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  Innovating social and economic strategies for landscape scale conservation


   School of Earth & Environment

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  Dr David Williams, Dr G Holmes, Dr Joelene Hughes, Prof D Edwards  No more applications being accepted  Funded PhD Project (Students Worldwide)

About the Project

Working with Europe’s largest environmental NGO—the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds—the fully funded project “Innovating social and economic strategies for landscape scale conservation” will investigate which conservation strategies can best balance societal and environmental goals, and how to achieve these strategies. Initial application date of 12th March 2021 (23:59pm).

Safeguarding the global environment while maintaining and improving food security is perhaps the 21st century's greatest challenge. While natural science studies have revealed the landscape-scale conservation strategies with greatest potential for balancing food production and environmental goals, very little is known about the social, cultural, or economic dynamics and impacts of these strategies. E.g. how they might affect communities, how communities might engage with them, or how such approaches could be implemented effectively, equitably and efficiently. The project 'Innovating social and economic strategies for landscape scale conservation' will use multiple disciplines to understand how landscape-scale biodiversity conservation strategies affect social, cultural, and economic objectives, and which interventions can best balance competing objectives. The project has been co-designed with the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), Europe’s largest environmental NGO, so that its outputs can directly inform policy.

Specifically, the project will draw on multiple disciplines, including human geography, politics, and environmental economics, to investigate:

1) The probable consequences of landscape-scale conservation for a range of stakeholders

2) Which policy mechanisms are more, or less, likely to achieve effective and equitable landscape-scale conservation in practice, particularly when working across multiple landowners.

In doing so, the project tackles the challenge of combining social and cultural values with environmental data to provide realistic and relevant policy-relevant outputs. By investigating the politics and economics of sustainable land-use strategies, the project will allow the RSPB to develop its understanding of how conservation strategies may affect, and be affected by, social, cultural, and economic concerns. This is crucial if landscape-scale conservation is to move from ecological modelling into conservation and agricultural practice, and from theory to reality.

We welcome applications from candidates with a wide range of experiences and expertise and from a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds, including both natural and social sciences. The key is to be willing to take on the challenge of truly interdisciplinary research, combining quantitative and qualitative methods, and techniques from a multiple disciplines.

We particularly welcome candidates from non-traditional backgrounds and offer both a three year PhD, and a 1+3 combined PhD and MA Social Research.

Please apply before 12th March 2021 (23:59pm). We would highly recommend contact David Williams or George Holmes prior to your application. Please see https://phd.leeds.ac.uk/project/971-esrc-wrdtp-collaborative-studentship-innovating-social-and-economic-strategies-for-landscape-scale-conservation for more details

Biological Sciences (4) Geography (17)

Funding Notes

The position includes fees and a maintenance grant at standard Research Council rates (£15,609 in Session 2021/22) for full-time study, together with other allowances.
There are a small number of places for international students available.

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