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Joanna Endter-Wada

FRIENDS of Great Salt Lake - Joanna Endter-Wada

Emeritus Professor, Dept. of Environment & Society

Utah State University

Bio:

Dr. Joanna Endter-Wada is an Emeritus Professor of Natural Resource Policy and Social Science in the Department of Environment & Society at Utah State University. Her research and Extension work focuses on water policy, urban landscape water use and conservation, the Great Salt Lake and its wetlands, the integration of land and water in planning, and the human dimensions of drought and climate change. She is a member of a project team working with the Utah Division of Water Resources to implement Growing Water Smart workshops in Utah, has been affiliated with USU’s Center for Water Efficient Landscaping, and has served on the Great Salt Lake Strike Team.

Panel: Preservation and Protection in Perpetuity: People’s Perceptions and Participation

Abstract: Social scientists are well suited to investigate and analyze people’s perceptions and participation regarding Great Salt Lake and how Utah is doing with preserving and protecting it in perpetuity. This panel will present audience members with key insights from research being conducted by members of the recently formed Great Salt Lake Social Science Network (GSL SSN), who are investigating a variety of societal issues related to Great Salt Lake, many focusing on the drying of the lake. The network includes social science researchers from many of Utah’s universities, as well as other states. They have been conducting GSL-related research focused on the larger Utah population, as well as specific groups, and different types of communities, employing a variety of research methods including surveys, focus groups, individual interviews, policy analyses, content analyses of public documents, photovoice, and longitudinal studies.

Each panelist will provide what they consider the most important insight from their work. Issues that members of the network are researching broadly include:

  • how various segments of the Utah population perceive and experience environmental risk related to Great Salt Lake’s desiccation, and their responses, including migration and displacement, effects on investment strategies, and other forms of adaptation;
  • analysis of public discourse, politics, and management issues related to efforts to save and preserve the GSL; and,
  • Utahns’ support for a wide range of policies and strategies related to GSL, including those addressing the drivers and consequences of lake desiccation and those focused on protecting people as well as other species and nature more generally.
FRIENDS of Great Salt Lake - Joanna Endter-Wada