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KEVIN ST. MARTIN Curriculum Vitae (June 12, 2020) Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Department of Geography 54 Joyce Kilmer Drive, Piscataway NJ 08854-8045 Email: [email protected] Faculty Profile Website RESEARCH INTERESTS Diverse Economies, Marine Governance and Livelihoods, Climate and Community, Ontological Politics, Critical Cartography, GIS, and Data Studies. EDUCATION Ph.D., 1999 Graduate School of Geography, Clark University. Dissertation: From Models to Maps: The Discourse of Fisheries and the Potential for Community Management in New England. Advisor: Jody Emel. MSc, 1989 University of Massachusetts, Amherst (Geography). Thesis: An Alternative Industrial Geography: Overdetermination and the Solid Wood Products Industry. Advisor: Julie Graham. BA, 1985 University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Major: Geography, Minor: Asian Studies Certificate. PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Academic appointments 2016-present Professor II (part time full professor), Faculty of Biosciences, Fisheries and Economics, Universitetet I Tromsø, Norway. 2008-present Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Rutgers University. 2002-2008 Assistant Professor at Rutgers University, Department of Geography. 2001-2002 Assistant Professor at Rutgers University, Joint appointment: Department of Geography and the Center for Urban Policy Research. 2000-2001 National Research Council (NRC) Associateship. Postdoctoral position at NOAA/ NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Woods Hole, MA. Administrative Positions 2018 (spring) Graduate Program Director, Geography, Rutgers University. 2015-2016 Graduate Program Director, Geography, Rutgers University. 2010-2012 Graduate Program Director, Geography, Rutgers University. 1

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Page 1: RESEARCH INTERESTS EDUCATIONJun 12, 2020  · Politics, Critical Cartography, GIS, and Data Studies. EDUCATION Ph.D., 1999 Graduate School of Geography, Clark University. Dissertation:

KEVIN ST. MARTIN

Curriculum Vitae (June 12, 2020)

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Department of Geography 54 Joyce Kilmer Drive, Piscataway NJ 08854-8045

Email: [email protected] Faculty Profile Website

RESEARCH INTERESTS

Diverse Economies, Marine Governance and Livelihoods, Climate and Community, Ontological Politics, Critical Cartography, GIS, and Data Studies.

EDUCATION

Ph.D., 1999 Graduate School of Geography, Clark University. Dissertation: From Models to Maps: The Discourse of Fisheries and the Potential for Community Management in New England. Advisor: Jody Emel.

MSc, 1989 University of Massachusetts, Amherst (Geography). Thesis: An Alternative Industrial Geography: Overdetermination and the Solid Wood Products Industry. Advisor: Julie Graham.

BA, 1985 University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Major: Geography, Minor: Asian Studies Certificate.

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

Academic appointments

2016-present Professor II (part time full professor), Faculty of Biosciences, Fisheries and Economics, Universitetet I Tromsø, Norway.

2008-present Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Rutgers University. 2002-2008 Assistant Professor at Rutgers University, Department of Geography. 2001-2002 Assistant Professor at Rutgers University, Joint appointment: Department of

Geography and the Center for Urban Policy Research. 2000-2001 National Research Council (NRC) Associateship. Postdoctoral position at NOAA/

NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Woods Hole, MA.

Administrative Positions

2018 (spring) Graduate Program Director, Geography, Rutgers University. 2015-2016 Graduate Program Director, Geography, Rutgers University. 2010-2012 Graduate Program Director, Geography, Rutgers University.

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Page 2: RESEARCH INTERESTS EDUCATIONJun 12, 2020  · Politics, Critical Cartography, GIS, and Data Studies. EDUCATION Ph.D., 1999 Graduate School of Geography, Clark University. Dissertation:

PUBLICATIONS (Google Scholar profile page)

Books:

2015 Roelvink, G., K. St. Martin, and J.K. Gibson-Graham (eds.), Making Other Worlds Possible: Performing Diverse Economies. University of Minnesota Press.

In Refereed Journal Articles and Books:

2020 Campbell, L., K. St. Martin, L. Fairbanks, N. Boucquey, and S. Wise. “The Portal is the Plan: Governing US Oceans in Regional Assemblages,” Maritime Studies doi: 10.1007/s40152-020-00173-3. St. Martin, K. “Framing Essay: The Diversity of Property,” in The Handbook of Diverse Economies, Gibson-Graham, J.K. and K. Dombroski, eds. (Edward Elgar), pp. 271-282. Pinsky, M., E. Fenichel, M. Fogarty, S. Levin, B. McCay, K. St. Martin, R. Selden, T. Young. “Fish and Fisheries in Hot Water: What is Happening and How do We Adapt?” Population Ecology doi: 10.1002/1438-390X.12050. Karnad, D. and K. St. Martin. “Assembling Marine Spatial Planning in the Global South: International Agencies and the Fate of Fishing Communities in India,” Maritime Studies doi: 10.1007/s40152-020-00164-4. St. Martin, K., N. Gabriel, O. Morrow, A. I. Heras Monner Sans (writing as the Community Economies Collective). “Community Economy,” in Keywords in Radical Geography: Antipode at 50, The Antipode Editorial Collective eds. (Wiley), pp. 56-63.

2019 Rogers, L.A., R. Griffin, T. Young, E. Fuller, K. St.Martin, M.L. Pinsky. “Shifting Habitats Expose Fishing Communities to Risk Under Climate Change,” Nature Climate Change 9(7): 512-516. Young, T., E. Fuller, M.M. Provost, K. Coleman, K. St. Martin, B. McCay, M. Pinsky. “Adaptation Strategies of Coastal Fishing Communities as Species Shift Poleward. ICES Journal of Marine Science 76(1): 93-103. Boucquey, N., L. Fairbanks, K. St. Martin, L. Campbell. “Ocean Data Portals: Performing a New Infrastructure for Oceans Governance,” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 37(3): 484-503. Dubik, B., E. Clark, T. Young, S.B. Jones Zibler, M. Provost, M. Pinsky, K. St. Martin. “Governing Fisheries in the Face of Change: Social Responses to Long-term Geographic Shifts in a U.S. Fishery,” Marine Policy 99: 243-251.

2018 Arbo, P., M. Knol, S. Linke, K. St. Martin. “The Transformation of the Oceans and the Future of Marine Social Science,” Maritime Studies (MAST) 17(3): 295. Fairbanks, L., L. Campbell, N. Boucquey, K. St. Martin. “Assembling Enclosure: Reading Marine Spatial Planning for Alternatives,” Annals of the American Association of Geographers 108:1:144-161.

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2017 St. Martin, K. and J. Olson. “Creating Space for Community in Marine Conservation and Management: Mapping ‘Communities at Sea’,” in Conservation in the Anthropocene Ocean, Levin, P. and M. Poe eds. (Elsevier), pp. 123-141. Breslow, S.J. et al. (19 authors including St. Martin, K.). “Evaluating Indicators of Human Wellbeing for Ecosystem-Based Management,” Ecosystem Health and Sustainability, DOI: 10.1080/20964129.2017.1411767.

