Elizabeth A. Corley, Ph.D.
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Research Grants

Urban Green Spaces Development and Environmental Justice. $30,000, College of Public Service and Community Solutions Internal Grant and Funding Mechanism, May 2018 to April 2020 (Role: Co-Principal Investigator).

Center for Nanotechnology in Society at Arizona State University (CNS-ASU), $12,700,000, National Science Foundation, October 2005 to September 2015 (Role: Co-Principal Investigator; Co-Leader of the Public Opinion and Values Team).

Qualitative and Quantitative Assessments of Outcomes from and Impacts of CNS-ASU, $172,500, National Science Foundation, October 2012 to May 2014 (Role: Co-Principal Investigator).

Governing Nanotechnology Risks and Benefits in the Transition to Regulation: Innovative Public and Private Approaches, $248,230, U.S. Department of Energy, October 2010 to September 2012 (Role: Co-Principal Investigator).

An Exploration of the Ethical Implications of Human Exposure to Nano-Materials in University Research Laboratories, $20,000, Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics, May 2010 to December 2011 (Role: Principal Investigator).

Central Arizona-Phoenix Long Term Ecological Research: Phase 2, $4,419,000, National Science Foundation, December 2004 to November 2010 (Role: Senior Personnel).

Assessing the LIFE (Learning in Informal and Formal Environments) Center: A Scientific and Technical Human Capital Evaluation Model, $1,076,000, National Science Foundation, November 2004 to September 2010 (Role: Principal Investigator).  


Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training in Urban Ecology, $3,184,586, National Science Foundation, July 2005 to June 2010 (Role: Senior Personnel).

Decision Center for a Desert City, $6,900,000, National Science Foundation, November 2004 to November 2009 (Role: Senior 
Personnel; Co-leader of Decision Science Team; Participant in Science & Technology Policy Team).

NICHD Research Centers/Network Program Review: National Cooperative Program for Infertility Research (NCPIR), $265,800, National Institutes of Health, September 2003 to September 2005 (Role: Co-Principal Investigator).

Political Culture, Science, and Public Attitudes in the Management of Two Western National Forests, $6,000, Arizona State University, College of Public Programs, Dean’s Incentive Grant, January 2005 to September 2005 (Role: Principal Investigator).

MUSES: Decision Support for Urban Development: Air Quality, Social Justice, Material and Energy and the Impact of Social Decision Making, $114,949, National Science Foundation, September 2004 to August 2005 (Role: Co-Principal Investigator).

A Decision Support Tool for Sustainability Urban Water Management, $10,000, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, September 2004 to August 2005 (Role: Co-Principal Investigator).

Organizational Characteristics of Effective Environmental Management Systems, $5,000, Arizona State University, College of Public Programs, Dean’s Incentive Grant, December 2003 to September 2004 (Role: Principal Investigator).

Public Policy Analysis for the Air Protection Branch, $100,000, Georgia Department of Natural Resources (Role: Research Engineer).

Continuation of a Pilot Program to Characterize Light Duty Vehicle Emissions by Optical Remote Sensing, $65,000, State of Vermont Air Pollution Control Division (Role: Co-Principal Investigator).

Evaluating Atlanta’s Enhanced Automobile Inspection/Maintenance Program, $125,000, Georgia Department of Natural Resources (Role: Research Engineer).

Pilot Program to Characterize Light Duty Vehicle Emissions by Optical Remote Sensing, $65,000, State of Vermont Air Pollution Control Division (Role: Research Engineer).

Automobile Emissions Testing Program Evaluation for the Environmental Council of States, $100,000, Georgia Department of Natural Resources (Role: Research Assistant).