SC&E Students - Tokesha Collins
 

Environmental Sciences Graduate Student Receives Prestigious Scholarship

After graduating from the Louisiana School for Math, Science, and the Arts, Baton Rouge native Tokesha Collins went to Brown University and graduated with an engineering degree. She came back to LSU to attend graduate school in the School of the Coast & Environment’s Department of Environmental Sciences (ENVS), where this spring she received a master’s degree with a concentration in environmental planning and management. This fall, she heads off to the University of Maryland School of Law, where she will be a prestigious Catherine Edwards Scholar in the Environmental Law Program and work with internationally renowned environmental law professor Robert Percival.

Collins master’s thesis, titled “An Analysis of the Variables that Influence a Country’s Decision to Ratify the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants,” was sparked by an article in the New York Times about the pesticide DDT being used in a program to prevent malaria in developing countries.

“I knew DDT was banned in the United States because of its adverse environmental effects,” said Collins, “and I wondered what factors weighed in the balance between fighting malaria and the negative impacts of DDT on people.” She found that although 90 countries had ratified the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, 100 had not ratified it. She wanted to know what economic and social factors influenced a country’s decision on treaty ratification.
“Poorer, autocratic countries with a malaria problem have not ratified the treaty,” said Collins. “They are too busy trying to deal with all the other problems in their world.”

This research stoked her interest in international environmental law.
Associate Professor Margaret Reams, Collins major professor in ENVS, said, “Tokesha leaves the ENVS program well situated to integrate environmental science, policy, and law. Her undergraduate training in engineering and her graduate studies in environmental planning and management have given her a holistic orientation toward environmental challenges. Her thesis addressed a complex and multi-disciplinary issue, how do we fight malaria without using these very damaging pesticides? This background gives Tokesha an excellent foundation as she embarks on her training and eventual career in environmental law.”

And what are Collins plans after she graduates from law school? “I hope to become involved in environmental justice issues. I want to be a voice for Louisiana in environmental justice.”

—Debra Waters

 

 

 

 


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