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Dr. Joseph Ripberger is an assistant professor of political science and deputy director for research at the Center for Risk and Crisis Management at the University of Oklahoma. He is a member of the OK NSF EPSCoR Track-1 RII Award titled Socially Sustainable Solutions for Water, Carbon, and Infrastructure Resilience in Oklahoma. The $20 million research project is a social science-led, multi-disciplinary collaboration among social, physical, biological, engineering, and computational scientists. More than thirty researchers from across the state are working together on the project, which began July 1, 2020.
Currently, Dr. Ripberger's research focuses on risk and public policy with an emphasis on weather, climate, and water policy. His interests include climate variability and human adaptation in Oklahoma, social responses to changes in complex river systems, and a systematic assessment of the watch, warning, and advisory system in the United States.
Dr. Ripberger's research supports the Social Dynamics Research Framework aspect of the OK NSF EPSCoR project. Human perceptions and beliefs are at the heart of the most critical challenges facing Oklahoma. They shape behaviors and collective decisions, and therefore our responses to the changing world. Using data from the M-SISNet, the social dynamics team will (a) measure and model perceptions and beliefs underpinning the social narratives that shape debates among the public, opinion leaders, and scientists about the emerging, interconnected, and salient threats to Oklahomans identified in our research focus areas; (b) evaluate how widely shared narratives have undermined collective action to pursue convergent solutions to wicked problems that recognize and address the array of anthropogenic drivers of these threats; and (c) measure social valuation for solutions using willingness-to-pay for potential sustainable solutions.
Coupled with the project’s four interconnected focus areas, the Social Dynamics framework provides the structure and direction of the EPSCoR project. The distinct but interrelated focus areas and the research questions they pursue were selected because they deepen understanding of overlapping natural and human dynamics that drive critical problems facing Oklahoma today. Treated individually as stand-alone problems, they are susceptible to social polarization and policy gridlock. Addressed as an integrated set, these dynamics offer the prospect for revised understandings of problem boundaries and provide the potential for informed value tradeoffs across social groups that can enable socially sustainable solutions to address our most pressing problems.
Currently, Dr. Ripberger's research focuses on risk and public policy with an emphasis on weather, climate, and water policy. His interests include climate variability and human adaptation in Oklahoma, social responses to changes in complex river systems, and a systematic assessment of the watch, warning, and advisory system in the United States.
Dr. Ripberger's research supports the Social Dynamics Research Framework aspect of the OK NSF EPSCoR project. Human perceptions and beliefs are at the heart of the most critical challenges facing Oklahoma. They shape behaviors and collective decisions, and therefore our responses to the changing world. Using data from the M-SISNet, the social dynamics team will (a) measure and model perceptions and beliefs underpinning the social narratives that shape debates among the public, opinion leaders, and scientists about the emerging, interconnected, and salient threats to Oklahomans identified in our research focus areas; (b) evaluate how widely shared narratives have undermined collective action to pursue convergent solutions to wicked problems that recognize and address the array of anthropogenic drivers of these threats; and (c) measure social valuation for solutions using willingness-to-pay for potential sustainable solutions.
Coupled with the project’s four interconnected focus areas, the Social Dynamics framework provides the structure and direction of the EPSCoR project. The distinct but interrelated focus areas and the research questions they pursue were selected because they deepen understanding of overlapping natural and human dynamics that drive critical problems facing Oklahoma today. Treated individually as stand-alone problems, they are susceptible to social polarization and policy gridlock. Addressed as an integrated set, these dynamics offer the prospect for revised understandings of problem boundaries and provide the potential for informed value tradeoffs across social groups that can enable socially sustainable solutions to address our most pressing problems.
研究兴趣
论文共 135 篇作者统计合作学者相似作者
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Political Psychology (2024)
Fusion Science and Technologypp.1-17, (2024)
Anna C. Wanless, Sam A. Stormer,Joseph T. Ripberger,Makenzie J. Krocak,Andrew S. Fox, David B. Hogg,Hank C. Jenkins‐Smith,Carol L. Silva,Scott E. Robinson, Warren S. Eller
Weather, Climate, and Society (2023)
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NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGY (2023)
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Anna Wanless, Sam Stormer,Joseph T. Ripberger,Makenzie J. Krocak,Andrew Fox, David Hogg,Hank Jenkins-Smith,Carol Silva, Scott E. Robinson, Warren S. Ellerf
WEATHER CLIMATE AND SOCIETYno. 4 (2023): 1113-1118
Abby Bitterman,Makenzie J. Krocak,Joseph T. Ripberger,Sean Ernst,Joseph E. Trujillo-Falcon, America Gaviria Pabon,Carol Silva,Hank Jenkins-Smith
WEATHER AND FORECASTINGno. 7 (2023): 1095-1106
NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGYpp.1-12, (2023)
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Societyno. 4 (2023): E768-E780
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Michael A. Long,Maggie León-Corwin, Kaitlin Peach, Kristin L. Olofsson,Joseph T. Ripberger,Kuhika Gupta,Carol L. Silva,Hank Jenkins-Smith
Energy Research & Social Science (2023): 103179-103179
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Deven Carlson,Joseph Ripberger,Hank Jenkins-Smith,Carol Silva,Nina Carlson, Elizabeth Bell,Kuhika Gupta
Environmental Research Communicationsno. 11 (2023): 115006-115006
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