Alumni

Stay connected with YSE and thousands of alumni around the world through events, professional networking, and volunteer opportunities.

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    YSE alumni connecting with current students in Washington DC

    Stay Connected

    Alumni can connect with other YSE alumni and students through events, networking on AlumniFire, volunteering, and contributing to our mission — among other opportunities. Stay up to date with YSE by updating your contact information.

    Stay Connected
    YSE alumni attending reunion in 2019

    Reunion

    Join your classmates to reconnect, learn, and have fun!

    Reunion Details
    aerial view of a township in South Africa

    Canopy Magazine

    Read the latest issue of Canopy, our alumni magazine — now fully digital.

    Read Canopy
    YSE alumni association board members group photo

    Alumni Association Board

    Meet the alumni volunteers who are promoting the interests of YSE alumni and the School.

    Meet the Board Members
    Kroon Hall on the Yale Campus

    Make a Gift

    Support the School with a gift to the YSE Annual Fund. Recent graduates are also encouraged to make a Class Gift to support scholarships for incoming students.

    Give Now
    YSE Swag

    Wear Your YSE

    Show off your school pride with YSE hats, shirts, hoodies — even onesies for the little one! Learn how our new line of “swag” was done the sustainable way.

    Shop for Swag
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    Stay Informed

    Subscribe to YSE 3 for bi-weekly news and research updates.

    Subscribe to “YSE 3”
    Alumni Commencement Celebration

    Transcript Requests

    Instructions for YSE doctoral or master’s alumni and former students to request transcripts. 

    Get Transcripts

    Alumni Impacts

    Pete Caligiuri in a forested area

    Fighting Fire with Fire

    As wildfires across the U.S. and Canada continue to endanger human health and wildlife, Pete Caligiuri ’10 MF, forest strategy director for The Nature Conservancy in Oregon, is working on fire suppression.

    And these efforts include setting fires. “Frequent, extreme wildfires are a threat, but fire has to be part of the solution. Fire always has been a part of these landscapes. Beneficial fire — like prescribed burns and managed wildfires — is essential to the long-term resilience of these forest landscapes into the future,” Caligiuri says.

    Nenha Young

    Financing the Transition to Clean Energy

    Transitioning to clean energy is key to combating climate change. As director of policy and network at the Coalition for Green Capitol, Nenha Young ’20 MEM is targeting greenhouse gas reduction initiatives through investments in the environmental, social, and economic sectors and working to establish the National Green Bank.

    “I attended YSE because of its leadership in the clean energy field,” Young says. “Through coursework, internships, and independent studies, I was able to design a career at the intersection of clean energy and economic development.”

     Ashia Ajani

    With the Help of High Expectations

    Ashia Ajani — ’21 MEM (she/they)
    “Working on the climate and science team at the David and Lucile Packard Foundation is very different from any work I’ve done before. It’s eye-opening to see how a large philanthropic organization functions in light of this moment’s equity and justice issues. Packard is stepping up to look at structural racism and try to create change, including grappling with questions like ‘How do you maximize the impact of money?’ and ‘How can we change the mindset of philanthropy so it prioritizes leadership from Black-led organizations?’”

    Tiana Wilson-Blindman

    Shifting the Power Dynamics

    Tiana Wilson-Blindman — ’21 MEM (she/her)
    “As a biracial person raised on a reservation by an Indigenous mother, I’m sure my identity contributes to my ease in a facilitating role, professionally. I have a cultural understanding of both sides that I think is critical in serving as a go-between and bringing people together.”

    Pari Kasotia

    The Drive to Create a Better World

    Pari Kasotia ’22 MEM
    “I was in the middle of my career when I decided to apply to YSE. I’ve spent the majority of my professional life working on clean energy policy in public and nonprofit spaces, but I wanted to get exposure to the private financing side of climate change discourse. When I saw that Just Climate was one of the fellowship hosts, I was excited by their mission and decided to apply. They’re one of the first investment businesses dedicated to climate-led investing, meaning they identify and invest in high-impact solutions for climate change mitigation.”

