SCHOLAR PROFILES
SICJS faculty scholars foster research, scholarship and teaching in in climate, environmental justice and sustainability.
 

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Professor of Law
 Heller McGuinness Leadership Chair
 Charles Widger School of Law
Todd's research focuses on issues of environmental law, energy law and regulation. In each of these areas, he tries to bring conceptual coherence and clarity to the legal treatment of issues of sustainability.
Recent publications:
- , Florida LawReview(forthcoming 2026)
 - , Illinois Law Review 555 (2025)
 - , Cambridge University Press (2022) with Andrew N. Kleit
 

Samantha Chapman
Professor and Co-Director Center for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Stewardship
 Department of Biology
 College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Samantha and her group study biodiversity and global change in coastal ecosystems. She leads the WETFEET project, an interdisciplinary group of scientists, land managers and environmental educators who work with an array of field experiments in marshes and mangroves and plan climate adaptation strategies. She feels honored to be able to study the ways plants shape our world and hopes that her work can contribute to our ability to rediscover how to value and live with nature.
Recent publications:
- Mancera Pineda, José Ernesto; J.F. Blanco-Libreros, F. Adame, G.A. Castellanos-Galindo, S.K. Chapman, K. Diele, K. Rogers. 2025. . Bulletin of Marine Science.
 - Mack, M.R., Langley, J.A., Feller, I.C. and Chapman, S.K. 2024. The ecological consequences of nutrient enrichment in mangroves. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, p.108690.
 - Chapman, S.K. I.C. Feller, G. Canas*, M.A. Hayes, N. Dix, M. Hester, J. Morris, J.A.  Langley. 2021. . Ecology. 
 

Jonathan Doh
Senior Associate Dean for Research, Faculty Advancement, and Global Engagement
 Herbert G. Rammrath Endowed Chair in International Business
 Professor, Management & Operations
  School of Business
Jonathan’s research focuses on climate change adaptation, corporate socio-political engagement, sustainability in global supply chains, and ESG as a risk mitigation strategy. He has published more than 100 referred articles, eleven books, and two dozen case studies. He has been editor-in-chief of Journal of World Business and Journal of Management Studies and is currently Editor (Sustainability) at Journal of International Business Studies. He is a fellow of the Academy of Management and the Academy of International Business, has been ranked by Stanford/PLOS among the top .5% of management scholars globally (282 out of 57,191), and has 26,000+ google scholar citations.
Recent publications:
- Marano, V., Wilhelm, M. Doh, J.P., Kostova, T., Beugelsdijk, S. (2024). y. Journal of International Business Studies, 55, 413-428.
 - Yoon, D., Tashman, P., Benischke, M., & Doh, J.P. (2024). Journal of Business Venturing. 39 (1). doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusvent.2023.106359
 - Krammer, S., Lashitew, A., Doh, J.P., & Bapuji, H. (2022). Income Inequality, Social Cohesion and Crime Against Businesses: Evidence from a Global Sample of Firms. Journal of International Business Studies, 54, 385-400.
 

Frank Galgano
Professor 
 Director of Sustainability Studies
 Executive Director, Pennsylvania Geographical Society
 Department of Geography and the Environment 
 College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
If climate change is the most important problem facing the global community, then violent conflict that may be triggered by its adverse effects represents an existential threat to human security. This is the environmental security doctrine which is the focus of Frank’s research. Frank examines linkages among climate change, adaptive capacity, vulnerable populations, non-sustainable practices and violent conflict. He has published five books, three physical geography study guides, and more than 30 professional articles focused on geographic, environmental and military subjects. He recently published a new book titled The Environment-Conflict Nexus: Climate Change and the Emergent National Security Landscape (Springer, 2019), which examines the geography of global security from the perspective of climate and environmental change.
Recent publications:
- Laughlin, A. and Galgano, F.A., 2025. Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Drought and Violence in Darfur, Sudan. African Security Review, 34 (1): 60-83.
 - Galgano, F.A. 2024. The 1964 Jordan River Diversion Plan: Transboundary Water Basins and Conflict. Case Studies in the Environment, 8 (1): 1-18.
 - Galgano, F.A. 2024. Hostis Humani Generis: Pirates and Global Maritime Commerce. Research in Globalization, 8 (2024) 100188
 

Steven Goldsmith
Professor
 Environmental Science Program Director
 Department of Geography and the Environment 
 College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Steven’s current research program focuses on identifying and mitigating environmental impacts on river systems. This research employs a community-inclusive approach, where academics, regulatory agencies, NGOs, students, and/or individual residents collaborate and utilize science to understand and mitigate the impacts on freshwater systems. He has published more than 30 peer-reviewed scientific articles on the biogeochemistry of river systems in journals such as Nature Climate Change and Science of the Total Environment. He has also developed and implemented an immersive, locally based, culturally responsive research experience in urban environmental geochemistry, through an environmental justice lens, to broaden a pathway to the geosciences for underrepresented students.
Recent publications:
- Hassebrock, J. M., Kremer, P., Seng, K. E., & Goldsmith, S. T. (2025). Long-term impacts of land cover change on nitrate export in mixed-use exurban and suburban watersheds. Science of the Total Environment, 1002, 180612.
 - Marks, N. K., Cravotta III, C. A., Rossi, M. L., Silva, C., Kremer, P., & Goldsmith, S. T. (2024). Exploring spatial and temporal symptoms of the freshwater salinization syndrome in a rural to urban watershed. Science of the Total Environment, 947, 174266.
 - Rossi, M. L., Kremer, P., Cravotta, C. A., Scheirer, K. E., & Goldsmith, S. T. (2022). Long-term impacts of impervious surface cover change and roadway deicing agent application on chloride concentrations in exurban and suburban watersheds. Science of the Total Environment, 851, 157933.
 

