Al Lim, Botao Zhao, and Yuefei You
Eli Fenichel, the Knobloch Family Professor of Natural Resource Economics, and co-authors have been awarded the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association’s 2025 Paper of Enduring Quality Award for their 2011 PNAS paper on integrating human behavior into models of infectious disease. The study laid key foundations for interdisciplinary research, bridging economics and epidemiology—an approach that proved critical during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I saw a lot of epidemiologists and economists recommending it to each other to figure out how to collaborate on COVID-19 research,” Fenichel said. “I think it set a benchmark for interdisciplinary research on epidemics.”
The award will be presented at the AAEA & WAEA Joint Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, on July 28.
Nyeema Harris, the Knobloch Family Associate Professor of Wildlife and Land Conservation, has been named a member of the 2026 cohort of New Voices in Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
The leadership program by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine aims to expand expertise in the functions of the National Academies while building a network of emerging U.S. leaders to address national and global challenges. New Voices members are competitively selected through a merit-based competition. Each cohort serves a two-year term before transitioning to alumni status.
“New Voices provides unique exposure to the National Academy of Sciences, enhancing my practical application of science diplomacy,” Harris said. "I am honored and elated by this growth opportunity and know my career trajectory will forever be changed as a result of the relationships built, data shared, and lessons learned."
Harris’ research explores carnivore behavior and movement and ecology and conservation in urban systems and national parks. She is director of the Applied Wildlife Ecology (AWE) lab at YSE.
Three YSE doctoral students — Al Lim, Botau Zhao, and Yuefei You — were recognized for their research during the American Anthropological Association in New Orleans.
Lim won the H Russell Bernard Student Paper Prize from the Society for Anthropological Sciences for his paper on how taxes and fiscal design shape subjects in AI-crypto ecosystems.
Zhao received the Nancy Abelmann Prize from the East Asia Society for best graduate student paper. The paper examines the decline of horse caravans in Yanjing, Markham, Tibet.
You earned the 2025 best student film prize from the Society for Visual Anthropology Festival of Film and Media for her documentary “What Do Ghosts Think?” The film examines how various communities in East Kalimantan respond to displacement, supernatural tales, and political censorship surrounding the construction of the new city of Nusantara.
Lim, Zhao, and You work in the lab of Michael Dove, the Margaret K. Musser Professor of Social Ecology and co-director of the Combined Doctoral Program in Anthropology.
Al Lim, Botao Zhao, and Yuefei You
Five Yale School of the Environment faculty members have been named to the world’s most influential researchers list by Clarivate Analytics, a company that compiles a list of scientists and social scientists whose papers rank in the top 1% of citations.
Included on this year’s list were: Mark Bradford, the E.H. Harriman Professor of Soils and Ecosystem Ecology; Xuhui Lee the Sara Shallenberger Brown Professor of Climate Science; Anthony Leiserowitz, the JoshAni-TomKat Professor of Climate Communication; Peter Raymond, the Oastler Professor of Biogeochemistry; and Karen Seto, the Frederick C. Hixon Professor of Geography and Urbanization Science. In total, 49 faculty members from Yale University made the list of 6,868 researchers worldwide.