Page: 1 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Applicant Project Owner Institution / company (Norwegian name) Norsk senter for bygdeforskning Faculty Institute Department Address Universitetssenteret, Dragvoll Postal code 7491 City TRONDHEIM Country Norway E-mail post@bygdeforskning.no Website www.bygdeforskning.no Enterprise number eAdministration Project administrator First name Egil Petter Last name Stræte Position/title Director / Dr.polit Phone 73592404 E-mail egil.p.strate@bygdeforskning.no Confirmation ✔ The application has been approved by the Project Owner Project manager First name Hilde Page: 2 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Last name Bjørkhaug Institution / company (Norwegian name) Norsk senter for bygdeforskning Faculty Institute Department Address Universitetssenteret, Dragvoll Postal code 7491 City TRONDHEIM Country NORWAY Position/title Senior reseracher / Dr. polit Academic degree Dr.polit Sociology Preferred language Bokmål Phone 73591781 E-mail hilde.bjorkhaug@bygdeforskning.no Project info Project title Project title Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) Primary and secondary objectives of the project Primary and secondary objectives The overarching objective of AGRISPACE is to provide comprehensive knowledge on challenges and opportunities for sustainable growth in production and innovation in land-based bio-production across space. Through interdisciplinary research and innovative and ambitious methods of spatial analysis AGRISPACE will explore the four interrelated thematic areas of: 1)Spatial variation and the effects of this variation on the utilisation of land resources 2)Spatial variation in products and production methods (types) 3)Factors and conditions that promote or restrict value creation in biobased value chains 4)Goals and goal conflicts in agricultural policy and policy instruments Page: 3 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 - and evaluate the effects of these for a bio-economic transition in land-based production. AGRISPACE will further discuss different development trajectories or scenarios for Norwegian agriculture and suggest policies to achieve desirable outcomes. Project summary Domestic food production is a key social and political goal in Norway. The population has been predicted to grow by 20 percent over the next 20 years and Norwegian agricultural production is being encouraged to grow at a parallel rate. To achieve a goal of increased productivity and food security, innovation and integration is required within all sectors of the bio-economy and in all regions of Norway (LMD 2011). These goals might be conflicting. Project summary Behind this agenda lies a set of grand societal challenges where food insecurity is intensified by the combination of global population growth, environmental degradation, climate change and excessive market interests and investment in agricultural assets. The effects of these challenges on Norwegian bioproduction, are emphasised in BIONÆRs (2012-2020:7) work programme and "will in all likelihood be significant, but the ramifications for Norway will vary in different areas". Hence the overarching objective of AGRISPACE is to provide comprehensive knowledge on challenges and opportunities for sustainable growth in production and innovation in land-based bio-production across spaces. AGRISPACE will, through innovative and ambitious methods of spatial analysis, explore the four interrelated thematic areas of 1) land resources, 2) types of production, 3) value chains and 4) policy instruments, and evaluate the effects of these for a bio-economic transition in land-based production. AGRISPACE will further discuss different development trajectories or scenarios for Norwegian agriculture. Benefiting from a multidisciplinary and internationally situated and oriented research team, AGRISPACE will offer new and necessary knowledge on what stimulates growth in landbased production and industries. AGRISPACE will further offer essential knowledge for agricultural and rural authorities on regulation and efficient use of policy instruments in different regions of Norway and discuss scenarios for future Norwegian bio-production. Funding scheme Supplementary info from applicant Programme / activity BIONÆR Application type Researcher project Page: 4 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Topics Samfunn Other relevant programmes/ activities/projects Discipline(s) Sociology, Geography, Political Science, Ag economy, Mathematics, Ecology, Biology, Veterinary If applying for additional funding, specify project number Have any related applications been submitted to the Research Council and/or any other public funding scheme No If yes, please provide further information Progress plan Project period From date 20140101 To date 20171231 Main activities and milestones in the project period (year and quarter) Milestones throughout the project From To Apply for and emply PhD candiates 2014 1 2014 3 Integrated analysis 2016 2 2017 4 Detailed planning 2014 1 2014 2 WP 1 Management and coordination 2014 1 2017 4 Annual workshops 2014 2 2017 2 Establish reference group 2014 2 2014 2 WP2 State of the art analysis 2014 2 2014 4 WP5 Scenarios 2014 2 2016 4 WP6 Dissemination and policy recommendations 2014 2 2017 4 WP3 Developing methods and framework 2014 3 2015 2 Page: 5 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 WP4 Thematic areas reseach 2014 3 2017 3 Contracts and agreement 2014 1 2014 1 WP4.2 Types of productions 2014 3 2017 3 WP4.3 Value chains 2014 3 2017 3 WP4.4 Politicy 2014 3 2017 3 WP7 Stakeholder involvment and network buildi 2014 3 2017 4 Attending conferences 2015 2 2017 3 Guest reseachers in Norway 2015 2 2016 4 Reseach stays abroad 2015 3 2016 2 Midterm conference 2016 2 2016 2 End conference 2017 4 2017 4 Final report 2017 4 2017 4 WP4.1 Land resources 2014 3 2017 3 Dissemination of project results The project aims for an extensive and broad dissemination of results. Target users are: policy decision makers, governments, agricultural organisations, economic organization, NGOs and other stakeholders within fields of agriculture and resource management, food and food processing, environment, finance, energy, and scientific and research bodies. In addition to newspapers, newsletters, factsheets, media interviews and conference presentations and scientific peer reviewed publication, AGRISPACE will initiate thematic workshops at conferences and host a midterm and end conference for invited policy makers and key stakeholders. Dissemination plan Detailed WP dissemination plan WP1: AGRISPACE Webpage WP2: State of the art report WP3: Methodological framework, Assessment interdisciplinary success WP4.1: Page: 6 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 2 articles submitted to refereed journals, 4 paper presentations at scientific conferences, 1 report (NFLI publication), 2 popular scientific articles (in Norwegian). WP4.2 1 Phd thesis, 2 articles submitted to refereed journals, 4 paper presentations at scientific conferences, 2 popular scientific articles 2 lectures at meetings or seminars WP4.3 1Phd thesis, 2 articles submitted to refereed journals, 3 paper presentations at scientific conferences, 2 media coverages, 1 popular scientific article (in Norwegian) 2 lectures at meetings or seminars. WP4.4 Integrated analysis report 2 articles submitted to refereed journals, 3 paper presentations at scientific conferences, 2 media coverages, 1 popular scientific article (in Norwegian) 2 lectures at meetings or seminars. WP5 1 article submitted to refereed journals, 1 chronicle, Scenario report WP6 Reference group meetings, scientific group meetings WP7 Yearly newsletter Midterm and end conference Researcher workshops and conference sessions Policy recommendation Final report Budget Cost plan (in NOK 1000) Page: 7 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 Payroll and indirect expenses 2191 3220 3271 2184 10866 Procurement of R&D services 1675 1925 1875 1750 7225 Equipment Other operating expenses Totals Sum 0 340 655 480 415 1890 4206 5800 5626 4349 19981 Payroll and Indirect Expenses: Salaries Centre for Rural Research (CRR) 2 PhD grants (located at CRR & NILF), Travel grants (abroad and guest researchers) Procurement of R&D services: Salaries and operating expenses for national partners Other operating expenses: operating expenses CRR and salaries international partners Specification Cost code (in NOK 1000) 2014 2015 2016 2017 Trade and industry Independent research institute 2018 2019 2020 2021 Sum 0 3906 5225 5226 4099 18456 Universities and University Colleges 0 Other sectors 0 Abroad 300 575 400 250 1525 Totals 4206 5800 5626 4349 19981 Funding plan (in NOK 1000) Page: 8 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 Sum Own financing 0 International funding 0 Other public funding 0 Other private funding 0 From Research Council 4206 5800 5626 4349 19981 Totals 4206 5800 5626 4349 19981 Specification Person for whom a fellowship/position is being sought First name Last name National identity number From date (yyyymmdd) To date (yyyymmdd) Basis for calculation of position Type of fellowship Not selected 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Percentage of full time position Documentation for calculation of overseas research grant and visiting researcher grant Institution / company Travelling with family Travel expenses Location Country Period 2021 Page: 9 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 From date (yyyymmdd) To date (yyyymmdd) Allocations sought from the Research Council (in 1000 NOK) 2014 2015 2016 2017 Student fellowships Doctoral fellowships 2018 2019 2020 2021 Sum 0 936 1934 1998 1032 Post-doctoral fellowships 5900 0 Grants for visiting researchers 78 Grants for overseas researchers 174 78 180 354 Researcher positions 0 Hourly-based salary including indirect costs 1255 1034 1093 1152 4534 Procurement of R&D services 1675 1925 1875 1750 7225 Equipment Other operating expenses From Research Council 0 340 655 480 415 1890 4206 5800 5626 4349 19981 Partners Partners under obligation to provide professional or financial resources for the implementation of the project 1 Page: 10 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Institution/ company NORSK INSTITUTT FOR LANDBRUKSØKONOMISK FORSKNING ( Department/ section Address POSTBOKS 8024 DEP Postal code 0030 City OSLO Country Norge Enterprise number 970954333 Contact person Klaus Mittenzwei Contact tel. +47 22 36 72 72 Contact e-mail klaus.mittenzwei@nilf.no Partner's role Research activity 2 Institution/ company NORSK INSTITUTT FOR SKOG OG LANDSKAP Department/ section Address Postboks 115 Postal code 1431 City ÅS Country Norge Enterprise number 970167641 Contact person Wenche Dramstad Contact tel. +47 64 94 96 84 Contact e-mail wed@skogoglandskap.no Partner's role Research activity 3 Institution/ company NTNU Fakultet for samfunnsvitenskap og teknologile Department/ section Institutt for sosiologi og statsvitenskap Address