Professorship for International Sustainable Development and Planning
Organisational unit: Professoship
Organisation profile
The aim of our research at the professorship for International Sustainable Development and Planning (ISDP) is to make sound contributions to the international field of Sustainability Science and thus to advance it. To this end, we generate empirical findings that help to understand the causes of (un-)sustainability, that is, to unravel, elicit and comprehend systems of values, knowledge and institutions that foster and underpin sustainable transformations and human-nature relations.
Four main principles mark our research and its (ongoing) development: interdisciplinarity, collaboration, commitment with the science-society respectively -policy interfaces and responsibility.
Topics
We research how Nature’s Contributions to People (NCP) are used, valued and demanded by different social actors in multiple social-ecological contexts. In addition, we seek to understand how different systems of values, knowledge and institutions with regards to human-nature relations are changing in different social-ecological contexts and identify ways by which these changes can be redirected to facilitate human-nature connectedness. We also advance knowledge to determine which configurations of values, knowledge and institutions promote pathways towards sustainability.
Modus Operandi
Our research program is highly inter- and transdisciplinary as the main motivation is to understand social-ecological dynamics across scales in order to foster sustainability. To do so, we conduct place-based social-ecological research in different rural systems in Africa, Europe and Latin America, as well as, regional and global assessments.
In order to meet the inter- and transdisciplinary requirements of our research the team covers different disciplines, including environmental science, sustainability science, ecological economics, humanities, feminist studies or political ecology. Moreover, we work collaboratively with scientists from other disciplines as well as social actors outside academia. Important partners in these collaborations are some minorities and marginalized groups, such as Indigenous Peoples and local communities, people with disabilities, and people discriminated because their gender*.
As a research team, we have an active commitment with the science-society and science-policy interfaces. Accordingly, we engage with a diverse and broad range of societal actors and, for instance, in the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).
Our daily research is guided by the conviction that it must be responsible. Responsibility means, in particular, responsibility towards society, towards our colleagues and collaborators, and towards ourselves. In our understanding, this principle strongly relates with a feminist ethos of care that we intend to practice steadily.
* refers to all non-male people, which also includes trans-gender, non-binary people and gender fluid people.
Most downloaded publications
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Exploring intrinsic, instrumental and relational values for sustainable management of social-ecological systems
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Identifying past social-ecological thresholds to understand long-term temporal dynamics in Spain
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Research pathways to foster transformation: linking sustainability science and social-ecological systems research
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Scaling the impact of sustainability initiatives: a typology of amplification processes
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Research on the social perception of invasive species: a systematic literature review
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Key features for more successful place-based sustainability research on social-ecological systems: a Programme on Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS) perspective
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Off-stage ecosystem service burdens: A blind spot for global sustainability
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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A feminist ethos for caring knowledge production in transdisciplinary sustainability science
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Nature’s contributions to people in mountains: A review
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Making the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration a Social-Ecological Endeavour
Research output: Journal contributions › Scientific review articles › Research
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Disentangling trade-offs and synergies around ecosystem services with the influence network framework: Illustration from a consultative process over the French Alps
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Human-carnivore relations: Conflicts, tolerance and coexistence in the American West
Research output: Journal contributions › Scientific review articles › Research
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Farmer Perceptions of the Ecosystem Services Provided by Scavengers: What, Who, and to Whom
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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Trait-based approaches to analyze links between the drivers of change and ecosystem services: Synthesizing existing evidence and future challenges
Research output: Journal contributions › Scientific review articles › Research
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Understanding the diversity of values of “Nature’s contributions to people”: insights from the IPBES Assessment of Europe and Central Asia
Research output: Journal contributions › Scientific review articles › Research