Cindy Isenhour contributes to report advising how governments can tackle biodiversity loss through COVID-19 recovery

Cindy Isenhour is one of two UMaine faculty who contributed to a recent report on how governments can mitigate biodiversity losses through their COVID-19 recovery plans. The report was led by Rutgers University and authored by researchers from around the world. Cindy is associate professor of anthropology and climate change and a Mitchell Center faculty fellow.

“As disastrous as the pandemic has been, the disruption does provide an opportunity to reconsider our path and to design economic systems that are more sustainable, healthy and resilient,” Isenhour says in a recent UMaine News article.