I leverage my broad training in nature-society studies, environmental science & policy, and development studies to engage with questions on how and why people affect and are affected by land-use changes in forest & tree systems in a changing climate context. I am interested in examining the drivers and implications of environmental degradation and climate change for forest-dependent people and for broader socio-ecological sustainability. I address specifically the socio-institutional dimensions of these issues, including the social arrangements, cultural contexts, and cross-scale (and tele-coupled) institutional challenges affecting the sustainable management of forest & tree systems. I approach my problem-solving oriented research from an interdisciplinary and geospatial perspectives that integrate both social and natural sciences analytical frameworks. For that, I use mixed methods – sourcing from qualitative, quantitative, and spatial methods and tools to build a holistic understanding of specific environmental problems and potential solutions at particular or across different geographical scales.