The University of Montana Department of Geography

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David Shively

David Shively

Associate Professor of Geography

Office: Old Journalism Building 212
Office Phone: (406) 243-6478
Office Fax: (406) 243-4840
E-mail: david.shively@umontana.edu

Education:

Ph.D., Oregon State University, 1999
   Geography
M.S., Oregon State University, 1990
   Geography
B.S., Eastern Oregon University (ne: State College), 1987
   Community Service-Environmental Studies

Areas of Specialization:

Land Use Planning (Community and Environmental)
Water Resources Management
Air Quality
Watershed Processes & Management
Geomorphology

Current Course Offerings:

Geog 101S - Introduction to Human Geography
Geog 335 - Water Policy
Geog 466 - Environmental Planning
Geog 467 - Planning Decision Support Systems
Geog 495 - Advanced Topics in Water Resources
Geog 465 - Planning Principles & Processes
Geog 560 - Seminar in Planning

Professional Background Information:

Dr. Shively is a broadly trained geographer who completed graduate work in the areas of geomorphology, riverine ecology, hydrology, watershed processes, land use and environmental planning, and in water resources planning and management.  His Doctoral research focused on the regional dynamics and local effects of water right marketing in New Mexico’s Rio Grande Basin.  He has extensive field experience in air quality surveys, fisheries, land use analysis, and fluvial geomorphology having worked on a number of projects throughout his career. He taught land use and environmental planning, physical, and human geography courses at Oregon State University, and at Central Michigan University for four years before coming to the University of Montana in 2004.  His current research projects include air toxics coming from snowmobiles in North America, water policy and planning in Montana, and the spatial diffusion of the McKenzie River Drift Boat in North America.  He also works closely with the Clark Fork River Basin Task Force, a collaborative consensus-based organization, in its public outreach activities.

Selected Recent and Future Research Projects:

Spatial variability of air pollution associated with oversnow recreational vehicle use in Yellowstone National Park; Winter use planning policy dynamics in Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks.

Integrated water resources management in Montana and the West, Montana and Western water policy and management.


Publications:

Zhou, Y., Shively, D., Mao, H., Russo, R., Pape, B., Mower, R.N., Varner, R., and Sive, Air Toxic Emissions from Snowmobiles in Yellowstone National Park, Environ. Sci. Technol., 2009, submitted.

Shively, D., Y. Zhou, and B.C. Sive.  2009.  Snowmobile pollution in North America: annual flux estimates of air toxics and implications for potential personal exposure in snowmobile dominated communities.  In Demidov, Sergey, and Jacques Bonnet, Traffic-Related Air Pollution and Internal Combustion Engines.  New York: Nova Science Publishers.

Petersen-Perlman, J., and D. Shively.  2009.  Assessment of Municipal Water Rights in the Upper Clark Fork Basin.  A research report prepared for and reviewed by the Upper Clark Fork River Basin Steering Committee.

Shively, D., B. Pape, R. N. Mower, Y. Zhou, R. Russo, and B. Sive.  2008.  Blowing smoke in Yellowstone: Air quality impacts of oversnow motorized vehicle recreation in the Park.  Environmental Management  41(2): 183-199 (DOI 10.1007/s00267-007-9036-8).

Sive, B., Shively, D., and B. Pape.  2003.  “Spatial Variation of Volatile Organic Compounds Associated with Snowmobile Emissions in Yellowstone National Park.”  Peer reviewed research report submitted to the National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior.  October 25, 2003.  Available: http://www.nps.gov/yell/parkmgmt/winterusetechnicaldocuments.htm

Shively, D.  2001.  Water Right Reallocation in New Mexico’s Rio Grande Basin, 1975-1995.  International Journal of Water Resources Development, 17(3): 445-460.

Petersen-Perlman, Jacob, and David Shively (Eds).  2008.  Proceedings of the Water Supply and Growth in the Clark Fork River Basin Conference.  Available: http://dnrc.mt.gov/wrd/water_mgmt/clarkforkbasin_taskforce/pdfs/watersupply_growth_conference-proceedings.pdf.

Shively, D.  2003.  Invited review of “Protected Areas and the Regional Planning Imperative in North America.”  Edited by J. G. Nelson, J. C. Day, Lucy M. Sportza, James Loucky, and Carlos Vasquez.  University of Calgary Press and Michigan State University Press.  2003.  Michigan Academician 35(4):495-497.

Sive, B., Shively, D., and B. Pape.  2002.  “Spatial Variation and Characteristics of Volatile Organic Compounds Associated with Snowmobile Emissions in Yellowstone National Park.”  A Research Report Submitted to the National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior.  May 28, 2002.

Shively, D.  2001.  Invited review of Terence Richard Lee’s (1999) “Water Management in the 21st Century: the Allocation Imperative,”  Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc.  Economic Geography, 77(4): 400-402.

Shively, D.  1999. Transfers of Water Rights in New Mexico’s Rio Grande Basin: Spatiotemporal and Sociocultural Patterns.  Ph.D. Dissertation.  Corvallis: Oregon State University Department of Geosciences.

Shively, D.  1993.  Landscape Change in the Tualatin Basin Following Euro-American Settlement.  Tualatin River Basin Water Resources Management Report Number 6.  Corvallis, OR: Oregon Water Resources Research Institute.

Shively, D.  1989.  Landsliding Processes Occurring on a McDonald-Dunn Forest Hillslope.  M.S. Research Paper.  Corvallis: Oregon State University Department of Geosciences.