Charnley, S. et al. (14 authors including St. Martin, K.). “Evaluating the Best Available Social Science for Natural Resource Management Decision-Making,” Environmental Science & Policy 73: 80-88.

2016 Boucquey, N., L. Fairbanks, K. St. Martin, L. Campbell, and B. McCay. “The Ontological Politics of Marine Spatial Planning: (Re)Assembling the Ocean and Shaping the Capacities of ‘Community’ and ‘Environment’,” Geoforum 75: 1-11. Breslow, S.J. et al. (18 authors including St. Martin, K.). “Conceptualizing and Operationalizing Human Wellbeing for Ecosystem-Based Management,” Environmental Science & Policy 66: 250-259. Hicks, C. et al. (17 authors including St. Martin, K.). “Engage Key Social Concepts for Sustainability,” Science 352(6281): 38-40. Fenichel, E., S. Levin, B. McCay, K. St. Martin, J. Abbott, and M. Pinsky. “Wealth Reallocation and Sustainability Under Climate Change” Nature Climate Change 6(3): 237-244.

2015 St. Martin, K., Roelvink, G. and J.K. Gibson-Graham. “Introduction: An Economic Politics for our Time,” in Making Other Worlds Possible: Performing Diverse Economies, G. Roelvink, K. St. Martin, and J.K. Gibson-Graham eds. (University of Minnesota Press), pp. 1-25. Snyder, R. and K. St. Martin. “A Fishery for the Future: The Midcoast Fishermen’s Association and the Work of Economic Being-in-Common,” in Making Other Worlds Possible: Performing Diverse Economies, G. Roelvink, K. St. Martin, and J.K. Gibson-Graham eds. (University of Minnesota Press), pp. 26-52.

2014 Kittinger, J.N. et al. (23 authors including St. Martin, K.). “A Practical Approach for Putting People into Ecosystem-Based Ocean Planning” Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12(8): 448-456. Pavlovskaya, M. and K. St. Martin. “Economy,” in Sage Handbook of Human Geography, Lee, R. et al. eds. (Sage Publications).

2012 Halpern, B. et al. (33 authors including St. Martin, K.). “An Index to Assess the Health and Benefits of a Global Ocean” Nature (488): 615-620. St. Martin, K. “Mapping Biocultural and Economic Diversity… Everywhere” in Why Do We Value Diversity? Biocultural Diversity in a Global Context. G. Martin, D. Mincyte, and U. Münster eds., (Rachel Carson Center) RCC Perspectives 2012(9): 83-88.

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2010 Murray, G, T. Johnson, B. McCay, M. Danko, K. St. Martin, and S. Takehashi. “Cumulative Effects, Creeping Enclosure, and the Marine Commons of New Jersey” International Journal of the Commons 4(1): 367-389. St. Martin, K. and M. Pavlovskaya. “Secondary Data: Engaging Numbers Critically,” in Research Methods in Geography: A Critical Introduction. Gomez, B. and J.P. Jones III eds. (Wiley-Blackwell), pp. 173-193.

2009 St. Martin, K. “Toward a Cartography of the Commons: Constituting the Political and Economic Possibilities of Place” Professional Geographer 61(4): 493-507. St. Martin, K. and M. Pavlovskaya. “Ethnography” chapter in A Companion to Environmental Geography, N. Castree, D. Demeritt, D. Liverman, and B. Rhoads eds. (Wiley-Blackwell), pp. 370-384. St. Martin, K. “The Difference that Class Makes: Neoliberalization and Non-Capitalism in the Fishing Industry of New England,” in Privatization: Property and the Remaking of Nature-Society Relations. B. Mansfield ed. (Blackwell), pp. 133-155, first published in Antipode 39(3).

2008 Schroeder, R.A., K. St. Martin, B. Wilson, and D. Sen. “Third World Environments, Third World Justice? Expanding the Environmental Justice Agenda” Editorial essay for special issue of Society and Natural Resources 21(7): 547-555. St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “The Missing Layer: Geo-technologies, Communities, and Implications for Marine Spatial Planning” Marine Policy 32: 779-786. St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Creating a Place for ‘Community’ in New England Fisheries” Human Ecology Review 15(2): 161-170. St. Martin, K. “Mapping Community Use of Fisheries Resources in the U.S. Northeast” Journal of Maps 2008: 38-41.

2007 St. Martin, K. and J. Wing. “The Discourse and Discipline of GIS” Cartographica 42(3): 235-248. St. Martin, K. “The Difference that Class Makes: Neoliberalization and Non-Capitalism in the Fishing Industry of New England” Antipode 39(3): 527-549. Pavlovskaya, M. and K. St. Martin. “Feminism and GIS: From a Missing Object to a Mapping Subject” Geography Compass 1(3): 583-606. St. Martin, K., B. McCay, G. Murray, T. Johnson, and B. Oles. “Communities, Knowledge, and Fisheries of the Future” International Journal of Global Environmental Issues 7(2/3): 221-239. St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Environment and Development: (Re)Connecting Community and Commons in New England Fisheries,” in Connecting People, Participation and Place: Participatory Action Research

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Approaches and Methods. S. Kindon, R. Pain and M. Kesby eds. (Routledge), pp. 51-59.

St. Martin, K. “Enclosure and Economic Identity in New England Fisheries,” in Neoliberal Environments: False Promises and Unnatural Consequences N. Heynan, J. McCarthy, S. Prudham, and P. Robbins eds. (Routledge), pp. 255-266.

2006 R. Schroeder, K. St. Martin, K. Albert. “Political Ecology in North America: An Introduction” Editorial essay for special issue of Geoforum 37(2): 163-168. McCay, B., T. Johnson, K. St. Martin, and D. Wilson. “Gearing Up for Improved Collaboration: The Potentials and Limits of Cooperative Research for Incorporating Fishermen’s Knowledge,” in Partnerships for a Common Purpose: Cooperative Fisheries Research and Management A. N. Read and T. W. Hartley eds. (American Fisheries Society), pp. 111-115. St. Martin, K. “The Impact of ‘Community’ on Fisheries Management in the U.S. Northeast,” Geoforum 37(2) 169-184.

2005 St. Martin, K. “Mapping Economic Diversity in the First World: The Case of Fisheries,” Environment and Planning A 37: 959-979.

St. Martin, K. “Disrupting Enclosure in New England Fisheries,” Capitalism, Nature, Socialism 16(1): 63-80.

2004 St. Martin, K. “GIS in Marine Fisheries Science and Decision Making,” in Geographic Information Systems in Fisheries, W. L. Fisher and F. J. Rahel eds. (American Fisheries Society), pp. 237-258.

2001 St. Martin, K. “Making Space for Community Resource Management in Fisheries,” The Annals of the Association of American Geographers 91(1): 122-142.