Universitetssenteret Postal code 7491 City Trondheim Page: 11 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Country Norge Enterprise number 874749842 Contact person Arild Blekesaune Contact tel. +47 73591734 Contact e-mail arild.blekesaune@svt.ntnu.no Partner's role Research activity 4 Institution/ company Veterinærinstituttet Department/ section Epidemiologi Address Ullevålsveien 68, PB750 Postal code 0106 City Oslo Country Norway Enterprise number 970955623 Contact person Helga Høgåsen Contact tel. 23 21 63 64 Contact e-mail helga.hogasen@vetinst.no Partner's role Research activity 5 Institution/ company BIOFORSK Department/ section Bioforsk Øst - Løken Address Bioforsk Øst - Løken Postal code 2940 City Heggenes Country Norge Enterprise number 988983837 Contact person Gustav Fyrsto Contact tel. +47 406 23 818 Contact e-mail gustav.fystro@bioforsk.no Page: 12 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Partner's role Research activity 6 Institution/ company University of Otago Department/ section Sociology, Gender and Social Work Address 280 Leith Walk , P O Box 56 Postal code 9054 City Dunedin Country New Zealand Enterprise number Contact person Hugh Campbell Contact tel. 64 3 479 8749 Contact e-mail hugh.campbell@otago.ac.nz Partner's role Research activity 7 Institution/ company National Center for food and agriutural policy Department/ section Address 1616 P St NW Suite 100 Postal code DC 20036 City Washington Country USA Enterprise number Contact person Maureen Kilkenny Contact tel. +17753228602 Contact e-mail maureenkilkenny@gmail.com Partner's role Research activity 8 Institution/ company EUROCAREGmbH Department/ section Address Buntspechtweg2 2 Page: 13 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Postal code D-53123 City Bonn Country Germany Enterprise number Contact person Thomas Heckelei Contact tel. +49-228-732 916 Contact e-mail thomas.heckelei@ilr.uni-bonn.de Partner's role Research activity 9 Institution/ company University of Innsbruck Department/ section Department of Sociology Address Universitätsstrasse 15 Postal code A-6020 City Innsbruck Country Austria Enterprise number Contact person Markus Schermer Contact tel. 0512 / 507-5690 Contact e-mail markus.schermer@uibk.ac.at Partner's role Research activity 10 Institution/ company James Hutton Institute Department/ section Address Craigiebuckler Postal code AB15 8QH City Aberdeen Country Scotland, UK Enterprise number Contact person David Miller Page: 14 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Contact tel. +44 (0) 844 928 Contact e-mail david.miller@hutton.ac.uk Partner's role Research activity Attachments Project description Filename Agrispace 4 spetember 2013.pdf Reference ES516287_001_1_Prosjektbeskrivelse_20130904 Curriculum vitae (CV) with list of publications Filename CV sign-CRR Norway English 2013-08-29.pdf Reference ES516287_002_1_CV_20130901 Filename CV H Bjorkhaug 2013.pdf Reference ES516287_002_2_CV_20130901 Filename Katrina Ronningen Short CV August2013.pdf Reference ES516287_002_3_CV_20130901 Filename Magnar Forbord engelsk.pdf Reference ES516287_002_4_CV_20130901 Filename CV Eng Vik 2013 aug.pdf Reference ES516287_002_5_CV_20130901 Filename CV Burton 2013.pdf Page: 15 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Reference ES516287_002_6_CV_20130901 Filename CVArildBlekesaune.pdf Reference ES516287_002_7_CV_20130901 Filename CV Dramstad eng NFR 2013.pdf Reference ES516287_002_8_CV_20130901 Filename CVGreteStokstad2013.pdf Reference ES516287_002_9_CV_20130901 Filename cv_svein_olav_krogli_aug2013-1.pdf Reference ES516287_002_10_CV_20130901 Filename CVMittenzwei.pdf Reference ES516287_002_11_CV_20130901 Filename Hoveid cv_2013.pdf Reference ES516287_002_12_CV_20130903 Filename CV english 0913.pdf Reference ES516287_002_13_CV_20130903 Filename CV_Hogasen2013.pdf Reference ES516287_002_14_CV_20130903 Filename CV_gustav_2013.pdf Reference ES516287_002_15_CV_20130903 Filename CV H CAmpbell.pdf Reference ES516287_002_16_CV_20130903 Filename CV_heckelei_EuroCare.pdf Page: 16 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Reference ES516287_002_17_CV_20130903 Filename Curriculum Vitae Scermer .pdf Reference ES516287_002_18_CV_20130903 Filename CV Kilkenny.pdf Reference ES516287_002_19_CV_20130903 Filename CV - David Miller_drm_030913.pdf Reference ES516287_002_21_CV_20130904 Grade transcripts (Doctoral and student fellowships) Filename Reference Referees Filename Suggested referees for AGRISPACE.pdf Reference ES516287_005_1_Fageksperter_20130904 Recommendation and invitation Filename Reference Confirmation from partner(s) Page: 17 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Filename LoC-NILF.pdf Reference ES516287_008_3_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130902 Filename Letter of confirmation NFLI-Agrispace.pdf Reference ES516287_008_4_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130902 Filename Letter of confirmation_Agrispace_NVI.pdf Reference ES516287_008_5_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130902 Filename LetterArildBlekesaune.pdf Reference ES516287_008_6_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130902 Filename Bioforsk.pdf Reference ES516287_008_7_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130903 Filename Agrispace-LOI Schermer.pdf Reference ES516287_008_8_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130903 Filename Confirmation_EuroCare130828.PDF Reference ES516287_008_9_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130903 Filename Confirmationlette Campbell.pdf Reference ES516287_008_10_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130903 Filename Kilkenny Confirmation letter.pdf Reference ES516287_008_11_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130903 Filename Support_Letter_james hutton_Sept_2013.pdf Reference ES516287_008_12_AktiveSamarbeidspartnere_20130904 Page: 18 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE) (Researcher project - BIONÆR) Application Number: ES516287 Project Number: -1 Other items Filename AGRISPACE Norsk sammendrag.pdf Reference ES516287_010_1_Annet_20130904 Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE)1 1. Relevance relative to the call for proposals Domestic food production is a key social and political goal in Norway. The population has been predicted to grow by 20 percent over the next 20 years and Norwegian agricultural production is being encouraged to grow at a parallel rate. To achieve a goal of increased productivity and food security, innovation and integration is required within all sectors of the bio-economy and in all regions of Norway (LMD 2011). These goals might be conflicting. Behind this agenda lies a set of grand societal challenges where food insecurity is intensified by the combination of global population growth, environmental degradation, climate change and excessive market interests and investment in agricultural assets. The effects of these challenges on Norwegian bioproduction, are emphasised in BIONÆRs work programme (2012-2020: 7) and “will in all likelihood be significant, but the ramifications for Norway will vary in different areas”. Hence the overarching objective of AGRISPACE is to provide comprehensive knowledge on challenges and opportunities for sustainable growth in production and innovation in land-based bio-production across spaces. AGRISPACE will, through innovative and ambitious methods of spatial analysis, explore the four interrelated thematic areas of 1) land resources, 2) types of production, 3) value chains and 4) policy instruments, and evaluate the effects hereof for a bio-economic transition in land-based production. AGRISPACE addresses the BIONÆR programme 2013 call for projects on challenges and opportunities for innovation in agriculture based value chains. AGRISPACE has a strong focus on spatial variation in all of the thematic areas in BIONÆR’s Thematic priority area 4 “Social science research”, addressing 3 of four sub-topics no. 1) “Framework conditions for bio-based industrial activities”, no 2) “Innovation, business development and actors’ adaptations, and subtopic 3) “Local variation and opportunities for bio-based industry.” Benefiting from a multidisciplinary and internationally situated and oriented research team, AGRISPACE will offer new and required knowledge on what stimulates growth in agriculture and will further offer new and much needed knowledge for agricultural and rural authorities on regulation and efficient use of policy instruments in different parts of Norway and discuss scenarios for the future Norwegian bio-production. 2. Aspects relating to the research project 2.1. Background and status of knowledge Modern society is facing many challenges. Climate change, population growth and and ‘peak oil’ are all problems for which our current neoclassical economic paradigm has no easy answers as they require fundamental changes in the way we use resources. One solution that has been rapidly developing over the last decade has been the suggestion of a paradigm shift towards a “globally integrated” (Swinnen & Riera, 2013) bio-economy – an evolutionary transition from an economy based on the mining of non-renewable resources to the farming of renewable ones (Zilberman et al., 2013). This move has been facilitated, according to Sheppard et al. (2011a) by the rapid growth of biotechnologies, demand for sustainable resources, demand for food and energy, the need to decouple economic growth from environmental degradation and the development of eco-industrial 1 The project AGRISPACE is developed out of a merge of two obligatory proposal sketches to the BIONÆR call of May 3. 