Victoria Herrmann

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Victoria Herrmann is an American polar geographer and climate change communicator. She is the managing director of The Arctic Institute,[1] a National Geographic Explorer,[2] and Assistant Research Professor at Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service,[3] where her research focuses on Arctic cooperation and politics and climate change adaptation in the US and US Territories.

Herrmann is also an American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) IF/THEN Ambassador and works to empower girls and women in STEM.[4] She has been named on Forbes 30 Under 30 list,[5] the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s 40 under 40 list,[6] a North American Young Leader by Friends of Europe,[7] one of 100 Most Influential People in Climate Policy worldwide by Apolitical,[8] and as part of the inaugural "CAFE 100 – extraordinary change-makers who are taking action to address some of the most pressing problems in America and around the world" by former US Attorney Preet Bharara.[9]

Born in Paramus, New Jersey, Herrmann took an early interest in environmental issues.[10] She was raised Jewish and has cited her grandparents’ experience as Holocaust survivors as the inspiration of her research and advocacy on the impacts of climate change on disenfranchised communities.[11][12][13][14] She attended Paramus High School.[15]

In 2012 she completed a B.A. in International Relations and Art History at Lehigh University and was subsequently awarded a one-year Junior Fellowship at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, DC, where she worked on sustainable transport and climate policy in cities.[16] Herrmann moved to Canada in 2013 as a Fulbrightgrantee, completing an M.A. in International Affairs at Carleton University’s Norman Paterson School of International Affairs.[17] In 2014 she was awarded a Gates Cambridge Scholarship for doctoral studies at the Scott Polar Research Institute. In 2017 Herrmann was awarded the Bill Gates Sr. Award for a commitment to improving the lives of others,[18] and in 2019 received her PhD from the University of Cambridge. In the last year of her PhD, Herrmann spent three months at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine as a fellow in The Christine Mirzayan Science and Technology Policy Fellowship program.[19]

Arctic policy and migration research

Herrmann joined The Arctic Institute in 2015, and in 2016 became the organization's President and managing director.[1] She directs strategic planning to achieve its mission to inform policy for a just, sustainable, and secure Arctic. Herrmann oversees the implementation of global research partnerships and manages a team across North America and Europe. Under Herrmann's tenure, The Arctic Institute has consistently ranked as a top-75 think tank by the University of Pennsylvania’s Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program[20] and was shortlisted by Prospect Magazine as the best US Energy and Environment Think Tank.[21]

She is a recognized expert in Arctic policy, and has testified before the U.S. House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee[22] and has briefed the U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee[23] and the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources on Arctic security and climate change.[24] In 2017-2018 she served as the Alaska Review Editor for the fourth National Climate Assessment[25] and currently serves as one of two US Delegates to the Social and Human Working Group of the International Arctic Science Committee.[26] Herrmann has sat on the Board of Directors of the Arctic Research Consortium of the U.S. since 2019[27] and currently serves as a co-chair of the Arctic Youth Network Board of Directors.[28]

Herrmann's research focuses on climate-induced migration, displacement, and relocation in the Arctic, South Pacific, and United States. In 2016–2017, she served as the lead researcher for America's Eroding Edges project, a National Geographic-funded research project.[29][30] She traveled across the country interviewing 350 local leaders to identify what's needed most to safeguard coastal communities against the unavoidable impacts of climate change.[31] In partnership with the National Trust for Historic Preservation and with support from a JMK Innovation Prize, a follow-up project to Eroding Edges is bringing technical assistance directly to small and medium-sized towns that are geographically remote and socioeconomically vulnerable.[32] Her current National Geographic-funded research project, Culture On The Move: Climate Change, Displacement, and Relocation in Fiji, investigates the consequences of climate-induced relation on cultural heritage.[33]

She was the inaugural Principal Investigator of the Research Coordination Network Arctic Migration in Harmony: An Interdisciplinary Network on Littoral Species, Settlements, and Cultures on the Move funded by a National Science Foundation.[34][35] Herrmann developed the 700+ member international network to facilitate open communication, foster cross-disciplinary exchange, and build new collaboration teams of scientists, stakeholders, and practitioners to investigate the ways in which the drivers and consequences of Arctic coastal migrations intersect and interact with one another and identify the implications for society.

Climate change communication

Selected bibliography

References

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