Joseph Lennon
Associate Dean, International and Interdisciplinary Initiatives
 Emily C. Riley Director of Irish Studies
 Co-Chair, Strategic Initiative for Climate, Justice and Sustainability
 Professor, Department of English
 College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Joseph researchestheliteratures,cultures andhistoriesof Ireland and Irish America, focusing onissues of famine, hunger andsustainability. At present, heco-editsanopen-access issue of theAmerican Journal of Irish Studieson“Sustainability in Irish Culture.”The special issue includes essays on Irish theatre, literature and tourism. He studies Irish governmental cultural policy and writes onaudiencecommitment and engagementon sustainability. He haspublishedhistoriesonfamines and fasting protests in Ireland and India, and his forthcoming booktracestheprehistory of the firsthunger-strikeof theWomen’s Social and Political Unionin 1909. His scholarship crosses over into his community work withlocalIrish-Americancommunitygroupsacross the Philadelphia region.
Recent publications:
- Marion Wallace-Dunlop and the Origins of the Hunger Strike(forthcomingSUNY UP, 2026)
 - “Sustainability in Irish Culture,”American Journal of Irish Studies(forthcomingSpring 2026)
 - “Afterword: Rabindranath Tagore and W.B. Yeats,” Tagore and Yeats: A Postcolonial Re-envisioning, eds. Elizabeth Brewer Redwine and Amrita Ghosh, Brill, 2022.
 

Virginia Smith
Associate Professor 
 Civil and Environmental Engineering 
 Director, Graduate Studies 
 Associate Director,  Center for Resilient Water Systems 
 Director, Sustainable Engineering Minor 
 College of Engineering
Virginia is an Associate Professor of Water Resources in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, whose projects have focused on urban sediment transport dynamics, sustainable stormwater management, and applying data management and artificial intelligence to water resource engineering challenges. Virginia has overseen and worked on a diverse collection of water and natural resource projects across the US and around the world, including projects in Asia, Africa, the South Pacific and Afghanistan. She has leveraged her experiences in her research focusing on rivers, floodplains, stormwater, and flooding dynamics, particularly in urban settings.
Recent publications:
- Scolio, M., Kremer, P., Smith, V., Amur, A., Wadzuk, B., Homet, K., Devin, E., Al Mehedi, A. & Moore, L. (2025). Delineating urban flooding when incorporating community stormwater knowledge. Environmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability, 5(1), 015008.
 - Cook, L. M., Good, K. D., Moretti, M., Kremer, P., Wadzuk, B., Traver, R., & Smith, V. (2024). Towards the intentional multifunctionality of urban green infrastructure: a paradox of choice?. Nature: Urban Sustainability, 4(1), 12.
 - Hosseiny, H., Nazari, F., Smith, V., & Nataraj, C. (2020). A framework for modeling flood depth using a hybrid of hydraulics and machine learning. Nature: Scientific Reports, 10(1), 8222.
 

Pete Watkins
Director of Teaching, Learning, and Assessment
 College of Professional Studies
Pete is Director of Teaching, Learning and Assessment at . An educational psychologist by training, he is a former tenured faculty member who has worked in higher education since 2000. He has extensive teaching experience, both face-to-face and online, as well as expertise in course design, curriculum development and accreditation. He earned a bachelor's degree in psychology from the University of Pennsylvania, as well as a master's degree in social work and a PhD in educational psychology from Temple University. Pete believes that excellent teachers continually grow, develop and learn from one another.
- Watkins, P. (2021).
 - Watkins, P. (2018, February 26)
 - Watkins, P. (2017, March 3). .
 

Aaron Wemhoff
Professor 
Assistant Chair 
Administrative Director, Centralized Research Computing Facility
Mechanical Engineering
College of Engineering
The data center industry has expanded significantly in recent years, driven largely by advances in artificial intelligence. Because these facilities consume vast amounts of resources, predicting and mitigating their environmental impacts is critical. Aaron's research focuses on developing methods to assess greenhouse gas emissions, water footprints, and water scarcity impacts from data centers, while also evaluating strategies to reduce these burdens. He specifically examines the effectiveness of equipment cooling approaches, waste heat recovery and on-site power generation.
Recent publications:
- Khalid R., McMullen M., Amalfi R.L., Ortega A., Wemhoff A.P. (2025). Performance Analysis of a Brazed Plate Heat Exchanger during Condensation of R1233zd(E), Journal of Electronic Packaging, 147 (2), 021005.
 - McMullen M., Wemhoff A.P. (2024). Data Center Environmental Burden Reduction Through On-Site Renewable Power Generation, Journal of Engineering for Sustainable Buildings and Cities, 5 (2), 021001.
 - Chen, L., Wemhoff, A. P. (2023). The Sustainability Benefits of Economization in Data Centers Containing Chilled Water Systems Resources, Conservation & Recycling, 196, 107053.
 

