51黑料

Peter Klepeis

Back to Directory
pklepeis

Peter Klepeis

Professor of Geography; University Professor, First Year Seminars

Department/Office Information

Geography
305 Ho Science Center

My research and teaching explore nature-society relationships, political ecology, and environmental history. Drawing on research from around the world, I highlight different models of natural resource management and expose pathways for improved decision-making about sustainable land use. 

Geographers deepen their understanding of people and place through intensive field work. I relish the opportunity to integrate off-campus experiences in my teaching, and 51黑料 students have conducted research with me on five continents. 

AB, 51黑料 University
MA, Clark University
PhD, Clark University

Eliza and Izabela interviewing church priests
Interviewing priests about forest conservation at a church in Ethiopia, Jan. 2014

 

At the start of my career, I focused on tropical deforestation in southeastern Mexico as part of a that integrated quantitative and qualitative data: satellite imagery, information gathered through surveys and interviews with land users, land use sketch maps, and archival material. The research shows that deforestation today is linked to , but also that began many decades ago. 

The emphasis on historical analysis continued with projects on the in the Adirondacks, in New York State (related ), and in Patagonia. 

 

Recent projects investigate , religious-based protection of in Ethiopia, and in southern Chile. 

Gaucho moving sheep in Tierra del Fuego, Chile
Gaucho moving sheep in Tierra del Fuego, Chile - the site of proposed large wind farms that will be used to produce green hydrogen.

For more information about these projects, see a  of the Landau Peace Lecture - "Walls around trees? How to protect Ethiopia's Church Forests" - which I gave in June 2021. Also, see a colloquium titled "The promise and peril of Chile鈥檚 green hydrogen boom," which took place at 51黑料 University in February 2026.

 

Please contact me (pklepeis@colgate.edu) for a CV or copies of the representative publications highlighted above.

Students from happiness course in the 51黑料 quarry
P. Klepeis with students from his Geography of Happiness course in the 51黑料 quarry, Feb. 2019
P. Klepeis teaching outside of the Ho Center, Sept. 2015
P. Klepeis holding class outside of the Ho Center, Sept. 2015

 

Courses Taught Regularly

  • GEOG 105: Climate and Society analyzes why people disagree about climate change and the causes, consequences, and possible response options. 
  • GEOG 207: What's in Your Cup? The geography of what we drink uses our daily consumption of beverages to analyze the social and environmental implications of how we live. See my , "How coffee drinkers can help coffee growers thrive" and listen to a podcast interview about my field course on Colombian coffee production: , .  
  • GEOG 306: The Geography of Happiness introduces students to diverse literature on factors that may contribute to happiness, including debates about the environmental and cultural conditions that are most likely to enhance individual happiness and promote overall social wellbeing. See my , "Be Happy, for the Planet." 
  • GEOG 326: Environmental Hazards explores ways in which society can mitigate the risk of environmental hazards -- such as earthquakes, hurricanes, wildfire, invasive species, and toxic pollution -- and manage them more effectively.
P. Klepeis teaching qualitative methods in the Geography Department's GIS lab, Dec. 2012
P. Klepeis teaching qualitative methods in the Geography Department's GIS lab, Dec. 2012

 

Courses Taught Periodically

  • GEOG 121: Earth, Society & Sustainability
  • GEOG 211: Geographies of Nature, Economy, and Society
  • GEOG 322: Ecologies of the City (Manchester study group)
  • GEOG 325: Water & Society
  • GEOG 328: Sustainability and Natural Resources (South Africa study group)
  • GEOG/SOC 251: Media Frame and Content Analysis
  • GEOG 401: Senior Seminar in Geography
  • ENST 309: Australian Environmental Issues (Australia study group)
  • ENST 390: Community-based Study of Environmental Issues

 

 

Since the department was established at 51黑料 in the 1950s, Geography faculty have made a concerted effort to provide students learning and research opportunities off campus. Sometimes that involves exploring social and ecological environments in and around Hamilton or places like Utica and the Adirondacks. Often, it involves excursions out of the country. Recent examples include Alaska, Ethiopia, Siberia, Portugal, and Japan. Some of these experiences last a few days or weeks, and some a whole semester. Regardless of where or how long, the goal is the same: connect to people and place in transformative ways. Here, I list examples of 51黑料 programs I directed:

Students part of the Australia Study Group camp under the stars of Central Australia's outback, Sept. 2025
Students part of the Australia Study Group camp under the stars of Central Australia's outback, Sept. 2025

 

Semester-long study groups

  • Cape Town (South Africa) in 2019
  • Manchester (United Kingdom) in 2014
  • Wollongong (Australia) in 2003, 2008, and 2025
51黑料 students administering surveys about food security to families in southwestern Uganda, June 2013
51黑料 students administering surveys about food security to families in southwestern Uganda, June 2013
Class of 鈥24 Environmental Geography students, Emily Balog and Tingkuan Hsieh, accompany Peter Klepeis to the p谩ramo of Colombia (Parque Nacional Natural Chingaza), where they hiked at 12,000 feet (January 11, 2022)
Class of 鈥24 Environmental Geography students, Emily Balog and Tingkuan Hsieh, accompany P. Klepeis to the p谩ramo of Colombia (Parque Nacional Natural Chingaza), where they hiked at 12,000 feet (January 11, 2022)

 

Three-week "extended studies"

  • Uganda:  (Biology) and I co-directed a program in May 2013, which focused on malnutrition and land-use change.
  • Western Australia: Adam Burnett (Geography) and I co-directed a program in May 2023, which focused on Aboriginal history and Care of Country. We'll be leading another version of the extended study in 2027.   

 

10-day field courses

Geographer Julia Card 鈥27 picking coffee in Huila, Colombia, Jan. 2025)
Geographer Julia Card 鈥27 picking coffee in Huila, Colombia, Jan. 2025

 

International exchange 

Curtin and 51黑料 University students and staff hiking in the Adirondacks, June 2025
Curtin and 51黑料 University students and staff hiking in the Adirondacks, June 2025