Emily J Flies

Emily J Flies

University of Tasmania

H-index: 18

Oceania-Australia

About Emily J Flies

Emily J Flies, With an exceptional h-index of 18 and a recent h-index of 16 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Tasmania, specializes in the field of Urban Health, Environmental Epidemiology, Disease Ecology.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Online, Experiential Sustainability Education Can Improve Students’ Self-Reported Environmental Attitudes, Behaviours and Wellbeing

A mountain of health benefits? Impacts of ecological restoration activities on human wellbeing

The human values of dark skies: Light pollution as an emerging justice issue

Sustainability educator perspectives of impacts, potential and barriers of sustainability education

Outdoor mental healthcare: What, who, why and where to?

Which soil microbiome? Bacteria, fungi, and protozoa communities show different relationships with urban green space type and use-intensity

Nature-based solutions in Australia: a systematic quantitative literature review of terms, application and policy relevance

The health and wellbeing benefits of caring for nature

Emily J Flies Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

946

Citations(since 2020)

859

Cited By

316

hIndex(all)

18

hIndex(since 2020)

16

i10Index(all)

21

i10Index(since 2020)

20

Email

University Profile Page

University of Tasmania

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Emily J Flies Skills & Research Interests

Urban Health

Environmental Epidemiology

Disease Ecology

Top articles of Emily J Flies

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Online, Experiential Sustainability Education Can Improve Students’ Self-Reported Environmental Attitudes, Behaviours and Wellbeing

Sustainability

Francesca Douglas

Kim Beasy

Kate Sollis

Emily J Flies

2024/3/8

A mountain of health benefits? Impacts of ecological restoration activities on human wellbeing

Wellbeing, Space and Society

Pauline Marsh

Stuart Auckland

Todd Dudley

Dave Kendal

Emily Flies

2023/1/1

The human values of dark skies: Light pollution as an emerging justice issue

Emily Flies

Gabriella Allegretto

Dave Kendal

Adele Somerville

Sharolyn Anderson

...

2023/3/31

Sustainability educator perspectives of impacts, potential and barriers of sustainability education

Proceedings of The Australian Conference on Science and Mathematics Education

Francesca Douglas

Dave Kendal

Emily J Flies

2023/8/24

Outdoor mental healthcare: What, who, why and where to?

Australasian Psychiatry

Amanda L Neil

Anita Pryor

Jessica Kneebone

Emily J Flies

Nature Effect team

2023/12

Which soil microbiome? Bacteria, fungi, and protozoa communities show different relationships with urban green space type and use-intensity

Science of The Total Environment

Jessica Grierson

Emily J Flies

Andrew Bissett

Hans Ammitzboll

Penelope Jones

2023/3/10

Nature-based solutions in Australia: a systematic quantitative literature review of terms, application and policy relevance

Dan Zhu

Yue Zhang

Dave Kendal

Lily Fraser

Emily J Flies

2023/9/20

The health and wellbeing benefits of caring for nature

Pauline Marsh

Emily Flies

Dave Kendal

Brenda Lin

2023/5/31

Measuring what matters for Australia: A scoping study and proposed framework for selecting environmental indicators of wellbeing and productivity. University Of Tasmania …

Julie Boulton

Malcolm Eadie

Emily Flies

Carley Fuller

Michelle Graymore

...

2023/2/28

Bridging the evidence gap: A review and research protocol for outdoor mental health therapies for young Australians

Emily J Flies

Anita Pryor

Claire Henderson-Wilson

Megan Turner

Jessica Roydhouse

...

2023/11/14

Beyond bushfire preparedness: Evaluating the impact of a higher education sustainability unit on bushfire-related attitudes and behaviours

Proceedings of The Australian Conference on Science and Mathematics Education

Penelope Jones

Emily J Flies

Jessica E Hughes

Carina Anderson

2023/8/24

Why some countries but not others? Urbanisation, GDP and endemic disease predict global SARS-CoV-2 excess mortality patterns.

medRxiv

Nicholas M Fountain-Jones

Michael Charleston

Emily Flies

Scott Carver

Luke Yates

2023

Wildlife nidoviruses: biology, epidemiology, and disease associations of selected nidoviruses of mammals and reptiles

Andrew S Flies

Emily J Flies

Nicholas M Fountain-Jones

Ruth E Musgrove

Rodrigo K Hamede

...

2023/8/31

Nature Connection Tasmania 2022: a codesign outcomes report

Emily Flies

Pauline Marsh

Jenni Sharman

Vishnu Prahalad

Jason Byrne

...

2023/5/31

A submission to the Treasury Department's' Measuring what matters' consultation period

Emily Flies

Anissa Lawrence

2023/5/26

A submission to the review of the draft Tasmanian waste and resource recovery strategy

Corey Peterson

Carmen Primo Perez

Catherine Elliott

Emily Flies

Joanna Vince

...

2023/1/1

Nature-based Solutions in Australia–applications and opportunities to deliver real outcomes for communities and nature

Ray Nias

Anissa Lawrence

Dave Kendal

Emily Flies

2023/11/1

Sustainability education impacts on student knowledge, attitudes, behaviours and wellbeing

Proceedings of The Australian Conference on Science and Mathematics Education

Emily J Flies

Francesca Douglas

Dave Kendal

Penelope Jones

2023/8/24

Physical activity and food environments in and around schools: a case study in regional North-West Tasmania

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

Sisitha Jayasinghe

Emily J Flies

Robert Soward

Dave Kendal

Michelle Kilpatrick

...

2022/5/20

Oceans and society: feedbacks between ocean and human health

Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries

Kirsty L Nash

Ingrid Van Putten

Karen A Alexander

Silvana Bettiol

Christopher Cvitanovic

...

2022/3/1

See List of Professors in Emily J Flies University(University of Tasmania)

Co-Authors

H-index: 40
Craig R Williams

Craig R Williams

University of South Australia

H-index: 19
Andrew S. Flies

Andrew S. Flies

University of Tasmania

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