1995 St. Martin, K. “Changing Borders, Changing Cartography: Possibilities for Intervention in the New World Order,” in Marxism in the Postmodern Age, A. Callari, S. Cullenberg, and C. Biewener, eds. (The Guilford Press), pp. 459-468.

1990 Graham, J. and K. St. Martin. “Knowledge and the 'Localities' Debate: Meditation on a Theme by Cox and Mair,” Antipode 22(2): 168-174.

Graham, J. and K. St. Martin. “Resources and Restructuring in the International Solid Wood Products Industry,” Geoforum 21(3): 289-302.

Edited Volumes:

2008 Schroeder, R.A., K. St. Martin, B. Wilson, and D. Sen, eds. Third World Environments, Third World Justice? Special issue: Society and Natural Resources 21(7): 547-655.

2006 Schroeder, R.A., K. St. Martin, and K. Albert, eds. Political Ecology in North America: Discovering the Third World Within? Special issue: Geoforum 37(2): 163-245.

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1993 St. Martin, K. ed. Explorations in Geographic Information Systems Technology, Volume 3, Applications in Coastal Zone Research and Management. United Nations Institute for Training and Research, Geneva, Switzerland.

1992 McKendry, J. E., J. R. Eastman, K. St. Martin, and M. Fulk. Explorations in Geographic Information Systems Technology, Volume 2, Applications in Forestry. United Nations Institute for Training and Research, Geneva, Switzerland.

Research Reports:

2005 St. Martin, K., B. McCay, T. Johnson, and T. Rohrbach. Assessing Recreational Fishing Communities: A Guide to Research. A Report to the National Marine Fisheries Service. Fisheries Project, Rutgers The State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.

St. Martin, K., T. Johnson, and T. Rohrbach. A Profile of Recreational Fishing in Point Pleasant, New Jersey. A Report to the National Marine Fisheries Service. Fisheries Project, Rutgers The State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.

2002 McCay, B.J., B. Oles, B. Stoffle, E. Bochenek, K. St.Martin, G. Graziosi, T. Johnson, and J. Lamarque. Port and Community Profiles, Amendment 9, Squid, Atlantic Mackerel, and Butterfish Fishery Management Plan: A Report to the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council. The Fisheries Project, Rutgers the State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.

McCay, B. J., J. Lamarque, K. St. Martin, E. Bochenek, T. Johnson, B. Stoffle, and D. C. Wilson. Port and Community Profiles and Social Impact Assessment, Amendment 13 of the Surfclam and Ocean Quahog Fishery Management Plan: A Report to the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council. The Fisheries Project, Rutgers the State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.

2001 Listokin, D., M. Lahr, and K. St. Martin. The Economic Impacts of Historic Preservation in Missouri. Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers the State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.

Other Publications:

2010 The Community Economies Collective. “In Remembrance of Julie Graham” Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography 17(4): 419-420.

2007 Contributor to Visions for a Sea Change. Report of the First International Workshop on Marine Spatial Planning. Published by the UNESCO Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (ICAM Dossier Series): Paris.

2006 Danko, M, B.J. McCay, K. St. Martin, and G. Murray. “Cumulative Effects and New Jersey Marine Fisheries,” The Jersey Shoreline. 24(1): 8-11. McCay, B. J., C. Pomeroy, K. St. Martin, and B. Walker. Peer Review of Ecotrust MLPAI (Marine Life Protection Act Initiative) Products. Commissioned by the California Fisheries Coalition, Alliance of Communities for Sustainable Fisheries (CFC/ACSF), Sacramento, CA.

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2005 McCay, B. J., T. R. Johnson, K. St. Martin, and D. Wilson. “Social, Cultural, and Economic Impacts of Working Cooperatively: How is Fishermen’s Knowledge Incorporated?” Proceedings of the American Fisheries Society 135th Annual Meeting, Anchorage, AK, Sept. 11-15, 2005.

Under Review or In Preparation:

St. Martin, K. and R. Snyder. A Cartography of the Commons: Taking Action in a Rights Based World for submission to the Diverse Economies and Livable Worlds book series, University of Minnesota Press. St. Martin, K., E. A. Papaioannou, E. R. L. Selden, B. McCay, M. L. Pinsky. “The Ontological Politics of Interdisciplinary Climate Research,” for submission to Nature Climate Change. E. A. Papaioannou, E. R. L. Selden, K. St. Martin, J. Olson, B. McCay, M. L. Pinsky. “Not All Those Who Wander are Lost – Response Strategies of Fishers’ Communities to Shifts in the Distribution and Abundance of Fish” for submission to Frontiers in Marine Science. St. Martin, K., L. Campell, N. Boucquey, L. Fairbanks, S. Wise. “Metrological Struggles: How an Algorithm Constitutes Community in Marine Spatial Planning,” for submission to Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space.

FUNDED RESEARCH

Pending

2020 National Science Foundation, Convergence Accelerator (C-Accel) Program, Co-Principal Investigator (L. Kerr, PI), An Open Knowledge Network to meet Ocean Decision Challenges. Nov. 2020-Aug. 2022, $4,967,492.

Awarded

2019 National Science Foundation, Convergence Accelerator (C-Accel) Program, Co-Principal Investigator (L. Kerr, PI), Convergence Research to Meet Ocean Decision Challenges, Sept. 2019-Nov. 2020, $987,955.

2018 NOAA, New Jersey Sea Grant Program. Principal Investigator, Developing Indices of Vulnerability to Climate Change for Ground Fishing Communities in the Northeast, Sept. 2018-May 2021, $169,367.

2017 NOAA, The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program. Co-Principal Investigator (D. Georgianna, PI), Developing Strategies to Reduce the Effects of Gray Meat Disease on the Atlantic Sea Scallop Fishery, Oct. 2017-Sept. 2020, $242,179. Atlantic Sea Scallop Research Set-Aside Program. Co-Principal Investigator (D. Georgianna, PI), Monitoring Gray Meat Infestations in Atlantic Sea Scallops in a Closed Area on Georges Bank. May 2017-Apr. 2019, $428,160.

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2015 U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. Collaborating Researcher (J. Odell, PI) Collaborative Fisheries Planning for Virginia’s Offshore Wind Energy Area. Apr. 2015-Oct. 2015, subcontracted by The Nature Conservancy $15,000.

NOAA, The Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program. Co-Principal Investigator (D. Georgianna, PI), Combining Fishermen's Knowledge with Oceanographic and Economic Models to Locate, Evaluate, and Predict Gray Meat Outbreaks in Atlantic Sea Scallops, June 2015-May 2017, $299,551.

2014 National Science Foundation, Coastal SEES Program. Co-Principal Investigator (M. Pinsky, PI), Adaptations of Fish and Fisheries to Rapid Climate Velocities, Sept. 2014-Aug. 2018, $1,110,024. National Science Foundation, Geography and Spatial Sciences Program. Principal Investigator, Settling Uncertainties: Regional Implementation and the Emergence of Stakeholders and Ecosystems as Objects and Actors in US Marine Spatial Planning. July 2014-June 2016, $350,000.

