'Interdisciplinary African forest landscapes: ecological and socio-historical sciences for understanding forests today'

Tuesday 10 September 2019, 9:30am to 5:00pm

Venue

University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

Open to

Alumni, External Organisations, Postgraduates, Prospective Undergraduate Students, Public, Staff, Undergraduates

Registration

Free to attend - registration required

Event Details

How do forests respond to historical and societal change? What can be learned in the life-span of a long-lived tropical tree? University of Lausanne and Lancaster Environment Centre invite you to this exciting joint conference.

Forests have been greatly impacted by anthropogenic activities for thousands of years and have responded to histories of agriculture, trade, disease and resource extraction, amongst others. These influences can be discerned through modifications to soil, topography and vegetation, including the presence of light-demanding species of mono-dominant forests. Yet throughout the humid tropics, when forest vegetation change has been studied through different types of ecological and forestry plots, the focus has been often limited to forest dynamics, timber, and biodiversity and not in reference to the social, historical and political dynamics that have created these forests. Collaboration across the ecological and socio-historical sciences can enrich the insights and inferences from plot-based studies to address this gap; however, this requires interdisciplinary collaboration.

A conference will be held to explore the contribution that the historical and social sciences can make to ecological studies of forest dynamics and the specific methods and approaches required to achieve a multi-disciplinary understanding of forests over recent time periods, such as the Anthropocene, and the impact on current and future forest structure and biodiversity. Such studies would view forests through layers of data sets across layers of time. This approach will not only illuminate how forests have reacted to recent, past societal change, but how they continue to evolve in their current settings and what this means for the people who live in these forests today. This research will help us to consider the role that societies have had and continue to have on shaping these forests, the capacity of forests to recover from historical disturbances, and the implications for forest management and conservation.

Please register your participation by August 31, 2019

Invited Speakers include:

  • Kojo Amanor, Department of History, University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana
  • Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend, ICCA Consortium Association (Territories and areas conserved by indigenous peoples and local communities)
  • Fréderic Darballay, University of Geneva, Faculty of Psychology and Science Education, Director of the Cellule Inter- et Transdisciplinarité, Switzerland
  • Nestor Engone, Director Herbier National du Gabon, Instit de Recherche d’Ecologie Tropical, Gabon
  • James Fairhead, University of Sussex, Sussex Rights and Justice Research Centre, United Kingdom
  • James Fraser, Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University, United Kingdom
  • David Kenfack, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, USA
  • Christian Kull, Faculty of Geosciences and the Environment, UNIL
  • Paul Lane, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
  • Richard Oslisly, Agence Nationale des Parcs Nationaux- Gabon / Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
  • Leanne Phelps, Faculty of Geosciences and the Environment, UNIL

Contact Details

Name Dr James Fraser
Email

j.fraser3@lancaster.ac.uk

Telephone number

+44 1524 592196

Website

https://www.unil.ch/igd/african-forest-landscapes