"When I slow my pace of living so that I truly see the grassland, then my life comes into focus." (J.A. Lockwood, Prologue, Prairie soul: Finding grace in the earth beneath my feet)
Lockwood earned a B.S. degree in biology from New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, where he was the 1982 recipient of the Brown Award.[3] He received a Ph.D. in entomology from Louisiana State University, after completing a dissertation entitled The behavioral ecology of the first instar southern green stink bug, Nezara viridula (L.).[4]
His career at the University of Wyoming began as Assistant Professor of Entomology before becoming Professor of Natural Sciences and Humanities, then transferring to the philosophy department and teaching in the Master of Fine Arts program in creative writing.[5]
Lockwood and other scholars at the University of Wyoming have recently become locked in a debate with university administration, and Wyoming business and energy leaders over what he and others have argued is a clear case of the infringement of academic freedom. According to emails and reports released under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the sitting university President, Tom Buchanan, ordered the destruction of Carbon Sink, an artwork created by artist Chris Drury, after Wyoming energy and business leaders considered it an untoward criticism of the industry that partly subsidizes the university through severance tax. Although Wyoming industry leaders have called for a moratorium on the debate, the university administration's infringement of academic freedom has become the hot-button topic while the university seeks a replacement for Buchanan, upon his scheduled retirement in July 2013.
Lockwood is married, and has a son and daughter. He is a member of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Laramie, Wyoming, USA.[7] He also appears as a character in Tectonic Theater Project's The Laramie Project and The Laramie Project: 10 Years Later.
Selected publications
Articles
(1987). Probabilities of rangeland grasshopper outbreaks in Wyoming counties. Laramie, Wyo: Agricultural Experiment Station, Dept. of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences. OCLC 20379263
(1987). The Moral Standing of Insects and the Ethics of Extinction. The Florida Entomologist 70 (1): 70-89.
(1988). Impact of sedimentation on the aquatic macroinvertebrates of the North Fork of the Little Snake River. Laramie, Wyo: Wyoming Water Research Center]. OCLC 54467910
Books
(1988). Biology and recommendations for use of Nosema locustae Canning, a biological control agent of grasshoppers. Laramie, Wyo: Agricultural Experiment Station, Dept. of Plant, Soil, and Insect Sciences, University of Wyoming. OCLC 20975160
(1997). Ethical issues in biological control. Agriculture and human values, v. 14, no. 3. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic. OCLC 39233868
(2002). Grasshopper dreaming: Reflections on killing and loving. Boston: Skinner House Books. ISBN1-55896-431-2
^Lockwood, Jeffrey Alan (1985). The behavioral ecology of the first instar southern green stink bug, Nezara viridula (L.). OCLC15135366 – via OCLC 15135366.
Frosch, Dan (October 26, 2012). "Art That Irked Energy Executives Is Gone, but Wyoming Dispute Whirls On". The New York Times. Drury's artwork "Carbon Sink" was commissioned by the University of Wyoming. After about a year, it was taken down following after pressure from energy industry and political officials.
Nijhuis, Michelle (October 31, 2012). "The Artwork That Infuriated Big Coal". Slate. More on the Wyoming University decision to remove Drury's sculpture, and a comparison to Indiana University's handling of pressure regarding historical murals on campus showing the Ku Klux Klan's ascendancy in the 1920s.