Administration

Jennifer Thomsen

Program Director, Parks, Tourism and Recreation Management

Contact

Office
CHCB (Clapp) 410
Phone
862.216.3035 (cell)
Email
jennifer.thomsen@umontana.edu
Curriculum Vitae
View/Download CV

Personal Summary

Ever since I can remember, I have had a passion for conservation, wildlife, outdoors recreation, and travel starting with childhood explorations in the woods and my first trip to Africa. I am fortunate that my experiences have led me to a profession where I can research and teach in the field of park, recreation, and tourism management. Bridging my natural science background in wildlife and fisheries biology with my social science background in parks and conservation area management, my research focuses on four main areas: 1) stakeholder collaboration associated with large landscape conservation, 2) sustainable tourism and protected area management, 3) the relationship between human and ecosystem health, and 4) the relationship between environmental learning and pro-environmental behavior. 

My work in large landscape conservation has addressed the challenges, opportunities, and outcomes associated with stakeholder collaboration and how these groups evolve over time in their transboundary ecosystem management. I have conducted work in the Southern Appalachians and the Crown of the Continent regions in North America, have also been heavily involved in the biosphere reserve program, and will be expanding my research to international locations and large landscape conservation networks.

My work in sustainable tourism and protected area management focuses on the management of resources that balances the environmental, social/cultural, and economic needs of diverse stakeholders. I have explored unique types of tourism, such surf and medical voluntourism, as well as ecotourism, nature-based tourism, and adventure tourism. My work has taken place in the Glacier National Park, Yellowstone National Park, the Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail, the Flathead River System in addittion to international locations such as Dominican Republic, Haiti, Peru, Namibia, Zambia, and Brazil. 

My third research area focuses on the relationship between human health and ecosystem health. I have worked with the National Park Service to co-author the Healthy Parks, Healthy People Science plan and am collaborating with partners to explore the impacts and effectiveness of Park Prescription programs on the physical and mental health of participants. Working with a non-profit medical voluntourism group in Haiti, I have been able to conduct focus groups in multiple communities assessing the relationship between the health of their water and resources to their personal health to support how voluntourism groups can best address health issues. 

Environmental education and interpretation has been a common thread throughout my career. Working at an environmental education facility and then at the South Carolina Aquarium, I recognized the importance of environmental education in reaching diverse audiences to gain support for conservation and encourage pro-environmental behaviors. In this field, I helped conduct an assessment of the most effective techniques and strategies used by interpreters in National Park Service units throughout the country. This area of study also encompassed a large part of my postdoctoral research, which explored how people in the San Francisco Bay Area learn about the environment and form their environmental values and how these aspects relate to sense of place and their participation in sustainable behaviors. 

While I also am involved in other research projects, these four areas serve as the focal areas of my research and teaching. Montana is an ideal location to research and teach about these four topics and I am eager to work with students to help them fulfill their own passions in their future careers!

Education

Post-doc, Woods Institute for the Environment and Graduate School of Education: 2015, Stanford University

Ph.D. Park, Recreation, and Tourism Management: 2014, Clemson University

M.S. Wildlife and Fisheries Biology: 2007, Clemson University

B.S. Wildlife and Fisheries Biology: 2006, Clemson University

 

Courses Taught

PRTM 141: National Parks Course

PTRM 210: Nature-based Tourism 

PTRM 484: Field Techniques 

PTRM 595: Stakeholder Collaboration and Conflict across Spatial and Temporal Scales 

PTRM 595: Protected Area Management and Sustainable Tourism

NRSM 594: Conservation and Social Science Graduate Seminar 

 

Research Interests

Large landscape conservation

Stakeholder collaboration

Ecotourism and sustainability

Interpretation and education

Sense of place and sustainable behavior

Outdoor recreation benefits and impacts

Linkage between health of parks and people

Transboundary wildlife conflict and management