Extreme Heat and Environmental Health Intern

Tags: internship mental health Spanish Environment
  • Added Date: Tuesday, 04 March 2025
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About the Program

The Ross Center for Sustainable Cities (https://www.wri.org/cities) builds on WRIโ€™s global and local experience in urban planning and mobility and uses proven solutions and action-oriented tools to make the fast-growing urban environment more resilient to new challenges. Our heat resilience efforts, including the Data for Cool Cities (https://www.wri.org/initiatives/data-cool-cities) initiative and the Heat and Health in Brazilian Cities project (https://www.wri.org/initiatives/heat-and-health-brazilian-cities), aim to combat the effects of extreme heat in urban areas. Cities are home to most of the worldโ€™s population, and urban heat exposure is an increasingly deadly phenomenon resulting from from complex interactions between social, physical, and climatic systems. The Global Cities Data & Tools team is mapping the potential for heat-resilient infrastructure like street trees and cool roofs and identifying opportunities to improve health outcomes during heat events. The research results will provide insights both globally and for partner cities that inform future efforts to document the connections between extreme temperatures and public health.

This is a hybrid position which requires 8 days per month in the office. You can be based in our office in Washington DC Office. Existing work authorization is required at the time of application submission as WRI is unable to sponsor any visa work sponsorship for this position. To be eligible for this position, you must be a resident of DC, Maryland or Virginia at the start of employment.

What you will do:

You will be responsible for integrating equity into your work. In this role you will support our work on extreme heat and human health across Latin America, Europe, and Africa by conducting research on ways in which urban heat impacts health and well-being. You will collaborate with climate researchers to examine literature from science, policy, and planning on different kinds of heat-health measurement, ways to understand heat resilience, and best practices in preparing for extreme heat. Your primary tasks will include:

โ€ข Comparing methods of measuring heat-health connections in diverse geographic contexts.

โ€ข Surveying scientific and policy literature on heat resilience in 4 partner cities.

โ€ข Investigating effective heat preparation and mitigation strategies.

You will be supported by the Global Cities Data & Tools team and will report to Dr. Ruth Engel.

Internship Learning Outcomes:

โ€ข Conduct independent research on measuring and communicating heat-health resilience.

โ€ข Analyze environmental health policies and systems in 4 partner cities, supported by local documents and data.

โ€ข Produce written reports and present recommendations to WRIโ€™s urban heat research community at their quarterly symposium.

What you will need:

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