Atlantic Sea Scallop Research Set-Aside Program. Collaborating Researcher (D. Georgianna, PI), Tracking the Occurrence of Gray Meat in Atlantic Sea Scallops, Placopecten magellanicus. May 2014-Apr. 2015, subcontracted $6,000.

2012 NOAA, Regional Ocean Partnership Funding Program. Collaborating Researcher (T. Macdonald, PI), Mid-Atlantic Mapping and Planning Portal, Stakeholder Engagement to Advance Regional Ocean Planning. Jan. 2012-Sept. 2015, subcontracted $19,000. National Science Foundation, Geography and Spatial Sciences Program. Principal Investigator, Marine Spatial Planning and the Role of Community and Environmental Actors: A Sea Change in Oceans Governance? July 2012-June 2013, $125,000.

2008 Marine Ecosystem-Based Management Tool Innovation Fund (an initiative funded by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation). Principal Investigator, Communities at Sea Mapper, May 2008-May 2009, $74,108.

2004 National Science Foundation, Ethics and Values Studies program. Co-Principal Investigator (B. McCay PI), Experience Based Knowledge in a Science Policy Context, Mar. 2004-Feb. 2008, $180,001. NOAA, New Jersey Sea Grant program. Co-Principal Investigator (B. McCay PI), Cumulative Effects and New Jersey Marine Fisheries, Mar. 2004-May 2006, $78,500.

2003 National Science Foundation, Ethics and Values Studies program. Co-Principal Investigator (B. McCay, PI), Examining the Fate of Experience Based Knowledge in a Science Policy Process, Sept. 2003-Aug. 2004, $39,720.

NOAA, New Jersey Sea Grant program. Co-Principal Investigator (B. Oles, PI), Environmental Knowledge of Commercial Fishermen and Its Application to Fisheries Management, Jan. 2003-Dec. 2003, $49,993.

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2001 NOAA, Northeast Consortium. Principal Investigator, An Atlas-based Audit of Fishing Territories, Local Knowledge, and the Potential for Community Participation in Fisheries Science and Management, Sept. 2001-May 2005, $168,953. NOAA, Cooperative Marine Education Research. Principal Investigator, Recreational Fishing and National Standard 8: Assessing Community Impacts of Federal Regulations, Sept. 2001-Aug. 2004, $75,000. NOAA, Cooperative Marine Education Research. Principal Investigator, Spatial Dimensions of Fisheries and Their Implications for Property Rights Alternatives: A Case Study of Three Major Scalloping Areas, Sept. 2001-Aug. 2004, $28,000. Missouri Department of Natural Resources. Co-Principal Investigator (D. Listokin, PI), Economic Impacts of Historic Preservation in Missouri, Mar. 2001-Feb. 2002, $49,820. Rutgers Research Council. Principal Investigator, A Prototype for an Atlas of Fishing Territories, Local Knowledge, and the Potential for Community Participation in Fisheries Science and Management, Sept. 2001-May 2002, $2550.

FELLOWSHIPS AND AWARDS

2020 Rutgers Leadership Academy Fellow. Program for mid-career faculty to broaden their leadership roles at the university and in higher education.

2013-2017 Julie Graham Community Economies Research Fund Fellowship. To attend Community Economies Theory and Writing Retreats, Bolsena, Italy (2013, 2015, 2017).

2010 Fulbright-Hays Scholar Award, Norway, U.S. Department of State. 2009 Public Scholarship and Service Learning Curriculum Development Grant, Rutgers

University. 2003 Bildner Intercultural Fellowship, Rutgers University.

INVITED PARTICIPATION

Invited Working Groups and Scientific Committees:

2020-present International Council for the Exploration of the Seas (ICES), Working Group on Maritime Systems.

2020-present Conservation Law Foundation. Fisheries Management Assessment Working Group.

2019-present Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). Sustainable Use of Wild Species, IPBES Assessment Report (Chap. 1 lead author, Chap. 4 contributing author).

2019-present New England Regional Social Science for Fisheries Management Network.

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2014-2015 International Social Science Council, Transformations to Sustainability. Rebuilding Livelihoods to Meet the Challenges of Climate Change in Post-Crisis Communities.

2013-2014 NOAA, Washington Sea Grant, and University of Washington’s School of Marine Environmental Affairs. Advancing a Social Science Protocol for Assessing Human Wellbeing in Ecosystem-Based Management.

2012-2014 Center for Ocean Solutions, Stanford University. Social-Ecological Resilience in Small-Scale Fisheries.

2012 Center for Ocean Solutions, Stanford University. Exploring the Human Dimensions Relevant to Marine Spatial Planning.

2011-2019 Science and Statistical Committee, New England Fisheries Management Council-Committee.

2010-2011 National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS). A Framework to Assess Ecosystem health in Support of Ecosystem-Based Management of Coastal-Marine Systems.

2002-2007 Social Science Advisory Committee, New England Fisheries Management Council.

2001-2002 Scallop Plan Development Team, New England Fisheries Management Council.

Invited Keynote Addresses:

2017 Keynote speaker at the “Diverse Economies and Livelihoods” workshop, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University and the Sydney Institute for the Environment, University of Sydney, Australia, Mar. 27.

2013 Keynote speaker at the MARE People and the Sea VII conference, Amsterdam, June 26-29.

2012 Keynote speaker at the (no)Boundaries Graduate Student Conference, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, Feb. 11-12.

2008 Keynote speaker at “Sharing Ocean Space: Visions, Knowledge, Strategies, and Tools” seminar, Norwegian College of Fishery Science, University of Tromsø, Norway, Apr. 23-25.

2006 Keynote speaker at the “Sea Use Management and Marine Spatial Planning” workshop, United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Paris, Nov. 7-11.

2004 Keynote speaker at the “Spatial Planning for the Sustainable Management of the Seas” workshop, Maritime Institute at the University of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium, Jan. 15-16.

Invited Speaker and Workshops:

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2020 Speaker in the “Department of Fisheries Oceanography Seminar,” School for Marine Science and Technology, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, MA, Mar. 3.

2018 Speaker and participant at the Floating Laboratory of Action and Theory at Sea (FLOATS),” Columbia University, NY, Nov. 29-30. Speaker and participant at the “8th Nature-Society Workshop,” Pennsylvania State University, College Station, PA, Sept. 21-22. Speaker in the “Development Studies Seminar,” Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Helsinki, Finland, Feb. 9.

2017 Plenary speaker and participant at “Workshop to Assess Marine Spatial Planning Outcomes,” National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC), Annapolis, MD, Sept. 12-13. Speaker and participant at “Fisheries and Fishermen in Marine Spatial Planning” seminar, Universite de Nantes, France, June 14-15. Seminar series speaker, Department of Geography, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, May 5. Speaker and participant at the “Sustainable Seas Challenge” series of workshops, University of Auckland and the Cawthron Institute, New Zealand, Mar. 20-24.

