John Richard Stepp

Professor, Anthropology/Latin American Studies
1112 Turlington Hall
P.O. Box 117305
Gainesville, FL 32611-7305
Tel: 352-392-0299
Fax: 352-392-6929
E-mail: stepp@ufl.edu

 


Research Interests

Ecological anthropology, conservation, ethnobiology, anthropology of food, medical anthropology, visual anthropology

 

Geographic Expertise

Mesoamerica, Southeast Asia, Southern Africa

 

Background

Rick (John Richard) Stepp is UF Research Foundation Professor of Anthropology and Latin American Studies at the University of Florida. He is a core faculty member of the Tropical Conservation and Development Program and the Land Use and Environmental Change Institute. He is also an affiliate faculty member of the School of Natural Resources and Environment and several other interdisciplinary centers focused on environmental research. He has conducted conservation research over the last two decades throughout the tropics, especially in the Maya Forest and in the Greater Mekong Region of Southeast Asia. His research explores persistence, change and variation of traditional ecological knowledge

and ethnobiology. Much of this work has focused on wild food plants and medicinal plants. His work has also focused on patterns and causes in the distribution of biological and cultural diversity (biocultural diversity). He is leading the Quest 3 experiential learning initiative at UF and also serves as online coordinator for the Department of Anthropology. He is an associate editor for several journals in environmental anthropology and ethnobiology. He is past-president of the Society for Economic Botany and current president of the International Society of Ethnobiology.

 

Curriculum Vitae 

 

Courses
  • LAS 6290 Ethnoecology
  • LAS 6290 Biocultural Diversity and Conservation
  • LAS 6292 Research Methods in Tropical Conservation and Development