Kaitlyn Groh
Kaitlyn is a Masters student in the Anthropology and Environmental Policy program. She is originally from California and received her Bachelor’s in Anthropology at University of California, Davis in 2017. Her focus was mainly in primatology and worked closely with both gibbons and macaques in studies related to social behaviors and conservation. She also worked in the experimental archaeology lab where she participated in flintknapping experiments related to graduate research. After her undergraduate studies, she moved to China where she taught English as a second language for four years. Drawing from her experience overseas, Kaitlyn’s interests are related to cultural resilience to climate change. Specifically, the ways in which different cultures relate to their natural environment and how this can be reflected in modern environmental policy.