20013: 1) Stedlig variasjon i jordbruksbasert produksjon: Arealressurser, produksjonstyper, verdikjeder og virkemidler and 2) Analyse av utviklingsretninger for norsk landbruk og arealbruk (AULA) 1 clusters. The value of the bio-economy is potentially huge with the EU (2005) estimating the then value of the European bio-economy at 1.5 trillion Euros. Despite the optimism the bio-economy offers, the development of a bio-economy is not without its challenges. In particular, the European Union’s perspective of bio-economy (EC, 2005; 2012) has attracted two contending visions for the future (Levidow et al., 2012). The conventional and dominant view is one where life-science based technological solutions (such as energy crops) provide a common thread to address the problems facing mankind, thus moving the focus away from social causes towards possible technologically oriented solutions (Arancibia, 2013). This offers a vision of enhanced productivity and competitive advantage through global value chains that operate at global corporate economic levels (Kitchen & Marsden, 2009). The other vision, however, suggests that a sustainable bio-economy (or “eco-economy” according to Kitchen & Marsden 2009; 2011) and Marsden (2012) can only be achieved via the “recalibration of micro-economic behaviour and practices that, added together, can potentially realign production–consumption chains and capture local and regional value between rural and urban spaces” (Kitchen & Marsden, 2009, p. 275). The existence of these two contrasting perspectives opens up the possibility of pluralistic agriinnovation pathways within the bio-economy (Levidow et al., 2012). For Norway this pluralistic approach offers a feasible way of progressing. In favour of a technologically-based bio-economy Norway has a multitude of resources in the form of fisheries and, particularly, forestry, that could form the basis of a bio-economy while, at the same time, the research and development sector in Norway is well established and able to tackle the life-science based technological issues that will arise. Thus Norway has the biotechnological knowledge and renewable biomass required for a conventional bio-economy (OECD, 2009). However, at the same time the regional and social emphasis of Norwegian government policy – in particular with regards to agriculture – is not suited to the technologically competitive bio-economy but rather favours a micro-economic-based “eco-economy”. Through generous payments for public good provision Norway continues to have many small farmers (44 700 with owner occupied agricultural activity – Statistics Norway, 2012) upon which rural communities often depend. A particular problem here is one of spatiality. There is a large geographic variation both in terms of availability and suitability of land for bio-economic growth, and the extent and intensity of historic and current use (e.g Fjellstad & Dramstad 1999). Thus while some parts of Norway may benefit from the “globalised” value chains of a technological bio-economy, in other regions regional value chains and “product-identity alliances” between producers, distributors and social movements (suggested by Levidow et al., 2013) may be more beneficial. This need to consider spatial aspects in the development of the bio-economy mirrors some of the concerns expressed by the EC (2010) that the emerging bio-economy should be seen in the light of maintaining balanced territorial development. In addition, it reflects Kitchen & Marsden’s (2011, 755) observation that «the spatial and governmental dimensions of economic and environmental development» remain a key aspect of ecological modernisation. A further observation made by Marsden (2012) is that bio-economies promote the decoupling of agricultural production from space and place with food value chains increasingly being fragmented into value-added components to be produced in the cheapest location possible as with any globalised production system (e.g. imported fodder for animals). Thus the emergence of the bioeconomy “has been highly uneven, with concentrations of activity in certain countries and particular regions in those countries” (Birch, 2010, 273). This may make production cheap and economically efficient but, in shifting from local to internationally standardised supplies, can have dramatic implications for the spatial distribution of production within the country and make Norway’s many small farmers more vulnerable to global markets (Horlings & Marsden, 2011; Marsden, 2012) . The key then for the transition to a sustainable land-based bio-economy in Norway is to understand the challenges and opportunities for sustainable growth in production and innovation in bio-production, how this varies spatially, and how policy instruments might be used to ensure that 2 the “eco-economy” and “bio-economy” can be encouraged to operate pluralistically across Norway to promote balanced rural development. This requires focusing on three aspects of the bio-economy, namely; land resources, productions types and systems, and their associated value chains (both global and “product-identity alliances”) as well as assessing both the policies required to promote value chain development and the likely response of stakeholders to change. Because the development of bio-economies combines various sciences, stakeholders, policy and commercial considerations a strongly interdisciplinary and methodologically innovate approach is required to promote sustainable bio-economic growth and prosperity. 2.2. Approaches, hypotheses and choice of method Primary and secondary objectives are outlined in the grant application form. Work packages (WP1-7) The project is organized into seven work packages Figure 1 illustrates the four interrelated thematic areas. The agent/actor centre of the model underlines the importance of agents/actors as drivers of change. The project is proposed by a consortium of national research institutions headed by the Centre of Rural Research (CRR). The consortium includes the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute (NFLI), the Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute (NILF), Bioforsk, Norwegian Veterinary Institute (NVI), as well as international researchers from Germany, Austria, Scotland, the US and New Zealand. The WPs are Figure 1: Thematic areas described in turn, below: WP1: Project management and coordination WP1 will create and facilitate a sound working platform for the key actions of the project. This includes start up, contracting, coordination of activities and partners, and project management. The Centre for Rural Research will be the formal project manager for AGRISPACE. Shared responsibility across institutions in the different WP’s will ensure strong integration of partners and obligations in the project. Further, a steering committee consisting of the projects partners will be established to ensure a common understanding of research across different disciplines, negotiating potential changes in the project and promoting interdisciplinarity. The steering committee will make decisions if disagreements cannot be solved within the researcher teams or by the WP leaders. Work package leader: Hilde Bjørkhaug, CRR. Additional participants: Steering committee. WP2: State of the art analysis The aim of WP2 is to review and assemble the most current research on challenges and opportunities for sustainable growth in production and innovation in land-based bio-production for use in WP3, 4 and 5. The state of the art analysis will provide a knowledge base for selection of empirical case studies and offer relevant perspectives for AGRISPACE research. The review will gather research from a variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary sources and, 1) identify and discuss bio-economic perspectives in production and innovation in land-based bio-production, 2) identify spatial perspectives on growth in production and innovation in land-based bio-production, and 3) review successes and challenges, theories and methods related to growth and innovation initiatives in land based bio-production. Work package leader: Grete Stokstad, NFLI, Additional participants: CRR & NILF 3 WP3 AGRISPACE framework and methods AGRISPACE will employ innovative and ambitious methods of spatial analysis of the combined interdisciplinary data gathered in WP4. These data will be obtained from multiple sources, come from a variety of qualitative and quantitative methodologies, and will be both aggregated and site specific in nature. AGRISPACE research needs data that reveals variation across space on natural, economic, social and political indicators. Analysis of spatial variation can describe differences between spatial indicators. However, the great potential of AGRISPACE lies in its ability to explore dynamics (interactions and correlations) between these indicators and within different interpretations of space. The spatial dispersion of agriculture and the changes therein is the combined result of the dispersion of natural resources, of human, social and economic capital, and of regional policy measures. Regional science contributes valuable methodologies for descriptive spatial analysis and spatial dynamics. Firstly, there is a tradition of inter-disciplinarity which AGRISPACE will join. Secondly, the analysis of regional dynamics is, to a large extent, carried out with highly structured economic models, which will be part of AGRISPACE (e.g. Daniel & Kilkenny 2009). Third, spatial analysis is a computational challenge. One might get a view of the result of spatial processes, but the drivers are to a considerable extent unobserved and need be inferred from aggregate or site-specific observations. Recently, new statistical tools have been introduced to cope with this challenge within reasonable computer time (Rue et al., 2009; Lindgren et al., 2011). The success of AGRISPACE depends on its inter-disciplinarily – a problem focused iterative research approach coordinated between disciplines/work packages where effort is made to cross epistemological and ontological boundaries (in particular, qualitative and quantitative research methodologies). In this research we will adopt a methodological pluralism approach to integration, primarily because it enables projects to “focus more directly on the problems, rather than the particular intellectual tools used to solve them” (Haddorn et al., 2006: 120). However, methodological pluralism itself represents a serious intellectual challenge (Midgely, 1996). A number of steps will be taken to ensure integration, in particular: (a) developing an understanding of each other’s language/key concepts in the early stages, (b) involving all the research teams at the early stages of project development, (c) maintaining collaboration activities throughout the project , (d) coordinating access to all emerging results, and (e) integrating the knowledge of stakeholders (Höchtl et al., 2006; Deconchat et al., 2007; Mottet et al., 2007; Stevens et al., 2007). In addition the research tasks have specific cross-disciplinary iterative linkages embedded in the methodology. Towards the end of the project an assessment will be made of interdisciplinary success through a ‘communal reflection’ process and an assessment of the ‘significant outcome’ (contribution of the research to problem solving) as suggested by Wickson et al. (2006). Work package leaders: Øyvind Hoveid, NILF and Rob Burton, CRR. Additional participants: NFLI, Arild Blekesaune (NTNU), Maureen Kilkenny (US) & Thomas Heckelei (Germany) WP4 Thematic areas for empirical analysis WP4. 1. Land resources Land is a key, but limited resource, in the development of a bio-economy. The optimal allocation and management of different land uses is a major challenge (deGroot et al 2010). With the 2011 White paper (LMD, 2011) Norwegian agriculture got a renewed incentive to increase agricultural production. A remaining question, however, is the location, quality and extent of available land resources, in particular with respect to other landscape functions (see e.g. Bastian 2000, Bastian & Lutz 2006). Further, a stronger focus on efforts to increase production and efficiency in farming can result in a less sustainable production or loss of ecosystem services, e.g. in “High nature value farmland” (Fjellstad et al. 2012, Henle et al. 2008) unless it can be ensured that recommended growth and change do not jeopardisze sustainability (see e.g. Firbank et al. 2013). 