientist at the Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory.

Dr. Lynn received both her MSc (Rangeland Ecosystem Science) and PhD (Ecology) at Colorado State University where she studied the impacts of conservation policy and ecology on Maasai pastoralists, as well as the impacts of cultivation for both Maasai pastoral livelihoods and wildlife movement at multiple scales in northern Tanzania. Some of her specializations are in interdisciplinary approaches to research, systems thinking, participatory research methods, environmental governance, citizen science, science education, and situation assessment. Her diverse influences, experiences and partnerships have strongly shaped her specialization in taking a broad systems approach to investigating complex, applied, social-ecological questions that have real implications on the ground for both people and ecosystems. Her approach uses a combination of ecological and social science methods to perform integrated and community-based collaborative research. She has been working in Africa since 1994, starting with Peace Corps in Namibia, southern Africa.

Dr. Lynn received her first degree in Elementary education from Penn State University which led to several years of teaching in the Baltimore City School District before she joined the Peace Corps as a teacher trainer in Otjiwarongo, Namibia. During her Peace Corps tenure she founded the Earthwise Environmental Club for primary and secondary students, and worked extensively with the Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF).

Related Material