Most research into the connections between water and energy, water and food, and food and energy has been scientific and technical; little research has examined the public's understandings of these connections. This article studies these understandings and awareness of nexus issues using a 2015 national public opinion survey on the water-energy-food nexus. Responses from this representative sample of U.S. adults are used to create "awareness measures" for elements of the nexus-water and energy, water and food, and energy and food-which are then used as independent variables to investigate the extent to which awareness is associated with support for public policies designed to address these nexus interconnections. All three measures are significantly correlated to support for policy options. Results suggest that awareness of the water-energy-food nexus may represent conditions necessary for supporting policies and that building such awareness
Do interlocking boards provide advantage in the grants marketplace? Drawing upon board data from nine public grant-making organizations in two metropolitan areas and their grant recipients, we test the mediating and moderating relationships between interlocking boards, organizational size, and the size of the grants received. We find that organizational size is not a predictor of grant allocations independent of network characteristics. Larger organizations have larger and better-connected boards, which is associated with larger grants.
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