We engage in participatory science and open science, as well as disseminate our results as broadly as possible, to bridge the gap between science and society. We regularly inform about our Impact activities and related outputs in this section of our website.
Doctoral INPhINIT Fellowships Programme – Incoming. Call for applications 2021
We are looking for an experienced postdoctoral researcher to lead the development and calculus of a Rural Vulnerability Index in rural Spain.
Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) initiatives often aim to incentivize the joint adoption of forest protection and sustainable management practices. This research in Chiapas, Mexico, shows the limits of PES when parachuted into a context of uneven land tenure, weak collective action and contested leaderships.
Laseg as a group is working to develop and implement an emission reduction protocol that can serve as a pilot for further advancing the debate on responsible travels in academia.
Public green spaces provide essential benefits for people' health and well-being while triggering environmental attachment and stewardship, eventually resulting in a positive impact on the ecosystem as a whole. However, public green spaces benefits are usually unequally distributed across society. This study aims to understand the perceived benefits people obtain from public green spaces and assess their distribution, including spatial and temporal patterns of use.
We argue that the Covid-19 pandemic can become an opportunity to foster a culture of care and make academic practice more respectful and sustainable.
Doctoral INPhINIT Fellowships Programme – Incoming. Call for applications 2021
Laseg as a group is working to develop and implement an emission reduction protocol that can serve as a pilot for further advancing the debate on responsible travels in academia.
We are looking for an experienced postdoctoral researcher to lead the development and calculus of a Rural Vulnerability Index in rural Spain.
Public green spaces provide essential benefits for people' health and well-being while triggering environmental attachment and stewardship, eventually resulting in a positive impact on the ecosystem as a whole. However, public green spaces benefits are usually unequally distributed across society. This study aims to understand the perceived benefits people obtain from public green spaces and assess their distribution, including spatial and temporal patterns of use.
Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) initiatives often aim to incentivize the joint adoption of forest protection and sustainable management practices. This research in Chiapas, Mexico, shows the limits of PES when parachuted into a context of uneven land tenure, weak collective action and contested leaderships.
We argue that the Covid-19 pandemic can become an opportunity to foster a culture of care and make academic practice more respectful and sustainable.