Rice Farmers India Shutterstock.jpg

I am a Post-Doctoral fellow in the Sustainability Science Program at Harvard Kennedy School and a lecturer in Environmental Science and Public Policy at Harvard College. I received my PhD in Public Policy from Harvard University in 2018.

I study the role of institutions (rules, norms, culture and beliefs) in shaping development pathways in the Anthropocene System and how actors can reorient institutions to meet sustainable development goals. I am particularly interested in the consequences of inequality and maldistributions of power on development pathways.  My empirical work focuses on agriculture and food systems, specifically why the poorest farmers often fail to benefit from development programs and agricultural technologies. Practically, I hope my work will contribute to more equitable access to resources and the fruits of technological innovation.

My work has been published in Annual Review of Environment and Resources and Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences (PNAS).

Reference

William Clark: william_clark@hks.harvard.edu

 
Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
— Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development (aka Brundtland Commission), 1987