After his graduation from the University of California Los Angeles in 1972, Kineman started his career at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), working as officer and scientist in various assignments in oceanographic research at sea collecting geophysical, oceanographic, and climate data, Solar Forecaster at the Space Environment Services Center in Boulder, CO, and member of the NOAA-Coast Guard Spilled Oil Research Team (SOR Team) a research unit of the Outer Continental Shelf Environmental Assessment Program (OCSEAP),[2] publishing a one year study of the 'Tsesis' oil spill in the Baltic as his Masters Dissertation.[3] He joined the Kenya Wildlife Conservation and Management Department of the Ministry of Environment and Tourism (later reorganized under Richard Leakey as the Kenya Wildlife Service) in 1987 as a Senior Research Warden through the US Peace Corps, and later helped conduct the 1981 census of Mountain Gorillas in 1981[4] under the direction of Dr. Sandy Harcourt at Dian Fossey's Karisoke Research Center in Rwanda. He then began postgraduate research in ecology and returned to public service in NOAA at the National Geophysical Data Center (NGDC), developing distribution modeling techniques and ecological characterization datasets[5][6] for emerging USA and International global change programs,[7][8] and led development of the Data and Information Management component of a new NOAA "Center for Ecosystems Health" in Charleston, SC.[9] In 1997 he joined CIRES at the University of Colorado, where he has continued as a senior research scientist since retiring from government service in 2005. Extending the work of Dr. Robert Rosen (mathematical biologist),[10] he completed his Ph.D. in the Department of Environmental Studies in 2007, focused on ecological informatics, niche modeling, and complex systems theory,[11] which he continued in post-doc research through a Fulbright grant to India 2007-2008, working as Honorary Adjunct Fellow at the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and Environment (ATREE). Continuing research in both India and the USA to develop a theory of natural system wholeness, he published his first synthesis of Rosen's relational theory in 2011,[12] which he later called "R-Theory" or "Relational Holon Theory",[13][14] finding surprisingly deep correlations with ancient Vedic concepts of whole nature.[15] In 2020 he co-published an update of the general synthesis in two parts with his original PhD mentor Dr. Carol Wessman.[16][17] He has been a visiting professor at the Indian Institute of Sciences in Bangalore (Karnataka),[17] the Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Learning in Puttaparthi (Andhra Pradesh),[18] and Vignan's University in Vadlamudi (Andhra Pradesh).[19] Kineman was elected President of the International Society for the Systems Sciences in the year 2015-2016, producing the annual ISSS conference on the dual theme: Realizing Sustainable Futures in Socioecological Systems (US) and Leadership for Sustainable Socioecological Systems (India).[20]
Selected publications
John J. Kineman and Bradley O. Parks (eds.), Ecological characterization : recommendations of a science review panel: workshop held March 9–10, 1995, at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.
Rosen, Judith, and John Jay Kineman. "Anticipatory systems and time: a new look at Rosennean complexity." Systems Research and Behavioral Science 22.5 (2005): 399-412.
Kineman, John J. "Relational science: a synthesis." Axiomathes 21.3 (2011): 393-437.
Kineman, John J. (December 2017). "A causal framework for integrating contemporary and Vedic holism". Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology. 131: 402–423. doi:10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2017.09.011. PMID28943341.
Krupanidhi, Srirama; Madhan Sai, N.; Leung, Homan; Kineman, John J. (September 2017). "The Leaf as a Sustainable and Renewable System: The Leaf as a Sustainable and Renewable System". Systems Research and Behavioral Science. 34 (5): 564–576. doi:10.1002/sres.2487.
Kineman, John (2019). "Science of a Living Universe". Proceedings of the 63rd Annual Meeting of the ISSS - 2019 Corvallis, OR, USA.
Kineman, J. J., & Wessman, C. A. Relational Systems Ecology: Holistic Ecology and Causal Closure. In G. Metcalf, H. Deguchi, & K. Kijima (Eds.), Handbook of Systems Sciences. Springer (2020).
Kineman, J. J., & Wessman, C. A. Relational Systems Ecology: The Anticipatory Niche and Complex Model Coupling. In G. Metcalf, H. Deguchi, & K. Kijima (Eds.), Handbook of Systems Sciences. Springer (2020).
^Kineman, John J. (1992). Global ecosystems database. U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Geophysical Data Center and World Data Center A for Solid Earth Geophysics. OCLC1016991515.[page needed][non-primary source needed]
^Hastings, David A.; Kineman, John J.; Clark, David M. (January 1991). "Development and application of global databases: considerable progress, but more collaboration needed". International Journal of Geographical Information Systems. 5 (1): 137–146. doi:10.1080/02693799108927837.[non-primary source needed]
^Earth system science : a program for global change ; a closer view ; report of the Earth System Sciences Committee, NASA Advisory Council. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 1988. OCLC257151212.[page needed]
^The International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme: a study of global change (IGBP) of the International Council of Scientific Unions (ICSU). IGBP Secretariat, The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. 1986. OCLC229074568.[page needed]
^Kineman, John J.; Parks, Bradley O. (1996). Ecological characterization : recommendations of a science review panel. National Geophysical Data Center. OCLC38223520.[page needed][non-primary source needed]
^Rosen, Robert (1991). Life itself : a comprehensive inquiry into the nature, origin, and fabrication of life. New York. ISBN0-231-07564-2. OCLC23386523.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)[page needed]
^Kineman, John J. (September 2012). "R-Theory: A Synthesis of Robert Rosen's Relational Complexity: A Synthesis of Robert Rosen's Relational Complexity". Systems Research and Behavioral Science. 29 (5): 527–538. doi:10.1002/sres.2156.[non-primary source needed]
^ abKineman, John J.; Wessman, Carol A. (2020). "Relational Systems Ecology: The Anticipatory Niche and Complex Model Coupling". Handbook of Systems Sciences. pp. 1–46. doi:10.1007/978-981-13-0370-8_79-1. ISBN978-981-13-0370-8.
^Krupanidhi, Srirama; Madhan Sai, N.; Leung, Homan; Kineman, John J. (September 2017). "The Leaf as a Sustainable and Renewable System: The Leaf as a Sustainable and Renewable System". Systems Research and Behavioral Science. 34 (5): 564–576. doi:10.1002/sres.2487.[non-primary source needed]
^Kineman, John J.; Srirama, Krupanidhi (September 2017). "Introductory Essay for the SRBS Special Yearbook Issue: 'Realizing Sustainable Futures in Socio-Ecological Systems' (USA) in Parallel with 'Leadership for Sustainable Socio-Ecological Systems' (India): Realizing Sustainable Futures". Systems Research and Behavioral Science. 34 (5): 521–526. doi:10.1002/sres.2502.[non-primary source needed]