Dr. Maria
Elisa Christie
Program Director for Women in International Development,
Virginia Tech.
Phone: (540) 231-4297
E-mail:
mechristie@vt.edu
Expertise: Gender Equity Specialist
Education:
Ph.D., Geography,University of Texas at Austin, 2003.
Emphasis: Cultural and Political Ecology; Gender, Environment, and Development.
M.A.,Spanish and Women's Studies, University of Oregon, 1994.
B.A., International Studies, History, and Romance Languages, University of
Oregon, 1983.
Languages: Spanish and English (Native), French (Fluent)
Countries of work experience: Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Bolivia, Tunisia, Kenya, Uganda, Senegal, Republic of Guinée, and Mali.
Experience Summary: Dr. Christie
has over twenty years of experience in international development and environment
working with a variety of development, research, and policy NGOs throughout the
developing world and with local, state, and federal governments in the US and
Mexico. She has played a key role launching new projects that support
international collaboration. For instance, with the Institute for Food and
Development Policy and other organizations she helped start the Pesticide Action
Network (PAN) and organize its first meeting to bring together farmworker,
environmental, and consumer groups in Latin America. She opened and managed
Oxfam America's first and model regional field office. Later, she joined the
original team to set up the US office of the Environmental Law Alliance (E-LAW)
as Development Director, helping to establish a diversified funding base in its
first year of operations and developing funding strategies for its international
network of public interest environmental lawyers and scientists. She was the Ten
State Coordinator on the US-Mexico border working with state environmental
agencies and the Western Governor's Association to create a permanent
bi-national coordination mechanism for information and technical exchange; with
Texas, she organized and facilitated the first annual Ten State Retreat: A
Regional Approach to the US-Mexico Border Environment, subsequently working with
four other host states; results include a series of state-to-state strategic
plans between Texas, New Mexico, and four Mexican border states which Dr.
Christie was a responsible for writing and coordinating. In the Caribbean and
Central America, Dr. Christie worked with INIES/CRIES, a network of social and
economic research institutions to obtain funding for collaborative research,
manage relations with donors and international organizations, and organize
conferences and public relations.
Dr. Christie's research focuses on
gendered spaces and everyday life in nature/society relations, participatory
research methodologies, kitchens and gardens, and women's reciprocity networks.
Her publications include an article in The Geographical Review's special issue
on gardens for which she was guest editor. She has a pending article with
Gender, Place, and Culture and a book under contract with the University of
Texas Press entitled Women of the Circle: Kitchenspace: Women, Fiestas, and
Everyday Life in Central Mexico.
As Program Director for Women in
International Development, Dr. Christie's role is to provide leadership within
OIRED to ensure that all projects and programs are gender sensitive and will
have a positive effect on the most disadvantaged beneficiaries, many of whom are
women, and to work with faculty at Virginia Tech in order to increase their
capacity to effectively address gender issues in international research and
grant proposals. She serves as gender equity specialist on the SANREM and IPM
CRSPs managed by Virginia Tech and is also a Peanut CRSP PI.
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Dr. Maria Christie |



