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New

Associate Professor of Population and Public Health Sciences

University of Southern California
$180,000-$220,000
United States, California, Los Angeles
3720 Flower Street (Show on map)
Jan 28, 2026

The University of Southern California (USC), founded in 1880, is the largest private employer in the City of Los Angeles. As an employee of USC, you will be a part of a world-class research university and a member of the "Trojan Family," which is comprised of the faculty, students and staff that make the university what it is.

The Department of Population and Public Health Sciences at the University of Southern California invites applications for a talented candidate at any level (tenure or tenure track; assistant, associate, or full professor) in the Environmental Health Division of the Department of Population and Public Health Sciences to expand a productive research program on environmental determinants of human disease and become a future leader in a defined field of Environmental Health Sciences. This new position seeks to enhance and foster current and future research, with a proposed start date of Spring/Summer/Fall 2026.

Position Overview

The successful candidate will develop and lead an independent, externally funded research program in Environmental Health Sciences, with a strong emphasis on environmental epidemiology, chemical exposures, and human health outcomes. The position is well suited for candidates with expertise in endocrine-disrupting chemicals, chemical mixtures, reproductive and cardiometabolic health, and life-course approaches to disease etiology, and who are positioned to become leaders in their field.

Areas of Expertise

Applicants with demonstrated expertise in one or more of the following areas are encouraged to apply:

Assessment of environmental chemical exposures (e.g., endocrine-disrupting chemicals, pesticides, flame retardants, PFAS) and their impacts on human health across the reproductive and life course Environmental epidemiology of reproductive, perinatal, pediatric, and long-term health outcomes Chemical mixtures and exposome approaches, including advanced statistical and computational methods Integration of biomarkers, including epigenetic, metabolomic, and other molecular measures, to elucidate biological mechanisms Translation of environmental health research to public health relevance, risk assessment, and policy

Qualifications

  • Doctoral degree (PhD, ScD, or equivalent) in Epidemiology, Environmental Health, Public Health, or related biomedical or physical sciences
  • Postdoctoral training or equivalent experience
  • Strong publication record in high-impact, peer-reviewed journals commensurate with career stage
  • Demonstrated success or clear potential to secure NIH or other extramural funding
  • Experience working with large prospective cohort studies and interdisciplinary research teams
  • Commitment to mentorship, teaching, and collaborative team science

The successful faculty candidate is expected to bring in or develop an externally funded research program after an appropriate transitional period. Multi-year startup funding will be provided through institutional support and NIH research grants.

A demonstrative strength of the Keck School of Medicine is the existence of several research efforts oriented towards etiologic, intervention, population-based, and basic science research on understanding environmental impacts of multi-pollutant exposures to human health outcomes across the life course, with a special focus in early-life, childhood, and later-life impacts. The department has a world-renown research group in environmental epidemiology and biostatistics, with an active and well-funded program in environmental health effects research and a growing interest in novel approaches to disentangling multi-pollutant exposure contributions to environmental health impacts on multiple organ systems of interest. The department has diverse expertise in environmental respiratory, neurological, cardiovascular, metabolic and cancer epidemiology and in methodological research on environmental and genetic epidemiology. A dynamic group of investigators in the NIH-funded Southern California Environmental Health Sciences Center, Southern California Superfund Research and Training Program for PFAS Assessment, Remediation, and the Center for Translational Exposomics Research offer opportunities for a wide range of research collaborations with other USC schools and across several Southern California institutions.

Apply here and upload curriculum vitae, research statement, and names and contact information for three individuals who are familiar with academic accomplishments.

The annual base salary range for this position is $180,000-$220,000. When extending an offer of employment, the University of Southern California considers factors such as (but not limited to) the scope and responsibilities of the position, the candidate's work experience, education/training, key skills, internal peer equity, federal, state, and local laws, contractual stipulations, grant funding, as well as external market and organizational considerations

For further inquiries contact:

EH Faculty Search Committee

c/o: Lida Chatzi,

Professor, Environmental Health Division

Department of Population and Public Health Sciences

Keck School of Medicine of USC

2001 N Soto St #230G

Los Angeles CA 90089-9237

email: chatzi@usc.edu

Job ID REQ20171119
Posted Date 01/28/2026
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