4 At present there is an on-going polarization of the agricultural landscape in Norway, as more intensive use of land and land abandonment take place simultaneously and sometimes even within the same regions. Both these processes may have a negative effect of production of public goods (Cooper et al. 2009). Farming activity within areas with such contrasting trends requires different measures to increase or maintain the provision of public goods (Westhoek et. al. 2013). Land use/land cover is a key issue in this context, and the influence of on-going and possible future changes needs to be analysed and communicated, e.g. through the use of well-functioning indicators (see e.g. EEA 2006, Müller & Burkhard 2012). An understanding of the spatial variation is thus essential for a sustainable management of cultural landscapes in a growing bio-economy. In addition to providing input to the other thematic areas and WPs, this WP will focus on the following key question; How can spatial patterning of land resources in Norway and potential consequences of changes in the use of these resources best be mapped and what indicators best describe the situation and can be used to communicate these findings to different user groups? Underlying themes are: 1. What is the potential for and possible consequences of renewed intensification of agricultural production? 2. What does abandonment mean in terms of loss of production potential, what is the speed of the process? 3. To what extent can we use map-based indices as a proxy for public preferences and their perception of the cultural landscape? 4. How important are various landscape elements to selected public goods in the agricultural landscape, how does this vary with spatial context and can we relate this to the above mentioned indices and map based evaluations? Analyses related to the first two questions are based on use of AR5 and SLFs producer database. The first will be analysed using statistical analysis, while in question two the use of GIS-analysis is essential. Question 3 and 4 will be addressed through calculated indices from existing, new and revised maps as well as a new survey of the perception of landscape elements by different groups of stakeholders related to an assessment of indicator performance. Work package leader: Wenche Dramstad, NFLI. Additional participants: CRR & David Miller (Scotland) WP4.2 Types of production Conditions for types of production vary across Norway. Still, Norwegian agriculture has survived despite marginal conditions and a small-scale structure, due to a protectionist setting with the support and cooperation of the public, the state and agricultural actors (Bjørkhaug and Richards 2008). The cultural, historical and political importance of the small-scale, independent self-owning farmer has been pointed out (Almås, 2004; Daugstad et al. 2006; Rønningen et al 2012). However, recently the policy has shifted from ‘preservation’ to ‘neo-productivism’ (Bjørkhaug et al, 2012, Almås et al 2013) with renewed focus on sustainable growth and prospects of a new bioeconomy. Given the high production costs Norway cannot compete on an international agricultural market, except for products with specific qualities. While an overarching WTO agreement on agricultural trade has yet to be agreed, the latest drafts propose the categorisation of so-called ‘sensitive products’ that may be allowed higher tariffs. For Norway, dairy and beef production based on home-grown feed and grazing resources are most likely to be defined as sensitive products. The outfields, accounting for more than 80 percent of Norway’s land area, represent valuable feed resources and qualify, to a large extent, as organic. Yet a short growing season in large parts of the country set some strict limitations. In this sense, the principle of “relative comparative advantages” which was the basis for the policy of agriculture from the 1950s onwards, with dairy and beef production in fjord and mountain areas and Northern Norway and grain in central and highly productive areas (Almås 2004; Borgan 1978), may possibly live on under more liberal political 5 conditions, but very likely with fewer producers. Similar distinctions exist in Austria between dairy livestock in the Alps and grain and wine production in the east, but current challenges arise with abandonment of the milk quota system in the EU. Easy access to imports of soybeans and other concentrated feedstuff, chicken and hog production represent in principle productions independent of domestic natural resources and a step towards a globally integrated bioeconomy. However, current changes in the food supply chains through vertical integration and changing consumer behaviour (Bjørkhaug et al 2012, Richards et al 2013) as in a developing “eco-economy” can affect localisation of agricultural productions (cf. WP4.3). Hence, natural resources, framework conditions (prices on input factors and products and policy), value chains and markets, (food, fuel, energy) affect development and localisation of landbased bio-production. In addition, the community (e.g. socio-cultural conditions for production) and actors making informed choices have influence. WP 4.2 asks: 1. How do types of production vary with spatial localization (what is being produced and how it is conducted)? 2. What opportunities and challenges will be created under different forms of bio-economic transitions in land-based productions, and how can these be exploited and mitigated at the farm level? 3. What lessons can be learned about types and localisation of agricultural and bio-based productions through comparison with naturally similar but politically and socio-culturally different systems & regions in Austria? Data and methods for investigating the questions will be multilevel analysis of quantitative register (Economic and demographic, direct payment base) and survey data (e.g Trender i landbruket) coupled to e.g. Norwegian Institute of Forest and Landscapes database on landscape characters (Landscape models in 5x5km grids) (See e.g. Heggem et al N.D.) and other spatial indicators in close relationship to WP4.1 and WP4.3. These will be complemented with qualitative data analysis such as interview data from selected case regions with farmers and farmers’ families, landowners, authorities, and other stakeholders, and document (policy documents, other strategic documents) reviews. The comparative component will be built on Austrian data. Work package leader: Hilde Bjørkhaug, CRR. Additional participants: NILF, Arild Blekesaune (NTNU), Markus Schermer (Austria) & Maureen Kilkenny (US). WP4.3 Value chains Due to natural conditions Norwegian agriculture is characterised by particularly vulnerable value chains and, as a result, production at the farm gate cannot be analysed independently of production at the processing stage. For example, because of the difficulties in shipping raw commodities form Southern Norway; farms and agricultural industries in Northern Norway depend on the production of raw materials in their own region. This has strong implications for the development of the bio-economy in the region. For this reason, a study of spatial heterogeneity in Norwegian agriculture needs to apply a broad perspective on value chains. In this WP, the agri-food value chain includes markets for agricultural inputs (e.g., land, capital, labour), agricultural outputs (e.g., raw milk, animals for slaughter, crops), food products at several levels of the food industry as well as final food products demanded by consumers at the wholesale level. Research questions addressed in this WP are therefore: 1. How large is the (spatial) heterogeneity of farms of similar types in similar regions? 2. What causes the observed heterogeneity? 3. How can the observed heterogeneity be rationalized and modelled? 4. How does heterogeneity affect the impact of a policy change on the spatial distribution of agricultural activities? 6 The coherent and consistent framework for the spatial analysis of agricultural value chains will be the Norwegian agricultural sector model Jordmod which is frequently used for policy analysis. The model assumes about 400 different programming models at the farm level (i.e., farm types) representative of Norwegian agriculture as a whole. Farms within each farm type are simply duplicated during the model’s optimization procedure that leads to market equilibrium. Hence, the model’s equilibrium solution is characterized by a large number of identical farms with homogenous technology. This feature leads typically to regional overspecialisation. Jordmod also includes dairy firms and two types of meat processing firms, one for slaughtering and one for processed meat products. The structure of the food industry in the model is determined by a trade-off between transportation costs between farms and processing plant on the one hand and economies of scale for farms and processing plants on the other; Large and few processing plants and farms lower per unit processing costs, but increase per unit transportation costs. Similarly, many small processing plants and farms give rise to higher per unit processing costs, but lower per unit transportation costs. In its current form, the model is not suited for the spatial analysis of policy change. The objective of this WP is therefore to enable in Jordmod the spatial analysis of a policy reform or a change in the sector’s exogenous framework conditions on the performance of the agricultural sector at the regional level. As spatial heterogeneity is more important at the farm level than the food industry level, this WP will focus at the farm level. This requires the introduction of empirically specified regional programming models at the farm level that represent the observed spatial heterogeneity. The scientific challenge consists of developing convincing methods that explicitly aim at rationalizing farmers’ observed choices based on heterogeneous farming conditions and farmers’ behaviour. A common approach to overcome the overspecialisation problem is Positive Mathematical Programming (PMP) introduced by Howitt (1995). PMP uses the dual solution of a constrained optimization problem to specify a quadratic cost term that allows exact model calibration to observed base year values. Although appealing, Heckelei and Britz (2005) argue that the theoretical and empirical validity of the cost function is questionable as it may hide both data errors and important unobserved spatial heterogeneity. Moreover, the function is treated as a black box in the model. Instead, we will rationalize observed farm management and farmers’ observed behaviour using primal solutions to calibrate agricultural supply in Jordmod. Contrary to PMP which was developed for an environment where little empirical data is available, our proposed method will make use of rich empirical data sets from various sources. Data will be taken from mainly three sources: (1) the