Our site uses cookies necessary for its proper functioning. To improve your experience, other cookies may be used: you can choose to disable them. This can be changed at any time via the Cookies link at the bottom of the page.

Summer School "Ecology and Society: Frontiers and Boundaries" / 3 - 7 June 2019

Ecosystems societies Climate change Forests Hydrosystems Atmosphere Biodiversity Agrosystems Pressures Impacts Modelling Pollution Ecotoxicology Biogeochimical cycles Ecology Adaptability
Vineyards
Vineyards
Wine tasting - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Wine tasting - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Vineyard - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Vineyard - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Field Trip
Field Trip
Evening
Evening
Students 2014
Students 2014
Commodifying ecosystemic services
Commodifying ecosystemic services
Group - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Group - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Cellars
Cellars
Cellars
Cellars
Evening
Evening
Introduction : why a global ecology ?
Introduction : why a global ecology ?
Vineyards
Vineyards
Evening
Evening
Field Trip
Field Trip
Group Picture - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Group Picture - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Hôtel Chateau Latour - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Hôtel Chateau Latour - Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Field trip 2015 - Château Suduiraut, Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Field trip 2015 - Château Suduiraut, Crédits photo LabEx COTE
Biogeochemical cycles of disrupted ecosystems
Biogeochemical cycles of disrupted ecosystems
Field Trip
Field Trip

Jelle BEHAGEL

Last update Tuesday 28 February 2017

Jelle Behagel is Assistant Professor at the Forest and Nature Conservation Policy Group (FNP) at Wageningen University, the Netherlands. His expertise is in the democratic governance of nature as well as relations between political discourse and nature conservation practices. He currently works on emerging practices of conservation, for example on Atlantic rainforest as water source protection in the Metropolitan region of São Paulo. He is also involved in projects that focus on institutional practices of REDD+ and Sustainable Forest Management, indigenous knowledge and land use practices, and the nature-society divide in agroecology and beyond.