Janet Stephenson

Janet Rhona Stephenson (born 1955) is a New Zealand social scientist, and is a research professor at the University of Otago, where she is Director of the Centre for Sustainability. Her research focuses on climate change and societal transition.

Academic career
Stephenson's father was farmer Gordon Stephenson, founder of the QEII National Trust. The family moved to New Zealand from the UK in 1958 when Janet Stephenson was a young child. Stephenson completed a Master's thesis titled The planning framework for Maori land at Massey University. She followed this with a PhD at the University of Otago in 2005, studying cultural values and the links between society, values and sustainability outcomes. From 2002 Stephenson taught in the geography department at Otago, before joining the Centre for Sustainability in 2008. She has been Director of the Centre for Sustainability since 2011. Stephenson was appointed associate professor in 2018 and research professor in 2021.

Stephenson has been a member of the Advisory Board of INCLUDE, a Norwegian research centre for socially inclusive energy transitions. She is also involved in the Built Environment and Active Transport to School research programme, and the BRANZ Transition to Zero Carbon Programme. She is also a involved with the Coastal People: Southern Skies Centre of Research Excellence and both the Deep South National Science Challenge and the Science for Technological Innovation science challenge.

Stephenson's research focuses on climate change, and how to achieve societal transition to a sustainable future. She works in multidisciplinary teams, and has developed cultural frameworks as a new theoretical way to explore societal change. She has commented on issues such as New Zealand's electricity infrastructure, and how the economy could be redesigned.

Stephenson has received research funding from the MBIE Endeavour fund, the Norwegian Research Council, and was a principal investigator on a Marsden grants in 2008, with Henrik Moller, titled Tirohia He Huarahi: Co-management of environment by indigenous people.