Patrick Trent Greiner
Assistant Professor of Sociology
C Family Dean’s Faculty Fellow in Grand Challenges: Climate and Society
Patrick Trent Greiner received his PhD from University of Oregon in 2018, and is an Assistant Professor of Sociology, Assistant Professor of Public Policy Studies, and the 2022-2024 C Family Dean’s Faculty Fellow of Grand Challenges in Climate and Society at Vanderbilt University. Professor Greiner’s research centers on providing greater insight into the complex co-constitution of social inequalities, environmental changes, and their consequences. His teaching interests center on the theories and methods that facilitate understanding of simultaneous and reciprocal change in social and ecological systems as well. Professor Greiner’s work has been published in journals such as Environmental Sociology, Environmental Research Letters, Nature + Culture, The Journal of Land Use Science, The Journal of Classical Sociology, Rural Sociology, and Human Ecology Review, among others. He has written and had his work highlighted in a number of international periodicals and news outlets, such as The Conversation, El Globo News, and Phys as well.
Specializations
Environmental Sociology; Environmental Justice; Sustainability
Representative Publications
Greiner, Patrick Trent; and McGee, Julius Alexander. 2020. “The Asymmetry of Economic Growth and the Carbon Intensity of Well-being”. Environmental Sociology, 6(1): 95-106. DOI: 10.1080/23251042.2019.1675567
Greiner, Patrick Trent; Daniel A. Shtob; and Jordan Fox Besek. 2020. “Is Urbanization Good for the Climate? A Cross-County Analysis of Impervious Surface, Affluence, and the Carbon Intensity of Well-Being”. Socius, 6: 1-16. DOI: 10.1177/2378023119896896
Greiner, Patrick Trent. 2020. “Community Water System Privatization and The Water Access Crisis” Sociology Compass, 4(5): 1-13, DOI: 10.1111/soc4.12785
McGee, Julius Alexander; and Patrick Trent Greiner. 2019. “Renewable Energy Injustice: The Socio-environmental Implications of Renewable Energy Consumption”, Energy Research and Social Science, 56. DOI: 10.1016/j.erss.2019.05.024