Direct Payment database that contains the activity levels (acreage and herd size) for all farms applying for direct payments in the years 1995-2013, (2) the Norwegian farm accounts comprising about 1,000 farms for the same period, and (3) the income tax accounts of all farms applying for direct payments for the years 1999 and 2010 (and possibly for the years therein). The first and the last data source are especially useful as we hypothesize that heterogeneity between similar farms can be rationalized through the farmers’ opportunity costs of labour and farm household characteristics. The novelty and methodological challenge of this WP will be that the calibration procedure will be applied at the farm level (instead of the activity level). Work package leader: Klaus Mittenzwei, NILF. Additional participant: Thomas Heckelei, (Germany) WP4.4 New policy for a new bio-economy Agricultural policy strongly influences both agricultural production and its spatial distribution. In Norway policy pays particular attention to regional differences, for example, by providing economic support to compensate areas less favoured by climatic conditions, topography or transport distances. This is manifested in the canalisation policy (also see WPs 4.2 and WP5) whereby 7 subsidies have been directed towards supporting grain production in optimal grain producing areas and animal production in more marginal environments (Almås, 2004). Other spatially distributed policies include Rural Development Funds (“Bygdeutviklingsmidler”) (Almås, 2002) and Regional Environmental Schemes (Brandtzæg et al., 2008). In contrast to the canalisation policy these schemes are administered at a regional level (by the County Governor) and aimed at supporting diversification and the provision of public goods. As discussed in Section 2.1 the development of a bio-economy has two potentially conflicting visions. One is of a technologically advanced industry based on globalised supply chains (the “bioeconomy”) and the other is of the realignment of production-consumption chains to capture local and regional value (the “eco-economy”). The possibility of a pluralistic approach involving both (Levidow et al., 2012) sets an interesting policy challenge for Norway: how to develop policies that promote Norway’s integration into a bio-technologically driven globalised future while, at the same time, preserving the ‘eco-economy’ that persists in much of the country? Both are likely to be required to meet Norway’s overall policy goal of increasing agricultural production to match agricultural productivity growth with expected population increase (LMD, 2011). As these goals may conflict in some regions of Norway, new policies for the bio-economy must have a strong spatial element. This work package sets out to identify the challenges to developing spatially considered polices that promote balanced territorial development in the wider bio-economy. Here we will draw on the spatial analysis of WPs 4.1 to 4.3 and combine these with an assessment of the policy environments that have contributed to these distributions (conducted in this work package). The scenarios developed in WP5 will then be employed for a final analysis of the policies required to meet the goals established in the scenarios. The main tasks of this Work Package are therefore: 1. To outline and analyse the spatial impact of Norway’s current agricultural policies. 2. To analyse the impact policies have had on the spatial outcomes of WPs 4.1 to 4.3. 3. To investigate the spatial conflicts between the goals of increasing production via integration into the bio-economy and the need to maintain agriculture in all regions of Norway. 4. To make recommendations for policies that may achieve desirable outcomes for Norwegian landbased bioproductions. To assist in policy development, comparisons will be made between policy environments and their spatial outcomes both within the European Union (i.e. Austria – as an example of a regulated policy-led approach in a country with similar agricultural challenges and a predominantly ecoeconomic approach) and New Zealand (as an example of a free market approach with a strong bioeconomic emphasis). Studies of documents (policy documents, regulations, statistics, research reports etc.) and interviews with key informants (politicians, authorities, agro-industrial firms, researchers and experts) will be employed in the analysis. Investigations will be conducted through fieldwork in both of the comparative regions. Final policy recommendations will be developed in close collaboration with the Norwegian Government. Work package leader: Magnar Forbord, CRR. Additional participants: NFLI, NILF, Markus Schermer (Austria) & Hugh Campbell (New Zealand) WP5 Scenarios for Norwegian agricultural policies and agricultural production The aim of WP5 is to develop different development trajectories or scenarios for Norwegian agriculture. These scenarios will then be analysed both individually and comparatively to provide a knowledge basis for the generation of policies to promote bioeconomic growth. Norway’s core productions of meat, dairy and grain, and associated land use, landscape changes, environmental and veterinarian aspects, and bio-economic, socio-economic and socio-cultural aspects will be incorporated in the scenarios and subjected to interdisciplinary analsyis. 8 Three scenarios will be created to reflect the dominant discourses in public and scientific debate on the utilization of Norwegian land based bio-resources and agriculture: 1. Business as Usual - An extrapolative scenario based on the current level of economic support and import tariffs and border protection. On-going trends with gradual restructuring; fewer and larger units in the more central areas, increasing abandonment in rural areas, but still agriculture all over the country. 2. Food production based on maximum use of national bio-resources in terms of fodder and grazing. Increased levels of economic support, upholding current border protection and import levies. This involves a much more extensive use of the outfields (utmark) and possibly also cultivation of new land. 3. Liberalisation: Abandon subsidies to agriculture, removal of most border import barriers, except for veterinarian and other health related control and barriers. All scenarios will be used to explore the outcomes of a possible weak, strong and pluralistic bioeconomy (Levidow et al., 2012; Marsden, 2012). Further, because Norway’s canalisation policies focused production on grain in the central areas and animal husbandry in the uplands, fjords and valleys, predictions of change to the spatial distribution of agriculture and the bioeconomy are likely to be important outcomes of the scenario analysis. The scenarios will analyse (1) land use and land use changes and potentials, the relationship between infield–outfields and new cultivation, (2) the significance of the channelling policy within the various scenarios, the effects of it being phased out, and the resulting influence on crops and grain/dairy land use, and thus landscape development, (3) potential crop developments, primary production and land use under different regional preconditions such as climate, soil and agronomic conditions, and the degree of market liberalisation, (4) socio-cultural and socio-economic factors related to types of productions, business managers/farmers, demographic and ownership changes, and recruitment, and (5) agronomic challenges, animal and plant health and, animal welfare. The scenarios will also provide a basis for quantitative prediction models and simulations. In addition to utilising existing data and competences that exist in the collaborating partners’ institutions, this WP will use data generated through AGRISPACE (WP4) and draw on input and findings from the on-going BIONÆR funded project AGROPRO (Agronomy for increased food production. Challenges and solutions) (2255330/E40), which assesses the agronomic potential for increased food production in Norway. Scenario projects have previously been successfully completed at several of the participating institutes (see eg. Soliva et al, 2008; Mittenzwei and Nersten, 2004; Brastad et al, 2003). Input on international drivers and framework conditions will be obtained through the project’s international collaborators. While Austria is currently deregulating some of its major productions (e.g. milk quotas), New Zealand represents a full-scale experiment in the liberalisation of agricultural policies (Burton and Wilson, 2012). Comparing experiences from this will form the basis for analysis of factors central in a Norwegian liberalisation scenario. As veterinarian regulations concerning animal and human health are likely to remain the main border protection under a liberalisation scenario, special attention will be paid to analyse Norwegian veterinarian regulations and compare these to the New Zealand experience. This WP will deliver its main results and reports about two thirds way through the project, both in order to provide knowledge and input to policy decision-making, and to provide input to the analyses and discussions forming the main conclusions in the overall project. Scenarios will be developed and analysed in collaboration with the reference group. Work package leader: Katrina Rønningen, CRR. Additional participants: NFLI, NILF, Bioforsk, NVI, Hugh Campbell, New Zealand & Markus Schermer, Austria 9 WP6 Stakeholder involvement and network building Stakeholder involvement and network building is given explicit priority through WP6. Stakeholders in the agricultural sector will be integrated through a reference group. We will invite representatives of the Norwegian Ministry of Food and Agriculture (LMD), Ministry of Trade and Industry (NHD), Ministry of Local Government and Regional Development (KRD), Ministry of Environment (MD), Norway’s Agricultural Authority (SLF), the farmers’ organizations (BL and BSL) and the Norwegian Forestry organization (NSF) and environmental NGOs (e.g. Bellona, FVH). The reference group will be invited to annual meetings. The first of these will be used to fine-tune the research questions in order to ensure policy relevance and that the outputs meet end-user needs. Meetings in intermediate years will focus on the discussion of methods, data and provisional results and scenarios, while the last meeting will disseminate final results and policy recommendations. Active relationships with other projects will ensure that professional tasks are not repeated in AGRISPACE. Moreover, knowledge and results from other projects will be made available for this project and vice versa. In particular, close cooperation is expected with AGROPRO (see above). Further, up to five national and international experts will be invited to attend annual project meetings. The experts will be chosen from the thematic areas and asked to critically comment on and discuss methods, data and provisional results. This kind of network building is considered key with regard to