Matthew Zinsli headshot
Matthew J. Zinsli

Postdoc

Agricultural Economics & Rural Sociology

4075 Haley Center

Email

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EDUCATION

  • PhD, Sociology and Development Studies, University of Wisconsin–Madison
  • MS, Sociology, University of Wisconsin–Madison
  • MA, Environmental Studies, University of Illinois Springfield
  • BA, English, University of St. Thomas

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

Matthew has been a Visiting Researcher with The Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT as part of a project assessing actions and constraints to catalyzing food system transformation in Honduras. He was previously a Visiting Researcher with the Universidad San Francisco de Quito and a Visiting Scientists with the Charles Da rwin Foundation, where he worked on collaborative projects concerning commercialization opportunities for coffee producers on the Galápagos Islands. At UW–Madison, he was instructor for an introductory course in environmental sociology. He also has experience working in the nonprofit sector, including for a social enterprise in the Amazonian region of Ecuador working with indigenous communities to support alternative crops and commercialization strategies.

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS

  • Rural Sociological Society
  • American Sociological Association
  • European Society for Rural Sociology
  • Society for Social Studies of Science

HONORS & AWARDS

  • Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Fellowship
  • Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship
  • UW–Madison University Fellowship
  • UW–Madison/Mellon Foundation Area and International Studies Research Fellowship

RESEARCH

As part of the Auburn University Rural Partnership Institute, Matthew is conducting needs assessment research using qualitative methods in agriculture, forestry, and rural industries on the challenges and opportunities for rural Alabama.


SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

Zinsli, Matthew J. 2023. “Authorizing the ‘Taste of Place’ for Galápagos Islands Coffee: Scientific Knowledge, Development Politics, and Power in Geographical Indication Implementation.” Agriculture and Human Values 40(2):581-97. doi: 10.1007/s10460-022-10364-9.