Alexander More, PhD Associate Professor

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Appointments (Current)

Associate Professor of Environmental Health, Manning College of Nursing & Health Sciences, UMass, Boston, 2022-Present
Director, ECHO (Environmental Center for Climate Change Communications, Conservation, Health & Ocean research), 2020-Present
– Director, Climate and Health Communications & Research Program, 2022-Present
– Group Leader (Climate & Health) & Research Affiliate, SoHP at Harvard University, 2022-present
– Assistant Research Professor, Climate Change Institute, 2017-Present
– Research Associate, Max Planck – Harvard Research Center, 2016-Present
– Managing Editor, MAPS at Harvard, 2016-Present
– Research Associate, SoHP at Harvard, 2017-Present

Awards, Honors and Professional Memberships

Fellow: Royal Society for Public Health, Royal Geographical Society, Theodore Roosevelt Institute (2019-2022), Dumbarton Oaks Research Library (2010)

Member: National Environmental Health Association, American Geophysical Union, American Public Health Association, Planetary Health Alliance

Member and UN Representative, Global Council for Science and the Environment (2022)


Appointments (Past)

– Chair & Director, Department of Public Health & MPH, Long Island University, NYC, 2021-2022
– Associate Professor of Environmental Health, Long Island University, NYC, 2019-2022
– Director of the Honors College, Long Island University, NYC, 2019-2022
– Group Leader (Climate & Health) & Research Associate, SoHP at Harvard University, 2018-2022
Managing Director, World Ocean Forum, 2018-2019
– Postdoctoral Fellow, Initiative for the Science of the Human Past, Harvard University, 2015-2018
– Postdoctoral Fellow, Climate Change Institute, University of Maine, 2015-2017
– Lecturer on U.S. and European health and welfare, Harvard University 2015-16
– Teaching Fellow and Doctoral Candidate, Harvard University, 2008-2014

Education

PhD, Harvard University
MA, Harvard University
BA, Washington University in St. Louis

Languages: English, Italian, French, Latin, Greek, Spanish, German.

Biography

Dr. Alexander More's research focuses on the impact of climate change on population and ecosystem health and the economy. Dr. More is author of several landmark studies of the impact of climate on pandemics and pollution, and an active contributor to the fields of environmental health, health economics, sustainability and planetary health. By using ultra-high-resolution climatic, epidemiological, ecological and archeoscientific records, Dr. More brings recent drastic environmental changes into a broader perspective, one that allows stark comparisons between current and past trends in temperature, pollution, pandemic disease, and extreme weather, all of which directly impact food production, human health, economic prosperity, and political stability.

In addition to academic journals, his work has been featured in The Washington Post, CNN, The Guardian, Popular Science, Forbes, Smithsonian Magazine, Newsweek, Natural History Magazine, Der Spiegel, Archaeology Magazine, Süddeutsche Zeitung, Frankfurter Allgemein, AGU's Eos, Science et vie, and more than 150 other print and online publications (see media page). He has been a keynote speaker at the Global Exploration Summit, the Milstein Science Series at the American Museum of Natural History, and TEDx.

His findings bring him to study government responses to environmental and public health crises. He is completing a book on the origins of welfare and health care policy in the western world, a long-standing interest that gained him a position in the Office of Senator Ted Kennedy while he was drafting the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). More’s interests have brought him to do fieldwork and expeditions across Europe, North America and Oceania, including several underwater surveys in the Mediterranean, North Atlantic and South Pacific. Dr. More is a published photographer, specializing in underwater, archaeological and wildlife subjects related to his research, and is the Managing Editor of Harvard's Digital Atlas (MAPS).

 

Raised and educated in Italy and Greece in the early part of his life, More moved permanently to New York City to complete his secondary education. He attended college in Chicago and eventually Washington University in St. Louis. Immediately after graduation, he continued his studies in an interdisciplinary PhD program at Harvard University, where he has taught ten different courses and earned as many teaching awards. He has supervised seven theses, with topics ranging from the creation and evolution of Medicaid and Medicare legislation in the United States, to the establishment of the public health system in post-revolutionary Mexico and the Sultanate of Oman, the early history of modern foreign relations, the leading role of women in the creation of the World Health Organization (WHO), and the first food enrichment policies in interwar United States.

 

Dr. More is a frequent contributor in media coverage of climate change, public health and economic trends. His work extends into the non-profit world, where he has supervised a Harvard-Columbia student-run, public-health/environmental initiative in Bolivia—now a full-fledged NGO, Refresh Bolivia—securing initial funding with two grants from the Ford Fund. More also served as Managing Director of the World Ocean Forum, and serves as Communications and Education Director at Blue Ocean Watch, a climate-oriented ocean non-profit. More is a fellow and former director of the Explorers Club, a former fellow of the Theodore Roosevelt Institute and Dumbarton Oaks Research Library in Washington, D.C., and a recipient of the Arango Fund and Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation Research Grants.