Jacelyn Rice-Boayue
Assistant Professor
Engaging Communities with Participatory Modeling, Sustainable Water Resource Management, Environmental Justice
Department of Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering
Fitts-Woolard Hall 3169
Bio
Jacelyn uses geospatial analytics to provide new understanding and solutions to foster sustainable water resource management. Her research group combines modeling, analytical and social science capabilities to examine water quality, environmental health and contaminants, and environmental justice. Much of her work focuses on environmental and human health exposures to wastewater-derived emerging contaminants through model-informed surveillance and field studies. Other research interests include water treatment, cross-cultural research and community engagement through participatory geographic information systems.
Publications
- Development of a national antibiotic multimetric index for identifying watersheds vulnerable to antibiotic pollution , ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION (2023)
- Spatial Hazards of Antibiotic Resistance in Wastewater-Impacted Streams during Low Instream Flow Conditions , ACS ES&T Water (2022)
- Impact of Nitrogen Removal in Wastewater Treatment on NDMA Formation at Downstream Drinking-Water Treatment Plants , Journal of Environmental Engineering (2021)
- Cross-cultural knowledge and acceptance of wastewater reclamation and reuse processes across select sites , Human Organization (2019)
- Harmonizing across environmental nanomaterial testing media for increased comparability of nanomaterial datasets , Environmental Science: Nano (2019)
- Integrated Assessment of Wastewater Reuse, Exposure Risk, and Fish Endocrine Disruption in the Shenandoah River Watershed , Environmental Science and Technology (2019)
- Modeled De Facto Reuse and Contaminants of Emerging Concern in Drinking Water Source Waters , Journal - American Water Works Association (2018)
- Motivators for treated wastewater acceptance across developed and developing contexts , Journal of Water Sanitation and Hygiene for Development (2018)
- High levels of endocrine pollutants in US streams during low flow due to insufficient wastewater dilution , Nature Geoscience (2017)
- Comparing actual de facto wastewater reuse and its public acceptability: A three city case study , Sustainable Cities and Society (2016)