The Ted Bradshaw Student Engaged Scholars Award honors one of the CRC's original visionaries. As Bradshaw Scholars, select UCD undergraduate and graduate students spend 6-10 hours per week during Winter and Spring quarters, working on applied and policy-oriented research projects with community partners and UCD faculty.
The UC Davis Center for Regional Change, or CRC, is entering a new chapter, focused on renewing its mission and driving meaningful change for both the campus and the communities it serves. As part of this new direction, the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (CA&ES) has appointed Professor Michael Rios to help guide the CRC’s framework.
University of California, Davis, researchers have launched a new online database that can help community members, policymakers and advocates view and compare local governments’ vision for the future with the California General Plan Database Mapping Tool.
Hosted by: UC Davis Office of Research
In a multi-year project (2018-2020) funded by the California Department of Fish & Wildlife, researchers from UC Davis Center for Regional Change (CRC) and
To immerse community expertise into academic research and public policy, the UC Davis Institute of Transportation Studies (ITS), the Energy and Efficiency Institute (EEI), the Center for Regional Change, and the Policy Institute for Energy, Environment and the Economy in collaboration with members of the Transportation Equity and the Environmental Justice Advisory Group (TEEJAG), are launching the Environmental Justice Fellowship program (EJF).
The dean’s office of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (CA&ES) is conducting a search for Faculty Director of the Center for Regional Change.
Statistically speaking, George Villa shouldn’t have been a college student. Villa studied community and regional development at UC Davis – after serving a cumulative of 13-plus years in prison.
In the 20th century, California’s black farmworkers settled in waterless colonies. The history endures underground, through old pipes, dry wells and shoddy septic tanks.