future possibilities for participating in internationally funded research projects (e.g. Horizon 2020 & JPI’s). Work package leader: Klaus Mittenzwei, NILF WP7 Dissemination and policy recommendations Dissemination work starts in the beginning of the project, and aims to inform target groups on research questions and activities taking place in AGRISPACE. The webpage will be set up in the beginning of the project in WP1. WP7 will provide information to the webpage and publish a yearly newsletter. WP7 will also encourage and facilitate writing processes across the interdisciplinary team to secure scientific and popular dissemination in accordance with AGRISPACEs goals. Development of policy recommendations and the organization of dissemination and publications are the core activities of WP6. This includes initiation and administration of (1) researcher workshops, (2) midterm and end conferences, (3) contributed sessions and working groups at scientific seminars/conferences (e.g. Nordic Association of Agricultural Scientists (www.njf.nu), European Society for Rural Sociology (http://www.ruralsociology.eu/), European Association of Agricultural Economists (http://www.eaae.org)), and (4) Final report and policy recommendations. Work package leader: Hilde Bjørkhaug (CRR) 2.3. The project plan, project management, organisation and cooperation The project’s main activities and milestones are outlined in the grant application form. The project will be led by the Centre for Rural Research (CRR), and senior researcher Dr. Hilde Bjørkhaug (sociologist, studies of agricultural restructuring, multifunctionality, sustainable agriculture, gender, aspects of farming and rural communities). Bjørkhaug has led large research projects involving national and international collaboration and consortia funded by the Norwegian research council (see CV for details). She is also national or local partner in several projects (international and national). The CRR team will also incorporate senior researcher Dr. Magnar Forbord (agricultural economist, long experience of studies on agricultural legislation and instruments, organization and new farm based business activities), Dr. Katrina Rønningen (geographer, long experience within multifunctionality and cultural landscape studies, conservation, commodification and land use conflicts), Dr. Jostein Vik (political scientist, research fields: rural political economy and governance, and; farm diversification and strategies) and Dr Rob Burton (geographer, wide range of expertise in studies of agricultural decision-making, rural society and policy implications including 10 countries such as Scotland, England, New Zealand and Germany). Burton has a wide experience with spatial issues as well as complex biological-human interactions such as integrated system response to climatic challenges. Through his international experience Burton has an understanding of production issues under both free-market and subsidised agricultural systems and has been involved in work on biological economy development under free-market conditions (see CV). In addition CRR will employ junior scientist when applicable and employ and host a PhD candidate in collaboration with NTNU. CRR has a successful history of hosting doctoral students within multiple faculties. CRR has 30 years of competence in hosting research projects and has a professional administrative staff that is capable of supporting large research consortia on economic, technical and media issues. The NFLI team is Professor/Senior research scientist Wenche Dramstad, an experienced landscape researcher and head of landscape section at NFLI, Dr. Grete Stokstad who is coordinating the on-going landscape monitoring at NFLI and in addition has theoretical background and work experience from economics and policy analysis and Dr. Svein Olav Krøgli who has extensive knowledge and experience in GIS, as well as use of the relevant data sources of AGRISPACE. The project team at NILF will consist of Dr. Klaus Mittenzwei, Dr. Øyvind Hoveid and Researcher Arild Spissøy. Mittenzwei is an agricultural economist with long experience in the quantitative analysis of agricultural policies through the use of sector models. He maintains, develops and runs the Norwegian sector model Jordmod and is member of the CAPRI-network which uses the EU-wide large scale sector model CAPRI. Other fields of interest include spatial analysis, structural change in agriculture, and political economy including the institutions of agricultural policy decision-making. He has long experience as a leader of several projects financed by the Research Council of Norway. Professor Arild Blekesaune, Department of Sociology and Political Science, NTNU/Senior Adviser CRR is professor in quantitative methods within social science and will provide AGRISPACE with expert knowledge in econometrical models measuring time, space and multilevel processes. Blekesaune will be central in development of the methodological framework (WP3) and will carry out research in WP4, as well supervising PhD candidates in the project. Professor Blekesaune holds a Doctoral degree in agricultural sociology/politics. Bioforsk will provide expertise with Dr. Gustav Fystro. Fyrsto’s main expertise is on agronomy in general, plant nutrients, crop production and environmental impacts, and experience in system analysis. Fyrsto is leading integrated analysis of research in AGROPRO. From NVI, researcher Helga R. Høgåsen will participate. Høgåsen is a veterinarian experienced in risk assessment for food safety and animal diseases. She has been assisting government and industry with risk management in different fields, including import, aquaculture, livestock industry, waste, food toxicology and microbiology. The Norwegian project team will collaborate closely with outstanding international scholars hand-picked for designated AGRISPACE tasks. Dr. Markus Schermer, Associate Professor at the Department of Sociology in the University of Innsbruck, Austria, where he leads the working group “Rural Changes”, holds a diploma degree in agricultural economics and a PhD in sociology. He has a profound and long standing experience in interdisciplinary and international research of structural changes within farming in mountain areas. His research focuses on the analysis of social, cultural and structural change in rural regions. Thematic core areas are (agro-)food studies, cultural landscapes in mountain regions, humanenvironment relations, regional and rural development as well as changes of the socio-cultural position of agriculture and farmers. He participated in a number of interdisciplinary and international projects, mainly in EU-framework programs. Dr. Thomas Heckelei is Professor of Economic and Agricultural Policy at the Institute for Food and Resource Economics at the University of Bonn, Germany. Heckelei holds a PhD in agricultural economics and his research interests include the analysis of agricultural and environmental policies, 11 the study of agricultural sector and trade modeling as well as Bayesian econometrics and mathematical programming. Heckelei is a former editor of the European Review of Agricultural Economics and has participated in various interdisciplinary EU-funded as well as other collaborative projects. He will offer to supervise a Ph.D. student in the context of this project and offer workspace to her/him at the institute in Bonn for a suitable period of the research. Professor Hugh Campbell is Chair of Sociology and Head of the Dept of Sociology, Gender and Social Work at the University of Otago. He was also the Director of the Centre for the Study of Agriculture, Food and Environment (CSAFE) from 2000 to 2010. Campbell has since 2003 been co-leading the social research objective in the ARGOS Programme. This programme is considered to be the largest current study of ‘farm-scale’ sustainability in the world. Campbell is also the Co-PI of the prestigious Marsden Fund project: Biological Economies: Making and Knowing new Rural Value Creation which involves and examination of new theories and methods for understanding the creation of value in rural economies. Professor Maureen Kilkenny, USA has a Ph.D. in Agricultural & Applied Economics, from the University of Minnesota, 1987. She will provide expertise as a highly-cited general equilibrium modeller of the economic linkages and processes between and within multiple heterogeneous sub national regions of open economies. Another unique aspect of her expertise is the ability to model the sources or reasons for market failures – resource immobility, externalities, fixed costs and other barriers to entry, market power, and other indivisibilities – that lead citizens to seek nonmarket (policy) solutions in the first place. Professor David Miller, Scotland, works currently as leader of the Integrated Land Use Systems Group at the James Hutton Institute in Aberdeen. He has worked on techniques for handling and analysing geographic information and applying them to mapping, monitoring and modelling changes in peat, land cover, land use and landscape (including urban land use), and the development of GIS for use by government and its agencies. His research interest aims to better understand human uses, preferences and interpretation of land use and landscapes. AGRISPACE incorporates real and extensive collaboration across institutions, disciplines and nations. CRR will facilitate real life meeting places for the participating as well as a common virtual space for communication and sharing ideas and results for the project and the public. Resources will be assigned to professionally develop and operate the webpage in order to facilitate popular dissemination and meetings with the reference group and other stakeholders. The project plans to hold annual workshops and meetings at international conferences. Research visits for senior and junior scientists are planned – both international scientists coming to Norway, as well as Norwegian scientists visiting partners abroad. Figure 2. Organization of project and WPs 2.4. Budget Budget information is included in the grant application form. 3. Key perspectives and compliance with strategic documents 3.1. Compliance with strategic documents The proposed project lies at the core of CRR’s development of internationally recognised competence in agriculturally and bio-based value chains, food and rural policies and management, 12 rural development and innovation and environmental studies. The project is also related to the strategic collaboration between Norwegian research institutions involved in agricultural, bioindustry and rural research as well as CRR’s strategy of closer collaboration with NTNU and strong international collaboration. The project also addresses NILF’s core competence in economy, agriculture and food policy, industrial economics and environmental and resource economics. International cooperation is also an important activity in NILF. The project is within the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute’s priority area "landscape and land use" under the strategic focus "agricultural geography." AGRISPACE is in line with BIOFORSK’s central goal to be a leader in research and development in agriculture, food production, plant biology and plant health, environment and resource management. The project utilizes data and expertise related to animal diseases and animal welfare and is in line with the National Veterinary Institute's strategy to contribute to responsible bioproduction and sustainable development. 