This article was first published on February 23, 2026 by the University of Colorado Research and Innovation Office.
The University of Colorado Boulder's Research & Innovation Office (RIO) has announced the inaugural Sustainability Research Initiative (SRI) Research Fellows cohort, which includes Natural Hazards Center director Lori Peek.
The SRI Research Fellowship is built on a simple premise: when talented people are given the space, time and community to dream big together, transformative ideas emerge. Sustainability challenges are complex and multidimensional, and addressing them requires intellectual approaches that cross boundaries, challenge assumptions and leverage diverse perspectives.
This fellowship is designed to cultivate exactly that environment. This first cohort of fellows includes 20 researchers from departments and research institutes across campus. Through a series of intensive trainings and retreats, the fellows will spend the year building community, practicing future-oriented thinking, and forming transdisciplinary teams capable of shaping the next generation of sustainability scholarship and solutions.
“This new fellowship is emblematic of CU Boulder’s strong campuswide commitment to sustainability, and it demonstrates how SRI is elevating and connecting CU’s sustainability researchers in creative and unexpected ways for greater impact,” said CU Boulder Vice Chancellor for Sustainability Andrew Mayock.
SRI conducted a series of focus groups in the fall of 2025 and a resounding theme emerged: researchers are eager to collaborate across disciplines, but institutional structures make that collaboration challenging.
“Comments like ‘Where can we think together?’ and ‘Can we buy faculty time for creative thinking?’ underscored the urgency,” said SRI Director Jane Zelikova. “The SRI research fellowship directly responds to these needs by carving out time and space for intentional community building across intellectual and departmental silos and for creative, non-proposal driven conversations. We aim to foster a space where serendipity can seed new ideas and collaborations and where researchers feel supported to explore bold, unconventional approaches.”
About the SRI Research Fellows program
Through an open application, a committee of sustainability researchers selected fellows based on their demonstrated engagement with sustainability research as well as their expressed interest in expanding their research areas and openness to transdisciplinary collaboration.
The inaugural cohort is a group of researchers from across STEM fields, social sciences, arts and humanities, design, policy, and other disciplines—bringing together perspectives and experiences from assistant professors, associate professors, full professors and center directors—resulting in a scaffolded model that focuses on innovative ideas rather than publication record or career stage.
The fellowship functions as an intellectual incubator, providing structure, community and sustained opportunities for collaboration. Key fellowship program elements include cohort-based community building, facilitated workshops and thematic sessions, sustained small-group conversations to seed working groups, time, space, and creative support to develop new research directions and transdisciplinary project proposals that can be seed-funded by SRI, and opportunities to co-organize workshops with SRI on emergent topics. Consecutive cohorts will overlap by 1–2 months to grow community continuity and enable peer learning.
See all of this year's Fellows below.
2026 SRI Research Fellows
- Mirela Alistar (ATLAS Institute, Computer Science)
- Karen Bailey (Environmental Studies)
- David Ciplet (Environmental Studies)
- Cibele Hummel do Amaral (CIRES, ESIIL, Earth Lab)
- Virginia Iglesias (CIRES, Earth Lab)
- Abbie Liel (Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering)
- Zannah Mae Matson (Environmental Design)
- Keith Musselman (Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, Geography)
- Irina Overeem (Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, Geological Science)
- Srinivas "Chinnu" Parinandi (Political Science)
- Lori Peek (Institute of Behavioral Science, Sociology, Natural Hazards Center)
- Julian Resasco (Ecology & Evolutionary Biology)
- Esther Rolf (Computer Science)
- Mehak Sawhney (Media Studies)
- Colleen Scanlan Lyons (Institute of Behavioral Science, Envronmental Studies)
- Katherine Siegel (CIRES, Geography)
- Wil Srubar (Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering)
- Sara Tabatabaie (Environmental Design)
- Sebastián Villa (Leeds School of Business, Renée Crown Wellness Institute)
- Jeffrey York (Leeds School of Business)