2015 Speaker and participant at “Building the Future of Fisheries: Designs for Government, Market, and Community,” Yale University, Apr. 3. Seminar series speaker, George Perkins Marsh Institute and the Graduate School of Geography, Clark University, Worcester, MA, Mar. 12.

2014 Participant at the “Social Transformations to Sustainability” workshop, International Social Science Council, Potsdam, Germany, Nov. 17-19.

2013 Speaker and participant. “Nature-Society Workshop,” Clark University, Worcester, MA, Sept. 27-28. Seminar series speaker, Economic Sociology Laboratory, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia, Apr. 23.

2012 Speaker and participant at the “Future of Sami Fisheries Research” workshop, University of Tromsø, Norway, Oct. 8. Organizer and speaker, “GIS for Social Science” workshop, Tórshavn, Faroe Islands, May 22-24.

2011 Speaker and participant at “Geographies of Justice: An Interdisciplinary Symposium,” Penn State University, Sept. 30-Oct. 1. Speaker and participant at the “Fisheries Leadership and Sustainability Forum,” Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, Sept. 21-23. Guest lecturer in the Center for Oceans Solutions short course on Marine Policy, Hopkins Marine Laboratory (Stanford University), Monterey, CA, Aug. 14-15.

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Participant at the “Atlantic Wind Energy Workshop,” U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement (BOEMRE), Washington D.C., July 12-14. Speaker and participant at the “Why Do We Value Diversity? A Cross-Disciplinary Workshop on Biocultural Diversity in Global Context,” Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, Munich, Germany, June 4-5. Steering Committee member, speaker and participant, The Role of Social Sciences in Ecosystem-Based Management, a CINAR (Cooperative Institute for the North Atlantic Region) workshop, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Woods Hole, MA, May 2-4. Speaker and participant at the “Social Science and Chesapeake Bay Restoration” workshop, Scientific and Technical Advisory Committee of the Chesapeake Bay Program, Annapolis, MD, Mar. 10. Seminar series speaker, DukeFish Spring Lecture Series, Duke University Marine Laboratory, Beaufort, NC, Feb. 24.

2010 Speaker and participant at the “Local Resources, Markets, and Economic Growth” workshop, Center for Northern Peoples and Kåfjord municipality, Manndalen, Norway, June 21. Seminar series speaker, Fisheries College, University of Tromsø, Norway, Apr. 23. Speaker at the “Fulbright Seminar 2010,” Oslo, Norway, Feb. 11. Seminar series speaker, “Favllis Research Forum 2010,” Sami Center, University of Tromsø, Norway, Feb. 4.

2009 Speaker and participant at the “Sami Rights in Coastal Landscapes and Seascapes: Rights to Natural Resources and New Management Principles” conference, University of Tromsø, Norway, Apr. 22-24.

Speaker (via video link) at the “Ways of Knowing the Sea: The Integration Project” workshop, Memorial University, Newfoundland, Canada, Feb. 5-6.

2008 Speaker and participant at the “Geospatial Technology, Wildlife Conservation, and Community” workshop, Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India, Dec. 14-17. Speaker and participant at the “Socioeconomics, Markets, and Space: Performing Markets” workshop, Hirschberg, Germany, Oct. 16-18. Public lecture series speaker, Gulf of Maine Research Institute, Portland, ME, Mar. 13.

2007 Participant at “The Science of Marine Reserves in the Gulf of Maine,” a COMPASS (Communication Partnership for Science and the Sea) advisory meeting, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, Dec. 6. Panel participant at a public screening and panel discussion of the film Fishing for the Future, Island Institute, Rockland, ME, Aug. 16.

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Participant at “Using Case Studies to Advance a Practical Framework for Ecosystem-Based Management in Marine Systems,” a COMPASS (Communication Partnership for Science and the Sea) workshop, Oregon State University, Portland, OR, Apr. 4-6.

2006 Seminar series speaker, NOAA, Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Woods Hole, MA, Dec. 18. Seminar series speaker, Department of Natural Resources, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, Dec. 6. Seminar series speaker, Department of Geography, Hunter College, CUNY, New York, NY, May 11.

2005 Speaker and participant at the “Mapping Human Activity in the Marine Environment: GIS Tools and Participatory Methods” workshop, NOAA, National Marine Protected Areas Center, MPA Science Institute, Monterey, CA, Nov. 30-Dec. 1. The 2005-2006 Geography Lecture, Department of Political Science, College of Charleston, Charleston, SC, Nov. 16. Seminar series speaker, Duke University Marine Laboratory, Beaufort, NC, Oct. 12. Colloquium speaker, Department of Geography and Regional Studies, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, Feb. 25.

2004 United States delegate and workshop participant, Working Group on Fisheries Systems (WGFS), International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), Apr. 26-30, Lowestoft, United Kingdom.

2003 Colloquium speaker, University of Massachusetts, Department of Geosciences, Amherst, MA, Nov. 7.

2002 Participant in the “Workshop on Social and Economic Measures of Fishing Community Participation in Fisheries,” NOAA, National Marine Fisheries Service, Silver Spring, MD, Apr. 23-25.

2001 Speaker and participant at the Social Science Workshop, New England Fisheries Management Council, Gloucester, MA, May 22-23.

2000 Participant at the “Second Social Research and Ecological Knowledge Systems Seminar.” St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, June 19-23.

1999 Participant and workshop leader at the “Social Research and Ecological Knowledge Systems Seminar.” St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, May 22-29.

CONFERENCE PARTICIPATION

Conferences Organized:

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2004 Organizer (with R. Schroeder and B. Wilson), Environmental Justice Abroad, Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, Oct. 16.

2003 Organizer (with R. Schroeder and K. Albert), Political Ecology at Home, Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, Mar. 29.

Conference Papers and Panels (authors listed only when multiple):

2019 St. Martin, K. and D. Karnad. “The Ontological Politics of Industry Driven Marine Spatial Planning in India.” 10th MARE People and Sea Conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands, June 24-28.

Panelist: “Ex-Keynote: Maritime and Coastal Communities” 10th MARE People and Sea Conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands, June 24-28.

“The Ontological Politics of Interdisciplinary Climate Research.” The American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Washington D.C., Apr. 3-7.

Panelist: “Blue Collar Scholarship.” The American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Washington D.C., Apr. 3-7.

2018 Panelist: “Critical Approaches to Ocean Planning.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, Apr. 10-14. Panelist: “The Commons, Commoning and Co-becomings.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, Apr. 10-14.

2017 “Metrological Struggles: How an Algorithm Constitutes Community in Marine Spatial Planning.” 9th MARE People and Sea Conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands, July 5-8. Panelist: “Global Ambitions: Enhancing Local Capacities and Harnessing the Power of Marine Spatial Planning.” 9th MARE People and Sea Conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands, July 5-8. “Challenging Stakeholders and Constituting Community within the Emerging World of Marine Spatial Planning.” The American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Apr. 5-9.