3.2. Relevance and benefit to society With the present situation of climate change, severe weather events, unstable economic situation/prices and a rapidly growing world population, it is important to identify challenges and failures, build knowledge for policy development and institutions that make it possible for farmers, communities, industries and nations to adapt to change and secure means for future food security. AGRISPACE will provide knowledge on opportunities and challenges for a future bioeconomy in Norway. 3.3. Environmental impact The proposed project will not entail any significant negative environmental impacts other than those incurred through use of energy and fuels during transportation of staff between collaborating partners. Of positive environmental impact is new knowledge on environmental challenges related to national and global agri-food systems. 3.4. Ethical perspectives The project will be carried out in accordance with all relevant ethical standards and acknowledgement of NSD (Norwegian Social Science Data Services) and corresponding bodies that relates to partners activities. The project does not create any known ethical challenges. 3.5. Gender issues (Recruitment of women, gender balance and gender perspectives) The project will incorporate gender perspectives in the analyses and point at gender issues when appropriate in the work packages and in the overall discussions of the project. A gender balance is sought maintained in the project team. The project is also promoting the Research Council’s general objective of recruiting women as leaders with both the project leader and a number of workpackage leaders being women. 4. Dissemination and communication of results 4.1 Dissemination plan Plans for scholarly and popular science dissemination activities are included in the grant application form. In addition to dissemination through established academic publishing channels (journals and books), the project team will contribute with popular science dissemination to target groups in media, meetings and conferences (nationally and internationally). A webpage will be created linked to the CRR webpage and collaboration partners, as well as the BIONÆR programme. Relevant knowledge produced and projects partners will post activities generated in the project at the page. Resources are designated to follow up and stimulate to broad dissemination (WP7). 4.2 Communication with users Target groups for AGRISPACE are: Agricultural policy decision makers in Norway and internationally, the Norwegian and international scientific environment, agricultural, rural, trade and industry, regional and environmental bureaucracies and management, economic organisations, farmers’ organisations, environmental organizations, rural organizations, and other actors with 13 interest in rural development and innovation issues, including tourism and energy producers. A reference group for the project will be established (see WP6) There will be held a midterm conference, as well as a final conference at the end of the project period where representatives from relevant stakeholder will be invited to participate in dissemination, dialogue and mediation of research findings in AGRISPACE. AGRISPACE will produce a yearly newsletter with research facts and information on activities in the project. The newsletter is aimed for target groups. 6. References Almås, R., H. Bjørkhaug, H. Campbell, C. A. Smedshaug (eds) (2013/in press) Fram mot ein berekraftig og klimatilpassa norsk landbruksmodell. Trondheim: Akademika forlag. Almås, R. (2002). Norges landbrukshistorie IV 1920-2000. Frå bondesamfunn til bioindustri. Oslo: Det Norske Samlaget. Almås, R., Ed. (2004). Norwegian Agricultural History. Trondheim: Tapir academic press. Arancibia, F. (2013). Challenging the bioeconomy: The dynamics of collective action in Argentina. Technology in Society 35, pp. 79–92 Birch, K. (2009).The knowledge–space dynamic in the UK bioeconomy. Area 41 (3), pp. 273–284area_864 273 Bastian, O. and Lütz, M. (2006). Landscape functions as indicators for the development of local agri-environmental measures. Ecological Indicators, 6, 215–227 Bastian, O. (2000). Landscape classication in Saxony (Germany) - a tool for holistic regional planning. Landscape and Urban Planning, 50, 145-155. BIONÆR (2012) BIONÆR Research Programme on Sustainable Innovation in Food and Bio-based Industries (http://bioeconomy.dk/Norway_Bionaer_programme.pdf) Bjørkhaug, H., J. Vik and C. Richards (2012). Changes in the Norwegian Agri-food system: The chicken game. Paper presented at IRSA world Congress Lisbon 30 July-August 4 2012. Bjørkhaug, H., and C. Richards (2008). Multifunctional agriculture in policy and practice? A comparative analysis of Norway and Australia. Journal of Rural Studies 24(1):98-111. Brandtzæg, B. A., K. Daugstad, B. E. Flø, C. Hvitsand, O. Storstad and S. Svardal (2008). Evaluering av regionale miljøprogram i jordbruket. Rapport 3/08. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Borgan, S. 1978. Noen emner fra landbrukspolitikken. Ås, NLH: Landbruksbokhandelen. Brastad, B., A. Hegrenes, L. Rønning, O.K. Stornes & L.M. Årseth, 2003. Scenarier for landbruket i Nordland. NF-rapport nr. 2. 2003. Burton og Wilson 2012 Burton, R.J.F. and G.A.Wilson. 2012. The rejuvenation of productivist agriculture: the case for “cooperative neoproductivism.” In R. Almås and H. Campbell (eds.). 2012. Rethinking agricultural policy regimes. Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture. Bingley, UK: Emerald Publishing. Cooper, T., Hart, K. and Baldock, D. (2009) The Provision of Public Goods Through Agriculture in the European Union, Report Prepared for DG Agriculture and Rural Development, Contract No 30-CE-0233091/00-28, Institute for European Environmental Policy: London. Daniel, K. and M. Kilkenny (2009) “Agricultural Subsidies and Rural Development” Journal of Agricultural Economics 60(3):504529. Daugstad, K., K. Rønningen and B. Skar (2006). Agriculture as an upholder of cultural heritage? Conceptualizations and value judgements – A Norwegian perspective in international context. Journal of Rural Studies 22:67-81. Deconchat M., Gibon A., Cabanettes A., de Bus de Warnaffe G., Hewison M., Garnie E., Gavaland A., Lacombe J-P., Ladet S., Monteil C., Ouin A., Sarthou J-P., Sourdril A., Balent G., 2007. How to Set Up a Research Framework to Analyze Social–Ecological Interactive Processes in a Rural Landscape. Ecology and Society, 12(1): 15. [online] URL: http: //www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol12/iss1/art15/ de Groot, R.S., Alkemade, R., Braat, L., Hein, L., Willemen, L., 2010. Challenges in integrating the concept of ecosystem services and values in landscape planning, management and decision making. Ecological Complexity 7, 260-272. EEA, 2006. Integration of environment into EU agriculture policy — the IRENA indicator-based assessment report. European Envionmental Agency, Copenhagen. European Commission (2012). Innovating for Sustainable Growth: A Bioeconomy for Europe. Brussels: European Commission, 1 – 9. European Commission (2010). The CAP towards 2020: meeting the food, natural resource and territorial challenges of the future. Brussels: European Commission, 1 – 12 European Commission (2005). New perspectives on the knowledge-based bio-economy. European Union, Science and Research Conference paper. Brussels: European Commission, 1–24. Firbank, L.G., Elliott, J., Drake, B., Cao, Y., Gooday, R., 2013. Evidence of sustainable intensification among British farms. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 173, 58-65. Fjellstad, W., Dramstad, W., & Stensgaard, K. , 2012. Norway. In: Oppermann, R., Beaufoy, G., Jones, G. (Eds.), High Nature Value Farming in Europe verlag regionalkultur., Basel, pp. 318-327. 14 Fjellstad, W.J. and Dramstad, W.E. (1999) Patterns of change in two contrasting Norwegian agricultural landscapes. Landscape and Urban Planning 45, pp. 177-191. Hadorn, G.A.; Bradley, D.; Pohl, C.; Rist, S.; Wiesmannd, U. (2006) Implications of transdisciplinarity for sustainability research. Ecological Economics: 119 – 128. Heckelei, T. and Britz, W. 2005. Models based on Positive Mathematical Programming: State of the Art and Further Extensions. Pp. 48-73, in: Modelling Agricultural Policies: State of the Art and New Challenges. Proceedings of the 89th European Seminar of the EAAE. Parma, Italy. February 3-5. Heggem, E. G. O. Strand, S. Eiter (Not dated) Landsskapskarakter. Fakta. Ås: Norsk institutt for skog og landskap. Henle, K., Alard, D., Clitherow, J., Cobb, P., Firbank, L., Kull, T., McCracken, D., Moritz, R.F.A., Niemelä, J., Rebane, M. Müller, F., Burkhard, B., 2012. The indicator side of ecosystem services. Ecosystem Services 1, 26-30. Horlings, L.G. and Marsden, T.K. (2011). Towards the real green revolution? Exploring the conceptual dimensions of a new ecological modernisation of agriculture that could ‘feed the world’. Global Environmental Change 21, pp. 441–452 Howitt R.E. 1995. Positive Mathematical Programming. American Journal of Agricultural Economics 77(2): 329-342. Höchtl, F.; Lehringer, S.; Konold, W. (2006) Pure theory or useful tool? Experiences with transdisciplinarity in the Piedmont Alps. Environmetnal Science and Policy 9: 322-329. Kitchen, L., Marsden, T., 2009. Creating sustainable rural development through stimulating the eco-economy: beyond the ecoeconomic paradox? Sociologia Ruralis 49 (3), 273–293. Kitchen, L., Marsden, T., 2011. Constructing sustainable communities: a theoretical exploration of the bioeconomy and eco-economy paradigms. Local Environment: The International Journal of Justice and Sustainability, 16 (8), pp. 753-769. Kvalvik, I., S. Dalmannsdottir, H. Dannevig, G. Hovelsrud, L. Rønning and E. Uleberg (2011). "Climate change vulnerability and adaptive capacity in the agricultural sector in Northern Norway". Acta Agriculturae Scandinavica 61: 27-37. Lindgren, F., Rue, H. and Lindström, J. (2011), An explicit link between Gaussian fields and Gaussian Markov random fields: the stochastic partial differential equation approach. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B (Statistical Methodology), 73: 423–498. