Skip to content Skip to navigation
The University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give
  • Search UMass.edu
Center for Agriculture, Food, and the Environment

Integrating research and outreach education from UMass Amherst

  • About
    • About CAFE
    • History
    • Strategic Directions
    • Research & Outreach Interest Areas
    • UMass Extension Board of Public Overseers (BoPO)
    • Partners
    • Locations
    • Faculty & Staff Directory
    • Contact Information
    • Civil Rights Information
    • Employment Opportunities
  • Extension
    • Extension Outreach Overview
    • CAFE Extension Faculty
    • Extension Outreach Projects
    • Extension Initiative Reports
  • Programs
    • 4-H Youth Development
    • Clean Energy Extension
    • Climate Change
    • Cranberry Station
    • Crops, Dairy, Livestock and Equine
    • Food Science Extension
    • Fruit
    • Greenhouse Crops and Floriculture
    • Landscape, Nursery and Urban Forestry
    • Nutrition Education
    • Turf
    • Value-Added Food
    • Vegetable
  • Research
    • Mass Agricultural Experiment Station
    • Information About Accessing Research Funds
    • Research Projects
    • NIFA Integrated Research and Outreach Initiatives
    • Civil Rights Information & Resources
    • Summer Scholars Program
    • REEU Internship Program
  • Resources
    • Resources Overview
    • Extension Sales Portal
    • Agriculture & Commercial Horticulture
    • Community & Economic Vitality
    • Disaster Preparedness
    • Food Safety
    • Home Lawn & Garden
    • Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
    • Land Conservation Tools
    • Pollinators
    • Risk Management & Crop Insurance
    • Tick Testing Resources
    • Urban Agriculture
  • Services
    • Services Overview
    • Pesticide Education
    • Plant Diagnostics Laboratory
    • Soil and Plant Nutrient Testing Laboratory
    • Hot Water Seed Treatment
    • Environmental Analysis Laboratory
    • Free Soil and Plant Services Application
  • Farms
    • Farms and Facilities Overview
    • Cold Spring Orchard Research and Education Center
    • Cranberry Station
    • Crop and Animal Research and Education Farm in South Deerfield
    • Equine and Livestock Research and Education Farm in Hadley
    • Joseph Troll Turf Research Center
  • News & Events
    • Center News
    • Upcoming Events
    • News from the Media
    • Faculty Staff Bios
    • Spotlight Stories
    • Video Gallery

Ezra Markowitz: Two Passions Make a Profession

Image
Ezra Markowitz

As an interdisciplinary environmental social scientist, Ezra Markowitz has two foremost passions: human behavior and environmental conservation. These two passions stem from his childhood and upbringing in the suburbs of New York. Growing up in the 1980s and 90s, Markowitz spent his formative years exploring the forested landscape of his backyard and hometown, a time during which he learned to care deeply for the environment. Later, in high school, Markowitz took a few psychology classes, wherein he quickly fell in love with the study of human behavior.

It wasn’t until his undergraduate years at Vassar College that Markowitz was able to bring these two passions together. While many of his classes were in the field of psychology, Markowitz’s extracurricular life revolved in large part around the Vassar Greens, an environmental student organization. About halfway through college, a close mentor who understood Markowitz’s fondness for the environment suggested that he look into conservation psychology, a field that blended the study of human behavior with environmental issues. Taking that advice marked the start of his journey in environmental social science.

From there, Markowitz found an interdisciplinary graduate program in Environmental Sciences, Studies, and Policy at the University of Oregon, where he spent five years taking coursework in psychology, public policy, communications, and environmental sustainability, and working on various projects. His next academic expedition took place at Princeton, where he worked with an interdisciplinary group of ecologists, philosophers, and social scientists interested in climate change. Then came a year at the Earth Institute at Columbia University working with folks in the Center for Research on Environmental Decisions.

In 2014, Markowitz joined the Department of Environmental Conservation at UMass. An environmental behavioral scientist by training, Markowitz’s research interests focus on the interdisciplinary factors that influence how people make environmental decisions. A core question around which his research revolves is: “How can we and others leverage our understanding of human behavior to promote positive pro-environmental engagement and action?”

In an effort to answer this momentous question, Markowitz has been involved in a number of projects over the course of his career. Much of his big-picture conceptual work centers on intergenerational decision-making – that is, decisions people make in the present that will have the greatest impacts in the future, either for themselves, future generations, or other species. Markowitz has found that the vast majority of people care deeply about the environment, but that their actions do not always align with their sentiments. His work, which takes place on various scales, attempts to identify ways to align people’s preferences for environmental conservation with their actions. Markowitz works closely with graduate students to conduct both experiments and surveys to study the core psychological and social mechanisms that shape those kinds of decisions. He is also involved in more applied projects examining how people are making real-world, environmentally-significant decisions.

One such recent project was the science-and-art installation, FutureSHORELINE. Led by UMass professor Carolina Aragón in the Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning Department, the project was a public art installation in Fort Point Channel in Boston visualizing the scientific predictions for future flood levels along with proposed solutions. Markowitz was interested in tracking how climate change-inspired art impacts the people interacting with it; he found that the installation changed people’s risk perception, understanding of sea-level rise, and level of engagement with the issue.

When not at work, Markowitz enjoys running and spending time with his wife and two sons, who inform his own environmental choices, concern, and motivation to do this work. Seeing the joy and wonder in his 6-year-old son’s eyes while hiking and exploring in the woods inspires Markowitz’s work at the intersection of the natural world and the human mind.

News & Events

  • Center News
  • Upcoming Events
  • News from the Media
  • Faculty Staff Bios
  • Spotlight Stories
  • Video Gallery

Center for Agriculture, Food, and the Environment

 

Stockbridge Hall,
80 Campus Center Way
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Amherst, MA 01003-9246
Phone: (413) 545-4800
Fax: (413) 545-6555
ag [at] cns [dot] umass [dot] edu (ag[at]cns[dot]umass[dot]edu)

 

Civil Rights and Non-Discrimination Information

College of Natural Sciences

Login for faculty and staff

CAFE Units

Mass. Agricultural Experiment Station

UMass Extension

UMass Research and Education Center Farms

UMass Cranberry Station

Water Resources Research Center

Interest Areas

Agriculture

Commercial Horticulture

Energy

Environmental Conservation

Food Science

Nutrition

Water

Youth Development & 4-H

Projects

Conservation Assessment Prioritization System (CAPS)

Climate Action Tool

Mass. Keystone

MassWoods

North American Aquatic Connectivity Collaborative

RiverSmart

Services

Pesticide Education

Plant Diagnostics Laboratory

Soil and Plant Nutrient Testing Laboratory

Hot Water Seed Treatment

Water Testing / Environmental Analysis Laboratory

Resources

Extension Sales Portal

Agriculture & Commercial Horticulture Resources

Community & Economic Vitality

Disaster Preparedness

Food Safety

Home Lawn & Garden

Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

Land Conservation Tools

Pollinators

Tick testing

Resources for Faculty and Staff

Extension Programs

4-H Youth Development

Agriculture

Crops, Dairy, Livestock and Equine

Fruit

Greenhouse Crops and Floriculture

Landscape, Nursery and Urban Forestry

Pesticide Education

Turf

Vegetable

Clean Energy

Climate Change

Food Science

Nutrition Education

Value-Added Food

UMass collegiate M - University of Massachusetts Amherst
©2025 University of Massachusetts Amherst · Site Policies · Accessibility