2016 St. Martin, K. and R. Snyder. “From Commons as Local Development to Commoning as Global Process: Ontological Interventions in Marine Policy and Planning.” The American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, Mar. 29-Apr. 2. Panelist: “A Research Agenda for a ‘Radical’ Marine Spatial Planning.” The American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, Mar. 29-Apr. 2. Young, T., E. Fuller, K. Coleman, M. Provost, M. Pinsky, K. St. Martin. “How Are Fishing Patterns and Fishing Communities Responding to Climate Change? A Test Case from the Northwest Atlantic.” Ocean Sciences Meeting, New Orleans, LA, Feb. 21-26.

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2015 “Aligning Small Scale Fishing with the ‘Solidarity Economy’: Expanding Research and Political Possibilities.” MARE People and the Sea VIII. Amsterdam, June 24-26. “Diverse Economies for Liveable Worlds: The Ethics of Small Scale Fishing.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, Apr. 21-25.

2014 “Instituting ‘Sectors’ in New England Fisheries: Producing Governable Fishermen or a New Foundation for Economic Difference?” Second World Small-Scale Fisheries Congress, Merida, Mexico, Sept. 21-25. “Metrologies for Other Worlds: Indicators of “Wellbeing” and Other Tools for Performing Economic Diversity.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Tampa, FL, Apr. 8-12.

2013 Panelist: “Take Back the Economy book panel.” Rethinking Marxism, Amherst, MA, Sept. 19-22.

2012 “Performing Diverse Economies and Enacting Economic Alternatives: The Case of Community Supported Fisheries.” Embeddedness and Beyond: Do Sociological Theories Meet Economic Realities, Moscow, Russia, Oct. 25-28. St. Martin, K. and J. Olson. “Enacting Community in Marine Ecosystem-Based Management.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New York, NY, Feb. 24-28. Panelist: “Unnatural Neoliberalisms? Debating ‘Post-Neoliberalism’ and ‘Alternatives’ to Neoliberal Natures.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New York, NY, Feb. 24-28. Panelist: “Alternative and Non-Capitalist Political Ecologies Opening Plenary.” Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Conference, Baltimore, MD, Mar. 27-31.

2011 “Performing Alternatives to Neoliberal Natures: The “Case” of Marine Resource Governance.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, Apr. 12-16.

Panelist: “The Shock of the Poetic: Critical Dialogues with Magical Marxism.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, Apr. 12-16. “Enacting Human Dimensions of Ecosystem-Based Management in Maine and Norway.” American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, Feb. 18-21.

2010 Sarmiento, E. and K. St. Martin. “Difference and Domination: The Search for Alterity in Fisheries and Food Networks.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Washington, D.C., Apr. 14-18.

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Snyder, R. and K. St. Martin. “Mapping Maine’s Working Waters: Drawing Communities Together.” Maine Sea Grant Symposium 2010: Marine Science that Matters, Mar. 22. St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Mapping Communities: Linking People to Ocean Spaces.” American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, Feb. 18-22.

2009 St. Martin, K. and R. Snyder. “Alternative Markets and Community Economies in New England Fisheries.” Rethinking Marxism, Amherst, MA, Nov. 5-8. St. Martin, K. and R. Snyder. “Fishing for the Future: Enacting Alternative Markets and Community Economies in the Fisheries of New England.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, Mar. 22-27. J. Myers and K. St. Martin “Integrating Community Use of Fisheries into Marine Ecosystem Based Management.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, Mar. 22-27. Panelist: “Displacing the Natural: Links between Political Ecology, Industrialization, and Consumption.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, Mar. 22-27.

2008 Murray, G., T. Johnson, B. McCay, K. St. Martin, S. Takehashi. “Cumulative Effects, Creeping Enclosure, and the Marine Commons of New Jersey” International Associations for the Study of Commons (IASC), Cheltenham, UK, July 14-18. “Marine Spatial Planning as a Cartography of the Commons.” International Associations for the Study of Commons (IASC), Cheltenham, UK, July 14-18. “Toward a Cartography of the Commons: Constituting the Political and Economic Possibilities of Place.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Apr. 15-19. Panelist “Diverse Economies 3: Toward a Dialog with Political Ecology.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Apr. 15-19.

Panelist “Ethical Political Ecology I.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Apr. 15-19.

2007 “Quantitative and Critical GIS Methods to Foster Community Participation in Natural Resource Management.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, Apr. 17-21. Panelist “Working Nature: Labels, Rents, and Fetishes.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, Apr. 17-21.

2006 St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Mapping Resilience in the Fishing Communities of New England.” Society for Human Ecology-XIV International Conference. Bar Harbor, ME, Oct. 18-21.

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St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Charting Fishing Communities at Sea: Revealing New Potentials for Participation in Fisheries Science and Management.” ICES 2006, Fishing Technology in the 21st Century. Boston, MA, Oct. 30-Nov. 3.

Murray, G., B. McCay, and K. St. Martin. “Cumulative Effects and the ‘Human Environment’: An Oral History Approach.” American Fisheries Society, Annual Meeting. Lake Placid, NY, Sept. 10-14. St. Martin, K., D. Wilson, B. McCay, and T. Johnson. “Scale, Knowledge and Participation in Ecosystem Approach Management Strategies: Lessons from North Sea and Northeastern US.” The ICES Symposium on Fisheries Management Strategies. Galway, Ireland, June 27-30. “Fishermen, Territory, and the Inhabitation of Neoliberal Space.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, Mar. 7-11. Panelist “Politics of Participation.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, Mar. 7-11. “Counter Mapping and the Production of Alternative Subjects and Spaces.” Indigenous Cartographies and Representational Politics-An International Conference. Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, Mar. 2-5.

2005 Hall-Arber, M. and K. St. Martin. “Mapping Fishing Communities At Sea.” American Fisheries Society 135th Annual Meeting, Anchorage, AK, Sept. 11-15. McCay, B. J., T. R. Johnson, K. St. Martin, and D. Wilson. ”Social, Cultural, and Economic Impacts of Working Cooperatively: How is Fishermen’s Knowledge Incorporated?” American Fisheries Society 135th Annual Meeting, Anchorage, AK, Sept. 11-15. “GIS and the (Re)production of a Fisheries Commons.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, Apr. 5-9.

St. Martin, K. and J. Wing. “The Possibility of Heterodox GIS.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, Apr. 5-9.

Panelist, “Feminists in our Midst: How Feminism has Infiltrated the Discipline.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, Apr. 5-9.

2004 “Re-Mapping the Commons and Constituting a Community-based Economy: The Case of Fisheries.” International Association for the Study of Common Property (IASCP), Oaxaca, Mexico, Aug. 9-13. St. Martin, K. and T. Johnson. “Inventing Communities of Fishers in the Northeast U.S.: Emerging Methods for Fisheries Impact Assessment.” International Association for the Study of Common Property (IASCP), Oaxaca, Mexico, Aug. 9-13.

