kikij

kikij's picture
Lekelia (Kiki)
Jenkins
kikij@u.washington.edu
Assistant Professor, School of Marine and Environmental Affairs

Education

  • B.S., 1997, University of Maryland Baltimore County
  • Ph.D., 2006, Duke University

Research Interests

  • The rigorous, empirical study of the process of conservation, especially marine conservation
  • The theoretical and empirical study of the invention and adoption of marine conservation technologies, especially bycatch reduction devices
  • The study of the integration of “lay” expertise into scientific decision-making
  • The study of gear substitution as a means to reduce bycatch and habitat impacts of fishing gear .

Biosketch

Lekelia “Kiki” Jenkins is a native of Baltimore, Maryland, where she grew up fishing and crabbing recreationally on the Chesapeake Bay. During the summers she prowled the grounds of the Baltimore Zoo as a junior zookeeper, learning about endangered species and conservation. A Meyerhoff Scholar and UNCF/Merck Fellow, she graduated with a B.S. in Biology from the University of Maryland Baltimore County. As a NSF Graduate Fellow, Kiki received her PhD from Duke University by pioneering a new field of study into the invention and adoption of marine conservation technology. Since then, she has worked as an environmental consultant for the Natural Resource Defense Council, while also actively participating in the burgeoning field of Studies in Expertise and Experience. As an AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow with the National Marine Fisheries Service’s Office of International Affairs, she helped implement new regulations to address bycatch and IUU fishing by foreign nations.  In 2009,  Kiki came to the University of Washington, where her research is supported by the David H. Smith Conservation Research Fellowship  and the Ford Foundation Diversity Postdoctoral Fellowship. She is now an Assistant Professor at the School of Marine and Environmental Affairs. Kiki’s research interests center on t he rigorous, empirical study of the process of conservation in order to distill conservation theory and codify best practices, specifically exploring marine conservation, bycatch, conservation technology, invention, technology transfer, and diffusion of innovations. Her hobbies include teaching and participating in all forms of dance, mentoring, reading, traveling, eating good food with a view, writing poetry, costuming, imagining the possibilities, loving her friends, and loving her life.

Curriculum Vitae

Dr. Jenkins

Selected Honors and Awards

Women of Power in the Environment Honoree - September 2011

Runner-Up Postdoctoral Category, AAAS Science Dance Contest

The Ocean Conservancy’s LIVBLUE Challenge Award

Sea Turtle Symposium Archie Carr Best Student Presentation Award

Selected Publications and Reports

Jenkins, L.D. 2010. Profile and Influence of the Successful Fisher-Inventor of Marine Conservation Technology. Conservation & Society. 8:44-54.

Jenkins, L.D. 2010. The Evolution of a Trading Zone: A Case Study of the Turtle Excluder Device. Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science. 41:75-85

Jenkins, L.D. 2008. Gear conversion as a means to reduce bycatch and habitat impacts in the U.S. West Coast sablefish fishery. Natural Resources Defense Council. 56pp.

Jenkins, L.D. 2008. The end game is diffusion: adoption of turtle excluder devices and the diffusion process. In: Proceedings of the Twenty-Fifth Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conservation. eds. Rodhe, K.H., Gayheart, K., and Shanker, K. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-582, 204 pp.

Jenkins, L.D. 2007. Bycatch: Interactional expertise, dolphins and the U.S. tuna fishery . Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science. 38:698-712.

Jenkins, L.D. 2007. Key factors in the invention of marine conservation technology: A case study of TEDs. In: Proceedings of the Twenty-Fourth Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conservation. eds. Mast, R.B., Hutchinson, B.J., Hutchinson, and A.H. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-267, 205 pp.

Jenkins, L.D. 2002.The science and policy behind proposed sea turtle conservation measures. Endangered Species Update. 19:35-40.

Selected Media Appearances

Martinez, L. A., 2008. Science and Technology Policy, transcript of interview about globalization and science policy, AWIS Magazine, 37(4):20.

Wood, J, 2010. Lindbergh Foundation awards grants, April 12, 2010, named as an award recipient in the article. GeneralAviationNews.com.

AAAS News, AAAS Policy Fellows Discuss Ways to Increase Diversity in S&T Workforce, quoted in the article, July 9, 2008

Environmental Research Web, Fishing Gear Improvements Reduce Bycatch, quoted in article about an the 2007 AAAS symposium, February 17, 2007