Postdoctoral Associate - GCR: Convergent Anthropocene Systems

Updated: 3 months ago
Location: Blacksburg, VIRGINIA
Deadline: ; Open until filled

This postdoctoral position is funded by a recently award National Science Foundation Growing Convergence Research project titled: GCR: Convergent Anthropocene Systems (Anthems) – A System-of-Systems Paradigm. The project will develop a systems-of-systems (SoS) convergence paradigm that includes an SoS computational framework, an SoS decision-support system, and an SoS pedagogy, enabling diverse stakeholders to integratively address the suite of societal challenges of the Anthropocene (e.g., climate change and impacts,
renewable energy, adaptive infrastructure, disasters, pandemics, food insecurity, biodiversity loss) and catalyzing a major transformation in our national and global approach to science and engineering. The SoS convergence paradigm will be developed, implemented, and validated in close collaboration with the Chesapeake Bay Program (CBP), focusing on the Chesapeake Bay Watershed (CBW) region. The CBP is a consortium of governmental and non-governmental entities that manage the CBW, and through their committee structure and outreach provide an avenue for effective stakeholder engagement. The CBW is home to over 17 million people and the CBP stakeholder community needs integrated modeling tools to examine synergies (e.g., nutrient reduction and flood risk mitigation) and tradeoffs (e.g., nutrient reduction and fish productivity) across multiple systems. Together, the CBW and the CBP provide a real-world testbed for the SoS convergence paradigm, enabling intellectually-diverse researchers to address multiple interdependent societal challenges (eutrophication, food and agriculture, and economic growth) by integrating across multiple systems (land use, watershed, economic,
estuary and governance) and multiple disciplines (environmental engineering, city and regional planning, planning policy and design, civil engineering, geography, industrial and systems engineering, political economy and public policy).

Working in close collaboration with the lead PI (John Little) and Co-PIs (Shalini Misra and Theo Lim) at Virginia Tech, the Postdoctoral Associate will be responsible for integrating models (land-use, watershed, and economic systems) in the SoS framework and for helping to manage the entire project. The successful candidate will be responsible for computational research including system modeling and development of simulation software, as well as writing publications, and collaborating in a transdisciplinary team environment. The Postdoctoral Associate will also work in close collaboration with Amro Farid, a systems engineering expert at Stevens Institute of Technology, who is the co-lead on the project.

The Postdoctoral Associate is also expected to spend time mentoring PhD students and attending project meetings. The Postdoctoral Associate will have the opportunity to learn best practices in proposal preparation and will receive guidance and training in the preparation of manuscripts for scientific journals and presentations at conferences. Occasional travel is required to attend annual project meetings and conferences.