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“How (Non)Capitalism Works: The Production and Maintenance of a Fisheries Commons.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, Mar. 14-19.

2003 “Re-Inserting Community and Re-Inhabiting the Commons: Constituting a Community Economy Discourse in Fisheries.” Marxism and the World Stage, Amherst, MA, Nov. 6-9. “Fixing the Commons.” Political Ecology at Home, a conference organized by the Department of Geography, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, Mar. 29. Stoffle, B. and K. St. Martin. “It Can’t Stand Alone: The Necessity of a Multidisciplinary Approach to the Study of Fishing Communties and The Development of Fishery Policy.” Society for Applied Anthropology, Portland, OR, Mar. 19-23. “The Globalization of Fisheries and the Conditions of Global Resistance.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, Mar. 5-8. “Political Ecology in the Regions IV: North America.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, Mar. 5-8.

2002 “The Emergence of “Community” in Fisheries’ Policy: A New Challenge for Social Science.” The American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, Nov. 19-24.

2001 “Emerging Communities, Emerging Geographies: A New Paradigm for Fisheries Science and Management?” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New York, NY, Feb. 27-Mar. 3. “Making Space for Non-Capitalism: GIS, Community, and the Mapping of Fisheries Resources.” GIS and Critical Geographic Research, Hunter College, New York, NY, Feb. 25.

2000 “Mapping the Spatial Practices of Fishermen and its Implications for Management.” The Marine GIS Technology Conference/Workshop at the Fish Expo/Workboat Atlantic Conference, Providence, RI, Oct. 12-13. “Emerging Geographies, Emerging Communities: Transforming Fisheries Science and Management in New England.” Marxism 2000, Amherst, MA, Sept. 21-24. “Overlaying Communities and Ecosystems: Assessing the Potential for GIS in Fisheries Management.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh, PA, Apr. 4-8. “Uncharted Waters: The Non-Capitalist Spaces of Fishing.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Honolulu, HI, Mar. 23-27. “GIS Against Capitalism?” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Mar. 25-29.

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Panelist, “Beyond the Technology Debate.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Mar. 25-29.

1997 Panelist, “GIS and Social Theory: From Critique to Dialogue.” NESTVAL Meeting, Salem State College, Salem, MA, Nov. 7-9.

“Mapping Class in New England Fishing.” Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Fort Worth, TX, Apr. 2-6.

1996 “Maps and Class: Making Space for Other Class Processes.” Politics and Languages of Contemporary Marxism conference, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, Dec. 5-8.

“Mapping Cultural and Economic Processes in New England Fisheries.” NESTVAL Meeting, Clark University, Worcester, MA, Nov. 1-3.

“Maps as Metaphor or Method: Postmodern Economics and Fisheries Management.” Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Charlotte, NC, Apr. 9-13.

Conference Sessions Organized:

2019 “Reinvigorating Imaginaries of Economic Change: Intersections with Gender, Identity, Race, and Sexuality I and II.”The American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Washington D.C., Apr. 3-7.

2018 “Diverse Economies and Liveable Worlds IV: Intersecting Other Politics and Enacting Other Worlds.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, Apr. 10-14.

2015 “Making Other Worlds Possible VII: How Values, Ethics, and Commons Practices (Re)Format Markets and Economies.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, Apr. 21-25.

2011 “For Julie Graham: Celebrating Julie Graham's Contributions and Exploring the Future of Her Work” and “For Julie Graham: Performing Diverse Economies.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, Apr. 12-16, 2011.

2008 “Geotechnologies, the Commons, and Property Rights.” International Associations for the Study of Commons (IASC), Cheltenham, UK, July 14-18. “Diverse Economies 2: Constituting the Potential of the Commons.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Apr. 15-19.

“Diverse Economies 3: Toward a Dialog with Political Ecology.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Apr. 15-19. “Producing Neoliberal Environments: The Role of Geotechnologies in Contemporary Enclosures and Resistance.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Apr. 15-19.

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2007 “Locating the Diverse Economy: Communities, Commons, and Sites of War.” Paper session at The Association of American Geographers, Middle States Division, Annual Conference, Reading, PA, Nov. 16-17.

2005 “Political Ecologies as Diverse Economies.” Paper session at The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, Apr. 5-9. “The Possibility of Heterodox GIS, I and II.” Paper and panel sessions at The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, Apr. 5-9.

1998 “Beyond the Technology Debate.” Panel session at The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston, MA, Mar. 25-29.

1997 “GIS and Social Theory: From Critique to Dialogue.” Panel session at the NESTVAL Meeting, Salem State College, Salem, MA, Nov. 7-9.

Conference Invited Discussant:

2019 “The Social-Cultural Pillar: Engaging Communities in Fisheries Management.” 10th MARE People and Sea Conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands, June 24-28.

2017 “A Discussion of Book with Author: ‘The Future of Consumer Society’” Mid-Year Fellows Workshop in Honor of Louis O. Kelso, Rutgers University, Jan. 15-17.

2015 “Disastrous Political Ecologies: Critical Perspectives on Disaster.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, Apr. 21-25.

2014 “Post-structural Interventions I: Geo-analytics and a New Epistemology of Poverty .” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Tampa, FL, Apr. 8-12.

“Methodologies and Governance in the Anthropocene .” After 400 PPM: Science, Politics, and Social Natures in the Anthropocene: A Workshop for Junior Scholars, New Brunswick, NJ, Mar. 27-28.

2011 “Food and Alterity in a Diverse Economy: Exploring a Politics of Possibility.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, Apr. 12-16, 2011.

2007 “Locating the Diverse Economy: Communities, Commons, and Sites of War.” The Association of American Geographers, Middle States Division, Annual Conference, Reading, PA, Nov. 16-17. “Politics and the Life Aquatic.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, Apr. 17-21, 2007.

2006 “Feminist Political Ecology.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, Mar. 7-11, 2006.

2005 “Privatization: Property, Nature, Bodies, and Subjectivities.” The Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Denver, CO, Apr. 5-9, 2005.

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2002 “Transformative Commodities and Political Food: Skills, Consumption and Geographic Knowledge.” Association of American Geographers Middle States Division Fall 2002 Meeting, Montclair State University, NJ, Oct. 11-12.

Conference Posters:

2006 Murray, G., B. McCay, and K. St. Martin. “Cumulative Socio-Economic Effects of Management Measures: An Oral History Approach” ICES 2006, Fishing Technology in the 21st Century. Boston, MA, Oct. 30-Nov. 3, 2006.

St. Martin, K. and M. Hall-Arber. “Integrating GIS and Qualitative Research Methods to Map Fishing Communities at Sea” Geographic Information Systems and Ocean Mapping in Support of Fisheries Research and Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, Apr. 11, 2006.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

Editorships

2014-present Editor, Diverse Economies and Livable Worlds book series, University of Minnesota Press.

2014-present Associate Editor, MAST (Maritime Studies), University of Amsterdam, Springer.

Steering and Advisory

2019-present Centre for Maritime Research (MARE), University of Amsterdam.

