| March
1, 2004
Scripps Launches New Master’s
Degree
In Marine Biodiversity And Conservation
UCSD-Scripps
master of advanced studies
program
offers short-term training for practical users
By Dora Dalton
Although oceans
cover 71 percent of the planet, their organisms and ecosystems
are far less well known than those on land. Scientists are increasingly
concerned about the health of the oceans and the loss of diversity
among marine species worldwide.
To help train the
skilled professionals needed to ensure the future vitality of
the oceans, the Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation
(CMBC) at Scripps Institution of Oceanography is launching a
new master of advanced studies degree in marine biodiversity
and conservation. Offered in cooperation with the University
of California, San Diego’s (UCSD) Office of Graduate Studies
and Research and UCSD Extension’s Office of Advanced Professional
Education, the program will welcome its first students in July
2004.
The multidisciplinary
program will include courses in natural, social, and informatic
sciences; marine policy, economics, and law; and training in
important cultural and communications skills, providing well-rounded
preparation for addressing the diverse stakeholders, solutions,
and science involved in biodiversity and conservation efforts.
Students can complete the degree in as little as one calendar
year.
Nancy Knowlton, director
of CMBC, says the program will offer the first master’s
degree of its kind by covering the scope of issues involved
in marine biodiversity and conservation.
“This is an ideal
degree for practical users who need specialized training in
marine biodiversity and conservation,” Knowlton said.
“The unique resources of CMBC and UCSD, along with our
select partners, will provide an outstanding and comprehensive
training program.”
The program is most
appropriate for marine resource managers, practicing marine
science professionals who wish to increase their understanding
of biodiversity and conservation, science policy analysts and
advocates, and researchers interested in obtaining a more solid
grounding in the public policy and economics of marine conservation.
Courses and fieldwork
will be led by professors from Scripps’s CMBC, the UCSD
departments of economics and political science, and the UCSD
Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies.
The World Wildlife Fund and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s Southwest Fisheries Science Center will
help provide fieldwork and research opportunities.
CMBC expects to have
about a dozen students enrolled during this inaugural program
year.
More information,
including an online application, is available on the web at
oaped.ucsd.edu/cmbc.
Media Contacts: Dora
Dalton or Cindy Clark (858) 534-3624
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