This year, 10 F&ES students traveled with Prof. Susan Clark to Jackson, Wyo., to assess conservation in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. They compared and contrasted scientific, management and policy dynamics while exploring themes of leadership, problem solving, decision-making, governance, change and adaptation.
Students based their considerations on their meetings with representatives of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, the U.S. Park Service at Grand Teton National Park, the U.S. Forest Service at the Bridger-Teton Forest, the Bureau of Land Management, the Wyoming Game & Fish Department, as well as nonprofit groups including the Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance, the Jackson Hole Land Trust, the National Museum of Wildlife Art and the Northern Rockies Conservation Cooperative.