    Cam Humphrey

    Preventing the Harm from Happening (Again)

    Cam Humphrey — ’21 MEM (he/him)
    “Before I came to Yale, I had more of an agricultural policy background, so it was new to focus on climate policy and environmental issues. I read Dr. Taylor’s book Toxic Communities: Environmental Racism, Industrial Pollution, and Residential Mobility twice during the summer before grad school. It opened my eyes to things happening in my home state and created a deeply rooted passion within me to work on environmental justice issues in the Deep South.”

    Liam Gunn 21 MEM

    Growing a Grassroots Movement for a Just Transition

    Liam Gunn — ’21 MEM
    “I wanted my internship to focus on grassroots environmental justice, and WE ACT in New York City is one of more prominent groups in the U.S. They’re working on building a coalition of environmental justice leaders; for a while, I’ve felt there needs to be a network for leaders of grassroots environmental justice groups. Grassroots is hard, and being able to share resources, skills, and knowledge will help build out the movement.”

    Tevin Hamilton

    Rising From the Bottom Up

    Tevin Hamilton — ’21 MEM
    “I went to college in Louisiana and lived in the area between Baton Rouge and New Orleans known as Cancer Alley, a heavily polluted 100-mile stretch with over 150 chemical plants. My goal was a career in forestry, but living there changed me. I saw how Black and low-income communities are more harshly affected by environmental hazards created by companies, so I started reading about environmental justice and knew I wanted to be in a position to help. That is what led me to YSE.”

    Simon Bunyan 23 MEM

    Climate Action through Centering Communities

    Simon Bunyan — '23 MEM (he/him)
    “Prior to coming to Yale, I worked for several federal agencies on energy and environmental policy. While those experiences were great, it was eye-opening to realize how mainstream environmental organizations, like ‘the Big Greens,’ have a history and active present of working against communities of color, low-income communities, and environmental justice communities on environmental policy."

    Semrod portrait

    Creating a Water Security Program for the Navy

    Water is fundamental to public health, food supplies, and energy production, and therefore vital to national security. Kelsey Semrod ’16 MESc, a water resilience program manager with the Office of the Assistant Secretary worked to establish the first comprehensive water security program for the Navy. Now, as a senior scientist at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, she supports the Department of Energy (DOE) and Department of Defense (DOD) on water resilience issues, including leading water resources management training for DOD and DOE utility managers and supporting a new water and energy resilience program for DOE's Water Power Technology Office. 

    Rujanavech

    Eliminating Electronic Waste in the Tech Industry

    Charissa Rujanavech ’13 MEM is a tech industry innovator, developing novel ways to recycle and eliminate electronic waste. Shortly after graduating from YSE, she invented Liam, an automated disassembly system that can take apart more than 1 million iPhones a year so the components can be reused. She has continued her work in the circular economy, promoting a closed-loop supply chain for major retailers, including Amazon, and is now developing new technologies and partnerships to decarbonize refrigeration, retail operations, and food waste at Albertsons Companies.

    Reid Lewis on a snowy day near a frozen lake

    Stewarding Forests in the Face of Climate Change 

    Forests help mitigate climate change because of their ability to remove and store carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, but they become carbon emitters during wildfires. PhD student Reid Lewis '20 MF is researching how satellite data and machine learning models can help fire-prone forests become more resilient.

    “When we make these forests more fire resilient, we can not only store more carbon, we can also help protect human communities, foster wildlife habitat, safeguard watersheds, and can use the process of restoration to partner with and empower Indigenous nations,” says Lewis.

    Yufang Gao in the mountains

    Redefining Human-Wildlife Conflict

    In the Tibetan Plateau, Yufang Gao ’14 MESc, ’23 PhD interviews, observes, and travels with Tibetan herders and Buddhist monks. He sets up camera traps and collects scat to analyze the diet of snow leopards. And he has hiked a mountainside 15,000 feet above sea level — all in pursuit of data for his dissertation focused on the quest for harmonious coexistence between people and large carnivores. What is needed for human-wildlife coexistence is a different perspective about conflict, Gao says. “Conflict,” he has found, “is part of coexistence.”

    Office of Development and Alumni Services

    205 Prospect Street, 2nd Floor, Room 20
    New Haven, CT 06511
    +1 203-432-5697
    alumni.yse@yale.edu