Masters Program


  1. F&ES Student Featured in Showtime’s “Years of Living Dangerously”

    In the new Showtime series "Years of Living Dangerously," a group of celebrities help tell the story of climate change. But the real stars of the film are the people already living with its consequences or fighting to make the world more resilient - including Brendan Edgerton M.E.M. '15 M.B.A. '15.
  2. F&ES Launches First Online Courses in Religion and Ecology

    This fall, Professors Mary Evelyn Tucker and John Grim will launch for the first time two online courses in the study of religion and ecology. While the courses will initially be open to Yale students only, the instructors intend to eventually make it available to a wider audience.
  3. F&ES Student Named Switzer Fellow

    Margaret Tallmadge ’20 M.E.M. has been named a recipient of the Switzer Environmental Fellowship, a prestigious program that supports future environmental leaders.
  4. Expanding Adaptive Financing Options For Post-Disaster Recovery

    As part of their F&ES masters project, students Laura Hammett ’17 M.E.M. and Katy Mixter ’17 M.E.M./M.B.A. recently convened experts from humanitarian and financial organizations for a one-day workshop on the challenges of post-disaster reconstruction and resilience.
  5. Eleven F&ES Students Selected as Climate Corps Fellows

    Eleven students and graduates from F&ES have been selected as summer fellows for the Environmental Defense Fund’s Climate Corps program, an innovative fellowship that places specially trained graduates students with private and public sector organizations to help transform how they use energy.
  6. Out of Their Comfort Zone: Students Merge Ecology and Design in Baltimore

    esi meeting with baltimore officials Earth Stewardship Initiative fellows meet with Baltimore officials over a map of the city.
    First-year M.E.M. student Amber Collett barely had a chance to unpack her bags after arriving in New Haven this summer before she had to catch a train to Baltimore.
     
    Collett, who hadn’t even completed her F&ES orientation, was one of 18 student fellows from across the country who participated in the Earth Stewardship Initiative (ESI), a Yale-led urban ecology project