Khara Grieger

Assistant Professor in Environmental Health & Risk Assessment; GES Center Executive Committee Member

Department of Applied Ecology, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences

Contact

Email: kdgriege@ncsu.edu | Phone: (919) 515-2593 | Twitter: @KGrieger | CV

Bio

Dr. Khara Grieger is an expert in risk governance and responsible innovation of emerging technologies, and was a Senior Research Scholar at the Genetic Engineering and Society Center from March 2019 through June 2020. Her research has recently focused on best practices for risk assessment, risk management, and stakeholder involvement of emerging risks. She is currently the Project Director for a USDA/NIFA-funded grant together with co-PI Jennifer Kuzma, in which the societal implications of nanomaterials used in food and agricultural sectors are investigated. She is also the PI of a grant that aims to grow the field of risk science in the Research Triangle Park area of NC, through funding provided by the Society for Risk Analysis. Further, she leads the stakeholder engagement efforts in a NC State-funded GRIP4PSI grant that develops new technologies for use in the sweetpotato industry in North Carolina (Williams = PI), and is involved in the NSF-funded Research Triangle Nanotechnology Network (RTNN) housed at NC State University (Jones = PI). In addition to research, Dr. Grieger also serves as an external advisory board member for a large European project focused on risk governance (RiskGONE), is the US Co-Chair for a US-EU Risk Management & Control Community of Research (COR) focused on nanomaterial risks, and an External Advisory Board member for the Town of Cary, NC.

Before joining the team at NC State, Dr. Grieger was a Senior Environmental Research Scientist at RTI International in the Health and Environmental Risk Analysis program (2012-2019) and a Duke University Scholar (2017-2018). In addition to conducting and leading independent research projects, she also managed and provided technical support for numerous federal projects, including those funded by US-FDA, EPA, NIOSH, and Army.

Education

PhD in Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Denmark; MSc in Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Denmark; MS in Plant Biology and Ecology, Michigan State University; BS in Zoology from Michigan State University.

Expertise

Risk assessment, Decision-support, Emerging technologies, Risk governance

Grants & Projects

  • Grieger, K.D. (PI). Social Implication and Best Practices for Responsible Innovation of Nanotechnology in Food and Agriculture. USDA/NIFA. Funded, $499,856. July 2019-July 2021
  • Grieger, K.D. (PI). Society for Risk Analysis Strategic Plant Initiative. SRA. Funded, $20,000. September 2019 – February 2021 Grieger, K.D. (Co-PI).
  • Improving Crop Productivity and Value Through Heterogeneous Data Integration, Analytics, and Decision Support Platforms. Game-Changing Research Incentive Program. NC State University. Funded, $550,000 (Williams = PI). February 2020 – June 2023.
  • Grieger, K.D. (team member). Implications of Solar Radiation Management for Strategic Behavior and Climate Governance. NSF. Funded, $565,872 (PI=Borsuk). April 2020-March 2023.
  • Grieger, K.D. (team member). Research Triangle Nanotechnology Network. NSF. Funded $5.5M (Jones = PI). 2014-2020.
  • Grieger, K.D. (Co-PI). Game-Changing Research Incentive Program. NC State University – RTI International. Funded, $650,000 (Jones = PI). 2016-2019

Featured In

Search GES Media Mentions >

Awards

  • 2018, Research Triangle Nanotechnology Network (RTNN) Collaborative Award
  • 2018, HOT paper selection for Environmental Science: Nano
  • 2017, American Society of Civil Engineers State-of-the-Art Civil Engineering Award
  • 2013-2017, Highly Published Author Award, RTI International
  • 2014, 2017, Highly Cited Author Award, RTI International
  • 2014, Professional Development Award, RTI International
  • 2013, Early Career Award, RTI International
  • 2011, Best Young Scientist Prize, Integ-Risk and Society for Risk Analysis

Highlighted Publications

See all publications on Google Scholar > or search GES Faculty Publications >

Kuzma, J., Grieger, K.D., Cummings, C.L., Brown, Z. S. 2020. Pandemics Call for Systems Approaches to Research and Funding. Issues in Science and Technology, May 4, 2020. Available: https://issues.org/pandemics-call-for-systems-approaches/

Grieger, K., Jones, J.L., Hansen, S.F., Hendren, C.O., Jensen, K.A., Kuzma, J., Baun, A. 2019. What are the Key Best Practices from Nanomaterial Risk Analysis That May Be Relevant for Other Emerging Technologies? Nature Nanotechnology, 14, 998–1001, doi:10.1038/s41565-019-0572-1.

Porcari, A., Borsella, E., Benighaus, C., Grieger, K., Isigonis, P., Chakravarty, S., Kines, P., Jensen, K.A. 2019. From Risk Perception to Risk Governance in Nanotechnology: A Multi-Stakeholder Study. Journal of Nanoparticle Research, 21(11), 1-19.

Grieger, K., Felgenhauer, T., Renn, O., Wiener, J., Borsuk. 2019. Emerging Risk Governance for Stratospheric Aerosol Injection as a Climate Management Technology. Environmental System and Decisions, 39(4), 371-382.

Isigonis, P., Hristozov, D., Benighaus, C., Giubilato, E., Grieger, K., Pizzol, L., Semenzin, E., Linkov, I., Zabeo, A., Marcomini, A. 2019. Risk Governance of Nanomaterials: Review of Criteria and Tools for Risk Communication, Evaluation, and Mitigation. Nanomaterials, 9(696), doi:10.3390/nano9050696

Mortensen, N.P., Johnson, L., Grieger, K., Fennell, T.R. 2019. Biological Interactions between Nanomaterials and Placental Development and Function Following Oral Exposure. Reproductive Toxicology, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.reprotox.2019.08.016.

Grieger, K., Bossa, N., Levis, J., von Borries, K., Strader, P., Cuchicara, M., Hendren, C.O., Hansen, S.F., Jones, J. 2018. Application and Testing of Risk Screening Tools for Nanomaterial Risk Analysis. Environmental Science: Nano, 5:1844-1858.

Hjorth, R., Holden, P.A., Hansen, S.F., Colman, B.P., Grieger, K., Hendren, C.O. 2017. The Role of Alternative Testing Strategies in Environmental Risk Assessment of Engineered Nanomaterials. Environmental Science: Nano, 4:292-301