2019-present Advisory Board, Floating Laboratory of Theory and Action at Sea (FLOATS). 2019-present Steering Committee, Diverse Economies International Conference, planned for

2021, Thessaloniki, Greece. 2013-present Steering Committee, Julie Graham Community Economies Research Fund. 2016-2018 Finance Committee, American Association of Geographers. 2017 Steering Committee, Workshop to Assess Marine Spatial Planning Outcomes,

National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC). 2013-2016 Coordinating Committee, Community Economies Collective. 2009-2013 Science Advisor to COMPASS (Communication Partnership for Science and the

Sea). 2012 Steering Committee, “Characterization of Spatial Patterns of Commercial Fishing

Activity in New England,” Northeast Regional Ocean Council. 2011 Executive Committee, Development of a Conceptual Framework for the

Contribution of the Social Sciences to Ecosystem-Based Fishery Management, CINAR (Cooperative Institute for the North Atlantic Region).

Peer Review – Journals

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ACME | Annals of the Association of American Geographers | Antipode | Applied Geography | Biological Conservation | Cartographica | Coastal Management Journal | Conservation and Society | Ecology and Society | Ecological Applications | Environment and Planning A | Environment and Planning D | Fish and Fisheries | Fisheries Research | Geoforum | Human Geography: A New Journal | MAST (Maritime Studies) | Northeastern Geographer | Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift/Norwegian Journal of Geography | Ocean and Coastal Management | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | Professional Geographer | Progress in Human Geography | Rethinking Marxism | Social and Cultural Geography | Sustainability Science | The Geographical Review | Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

Peer Review – Book Manuscripts

American Fisheries Society | Blackwell Publishing | Duke University Press | Springer Publications.

Peer Review – Grants

Belgian Federal Science Policy Office (BELSPO) | Economic and Social Science Research Council (UK) | National Science Foundation | National Geographic Society | NOAA, North Carolina Sea Grant | Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (Canada).

Peer Review – Tenure and Promotion

State University of New York (SUNY), Buffalo | University of Washington, Bothell | Memorial University, Newfoundland.

Peer Review – External Dissertation

Australian National University | City University of New York (CUNY) | New School, NY | University of British Columbia, Canada | University of Delaware | University of Helsinki, Finland (“First Opponent”) | University of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland | University of New Hampshire | University of Tromsø, Norway (“First Opponent”) | University of Western Sydney, Australia.

University and Departmental Committees

2020 Merit Promotion Evaluation Committee 2019-present School of Graduate Studies, Executive Council. 2018-present School of Graduate Studies, Awards Committee 2019 Department of Geography, Faculty Search Committee 2018 Department of Geography, Faculty Search Committee, Chair. 2017 Department of Geography, Faculty Search Committee, Chair. 2016 Merit Promotion Evaluation Committee 2016 Graduate School New Brunswick, Teaching Award Committee 2016 Department of Geography, Staff Search Committee 2013-2015 Advisory Committee for Appointments and Promotions to Associate Professor

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2012 Tenure Review Package Reading Committee 2012- Graduate School New Brunswick, Teaching Award Committee 2010-2012 Graduate School New Brunswick, Social Sciences Area Committee 2005-2009 Liaison to Rutgers University, OIRT 2005-2007 Livingston College Fellow, Executive Committee 2004-2010 Department of Geography, Web Page Committee 2003-2004 Faculty of Arts and Sciences Curriculum Committee 2003-2005 Faculty of Arts and Sciences Nominating Committee 2003-2004 Livingston College, Global Futures Symposia, Coordinating Fellow 2002-2007 Livingston College Fellow 2002-2009 New Brunswick Faculty Council 2002-present Department of Geography, Curriculum Committee

University Programs Affiliation and Participation

Institute for Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences. Rutgers Climate Institute. Civic Engagement and Service Education Partnerships (CESEP) Faculty Advisory Council. Geospatial Information Science Certificate Program. Human Dimensions of Environmental Change Certificate Program. Rutgers University Geographic Information Science (RUGIS).

TEACHING AND MENTORING

Postdoctoral Advisees:

Rebecca Selden (2018); Talia Young (2016-2018); Eva Papioannou (2015-2017); Sara Wise (2015-2016); Noelle Boucquey (2013-2014); Sofie Joosse (2016-2017, visiting).

Graduate Advisees Current:

Arianna Lindberg (PhD); Sahithya Venkatesan (PhD); Jonah Walters (PhD); Tyler Young (PhD); Kari Elida Eriksen (PhD, University of Tromsø, Norway).

Graduate Advisees Completed:

Divya Karnad (PhD 2018); Eric Sarmiento (PhD 2015); Luke Drake (PhD 2015); Nathaniel Gabriel (PhD 2012); Daniel Danza (MA 2012); Scott Salmon (MA 2011); Michael Mohamed (MA 2006); Michael Davenport (MA 2004); John Wing (MA 2003).

Undergraduate Advising:

Aresty Research Assistant Program, Faculty Mentor (2009, 2015, 2018, 2019). Honors Thesis Advisor (M. Endicott, 2015; J. Schenkel, 2016).

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Directed Research (Y. Lyu, 2015).

Courses Designed and Taught, Rutgers University

Geographic Information Systems. Advanced Geographic Information Systems. History and Theory of Geography. Geography, Space, and Social Theory (Graduate Seminar). Rethinking Economy (Graduate Seminar). Geographic Perspectives (Graduate Seminar). Graduate Directed Readings (topics: STS, Knowledge and Class, Economic Sociology, Scale).

Adjunct and Visiting Teaching

GIS for Fisheries Management, University of Tromsø, Norway (annually since 2013). Environmental Applications of GIS, Tufts University, Medford, MA. Introduction to GIS, Clark University, Worcester, MA. Fuzzy Set Theory and Decision Making with GIS, Department of Geography, University of Salzburg, Austria. GIS Applications to Coastal Science and Engineering, University College Cork, Ireland. GIS and Spatial Thinking, University of Forestry, Szekesfehervar, Hungary. GIS and Remote Sensing in the Coastal Zone, Coastal Zone Canada '94, Halifax, Nova Scotia

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION MEMBERSHIP

Member of the Association of American Geographers (AAG).

Member of the Community Economies Institute (CEI) and Community Economies Research Network (CERN).

Member of the Association for Economic and Social Analysis (AESA).

Member of the International Association for the Study of the Commons (IASC).

MEDIA

2019 Interview: climate change and fishing communities. Press of Atlantic City.

2017 NSF Coastal SEES funded project (see funded research above) covered by the following news agencies: Greenwire (E and E publishing); HNGH (headlines and global news); Newsweek; Weather Channel; Fishery Nation; Wall Street Journal.

2016 Interview: climate change and fishing communities. Wall Street Journal.

2010 Swedish government report on Marine Spatial Planning & The Ecosystem Approach.

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2008 Research featured in National Fisherman article “Charting At-Sea Communities.”

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