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9868.2011.00777.x Levidow, L., Birch, K. and Papaioannou, T. (2012): EU agri-innovation policy: two contending visions of the bio-economy, Critical Policy Studies, 6:1, 40-65 Levidow, L., Birch, K. and Papaioannou, T. (2013): Knowledge-Based Bio-Economy (KBBE) as an R&D Agenda. Science Technology Human Values 38 (1) , pp. 94-125. LMD 2011. Meld.St. 9 (2011-2012) Meld. St. 9 (2011–2012), Landbruks- og matpolitikken, Velkommen til bords: Tilråding fra Landbruks- og matdepartementet 2. desember 2011, godkjent i statsråd samme dag. (Regjeringen Stoltenberg II) Marsden, T.K. (2012). Towards a Real Sustainable Agri-food Security and Food Policy: Beyond the Ecological Fallacies? The Political Quarterly 83 (1), pp. 139-145. Midgley, G. (1996) The ideal of unity and the practice of pluralism in systems science. In: Flood, R.L. and Romm, N.R (Eds). (1996): Critical Systems Thinking: Current Research and Practice. Plenum Press, London. Pp 25 – 36. Mittenzwei and Nersten, 2004; Mottet, A.; Julien, M.P.; Balent, G.; Gibon, A. (2007) Agricultural land-use change and ash (Fraxinus excelsior L.) colonization in Pyrenean landscapes: an interdisciplinary case study. Environmental Modelling and Assessment 12:293–302 Müller, F., Burkhard, B., 2012. The indicator side of ecosystem services. Ecosystem Services 1, 26-30. OECD (2009). The bioeconomy to 2030: designing a policy agenda. Paris: OECD Publishing, ISBN: 978926403853. Richards, C., H.Bjørkhaug, G.Lawrence and E.Hickman (2013) Retailer-driven Agricultural Restructuring – Australia, the UK and Norway in Comparison. Agriculture and human values 30:235–24. Rue H., Martino S. and Chopin N.: Approximate Bayesian Inference for Latent Gaussian Models Using Integrated Nested Laplace Approximations (with discussion). Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B, 71, 319–392 Sheppard, A.W., Raghu, S., Begley, C., Genovesi, P., De Barro, P., Tasker, E., and Roberts, B. (2011). Biosecurity as an integral part of the new bioeconomy: a path to a more sustainable future. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 2011 (3), pp.105–111. Soliva, R., Rønningen, K. Bella, I., Bezak, P., Flø, B.E., Marty, P., Potter, C. 2008: Envisioning upland futures: Stakeholder responses to scenarios for Europe’s mountain landscapes. Journal of Rural Studies 24 (2008) 56-71 Statistics Norway, 2012. Strukturen i jordbruket, 2012, førebelse tal Swinnen, J., Riera, O. (2013). The global bio-economy. Agricultural Economics. DOI: 10.1111/agec.12045 Stevens, C.J; Fraser, I.; Mitchley, J.; Thomas, M.B. (2007) Making ecological science policy-relevant: issues of scale and disciplinary integration. Landscape Ecology (2007) 22: 799–809 Wickson, F.; Carew, A.L.; Russell, A.W. (2006) Transdisciplinary research: characteristics, quandaries and quality. Futures 38: 1046–1059 Westhoek H.J., Overmars K.P., van Zeijts, H., 2013. The provision of public goods by agriculture: Critical questions for effective and efficient policy making. Zilberman, D., Kima, E., Kirschnera, S., Kaplana, S., and Reeves, J. (2013) Technology and the future bioeconomy. Agricultural Economics 44, pp. 1–8. 15 CV Hilde Bjørkhaug CURRICULUM VITAE HILDE BJØRKHAUG, CENTRE FOR RURAL RESEARCH (CRR), NORWAY Personal Information Name: Hilde Bjørkhaug Academic degree: Dr. polit (Sociology) Occupation: Senior researcher Address: Centre for rural research, N- 7491 Trondheim, Norway Telephone: +47 73591781 E-mail: hilde.bjorkhaug@bygdeforskning.no Webpage: www.bygdeforskning.no Professional Experience • Researcher, Centre for Rural Research 1997- till present date • Researcher II Department of Interdisciplinary studies, NTNU 2011 • Visiting scholar The Journalism and Media Research Centre (JMRC), The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia January-May 2010 • Process & project leader Department of Interdisciplinary studies, NTNU(2007-2011) • PhD Scholar Centre for Rural Research 2000-2007 • Visiting Scholar, School of Social Science, University of Queensland, Brisbane Australia. August 2003 to March 2004. • Research assistant Centre for Environment and Development, Allforsk, 1997 • Student assistant Department of Sociology and Political Science, NTNU, 1995-1996 Research topics Bjørkhaug has a through her career been involved in research on different aspects of agricultural restructuring and the food system and organizational change. More recently she has been involved in research on power relations in the food chain in Norway and globally. Gender perspectives have been employed in most projects, many also with a specific gender focus. She has followed Norwegian legislation on gender balance in boardrooms though research projects and public debate. Honours • Keynote speaker at Rural at the Edge – the 2nd Nordic conference for rural research, University of Eastern Finland. • Guest editor International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food. • Member of the editorial board of Journal of Rural Studies. • Referee in Journal of Rural Studies, Sociologia Ruralis, Rural Sociology, Geoforum, European Countryside, The International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic and Social Sustainability, Southern Rural Sociology Journal, Tidsskrift for kjønnsforskning and International Journal of Sociology of agriculture and Food. • Guest lecturer at Department of Sociology and Political Science, NTNU • External examiner PhD thesis at University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway and Griffith University, Australia, University of Newcastle, Australia 1 CV Hilde Bjørkhaug Selected projects • Frogs, fuel, finance or food? Cultures, values, ethics, arguments and justifications in the management of agricultural land (FORFOOD). Funded by the Norwegian Research Council (SAMKUL) 2013-2017. Project leader. • Healthy growth: From niche to volume with integrity and trust. Funding Core Organic II. 2013-2015. Lead participant Norway. • Agronomy for increased food production. Challenges and solutions (Argopro). Funded by the Norwegian Research Council (BIONÆR) 2013-2017. Project partner. • Structural change in Agriculture. Funded by the Norwegian Research Council 20102014. Project leader. • Governing food in a globalizing environment: Innovation and market strategies in Norwegian food supply chains. Funded by the Norwegian Research Council 20102014 • The New Farm Owners: Finance Companies and the Restructuring of Australian and Global Agriculture, led by Professor Geoffrey Lawrence. Australian research council Discovery Projects Grant 2011-2013. Norwegian partner. • Back to the future? Policy responses to increasing food prices and climate change in the new millennium. Funded by the Norwegian Research Council 2008-2013. Joint project leader. • Challenges for succession in family farms and small family firms in rural areas. Funded by the Norwegian Research Council 2008-2012 • Power and Privilege, Meaning and Management - Gender in the Board Room. Funded by the Norwegian Research Council FRISAM 2007-2011. Joint project leader. • Socio-economic and environmental impacts of organic farming. Funded by the Norwegian Research Council 2007-2010 • Agricultural Restructuring – the case of Norway. PhD scholarship, Funded by the Norwegian Research Council 2000-2006. (REGMAT) • Kvinner i landbruket. Tilpasning til eller utfordring av en etablert mannlig driftskultur. Norges forskningsråd, 2003-2006. Project leader. Recent publications • • • • • • Almås, R., H. Bjørkhaug, H. Campbell, C. A. Smedshaug (eds)(2013/forthcoming) Fram mot ein berekraftig og klimatilpassa norsk landbruksmodell. Trondheim: Akademika forlag. Richards, Carol, Hilde Bjørkhaug, Geoffrey Lawrence and Emmy Hickman (2013) Retailerdriven Agricultural Restructuring – Australia, the UK and Norway in Comparison. Agriculture and human values 30:235–24. Bjørkhaug, Hilde and Arild Blekesaune (2013) Development of organic farming in Norway: A statistical analysis of neighbourhood effects. Geoforum 45: 201-210. Alsos, Gry, Hilde Bjørkhaug, Agnes Bolsø og Elisabet Ljungren (eds) (Forthcoming 20132014) Kjønn og næringsliv. Akademika. Bjørkhaug, Hilde and Siri Øyslebø Sørensen (2012) Feminism without gender? Arguments for gender quotas on corporate boards in Norway. Comparative Social Research, Volume 29:185210. Why gender quotas are necessary. Opinion piece. European Voice. 08.03.2012. (With Siri Øyslebø Sørensen) 2 CV Hilde Bjørkhaug • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Bjørkhaug, Hilde, Reidar Almås and Jostein Brobakk (2012) Emerging neo-productivist agriculture as an approach to food security and climate change in Norway. Pp 211-234 in Amås, R. and H. Cambell: Rethinking Agricultural Policy Regimes: Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture. Bingley: Emerald Insight. Research in Rural Sociology and Development Volume 18. Bjørkhaug, Hilde (2012) Exploring the sociology of agriculture: Family farmers in Norway future or past food producers? Pp 283-303 in Ersaga, D. (red) Sociological landscape: Theories, realities and trends. InTeck. De nye leilendingene? Comment in Nationen. 20.02.2012. (With Magnar Forbord) Det norske familiejordbruket. Comment in Nationen. 23.11.2011. Almås, Reidar, Hilde Bjørkhaug and Marta G. Rivera-Ferre (2011) Agriculture and Climate Change: Introduction. International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food. 18/3:162166. ISSN: 0798-1759. Wiborg, Agnete og Hilde Bjørkhaug (2011). Challenges for future farming in Norway: The role of place for farm succession P2/11. Trondheim. Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Bjørkhaug, Hilde and Gunn Turid Kvam (2011) Local small-scale food enterprises: ambitions and initiatives for achieving business growth among male and female owners and managers. Journal of Depopulation and Rural Development Studies. Ager 11/2011:29-55.ISSN: 15787168 Bjørkhaug, Hilde (2011). Flere kvinner i styrerom. Katalysator for profesjonalisering av styrearbeid? Tidsskrift for kjønnsforskning 3/2011199-217. Rønningen, Katrina, Hilde Bjørkhaug, Frank Egil Holm and Jostein Vik (2011). Tromslandbruket. Regional analyse. R 6/11. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Bjørkhaug, Hilde, Agnes Bolsø and Siri Øyslebø Sørensen (2011). Lønnsomt eller bare rettferdig. Cronicle Dagens Næringsliv 24.06-2011. Bjørkhaug, Hilde (2011) Fra enfold til mangfold? Om veien til balansert kjønnssammensetning i Norsk Landbrukssamvirke sine styrer. Pp. 355-379 In Haugen, Marit and Egil Petter Stræte (Eds). Rurale Brytninger. Trondheim: Tapir akademisk forlag. Bjørkhaug, Hilde, Einar Lier Madsen and Aagnete Wiborg (2010): Challenges for succession in family farming – Perspectives and research questions. N 1007/2010. Bodø: Nordlandsforskning. Bjørkhaug, Hilde, Einar Lier Madsen and Agnete Wiborg (2010): Eierskifte – en framtidstest? Cronicle Nationen 6.12.2010/ Forskning.no 13.12.2010. Mittezwei, Klaus, Hilde Bjørkhaug and Grete Stokstad (2010): Kunnskap om struktur. Cronicle Nationen 14.6.2010/ Bonde og småbrukar 25.06.2010. Richards, Carol A and Hilde, Bjørkhaug (2009) The importance of agency in facilitating the transition to a multifunctional countryside. Journal of Rural Studies 25/2:249. Heggem, Reidun and Hilde Bjørkhaug (2009): Fornuft og følelser: En odelslov til besvær. In Barstad, Anders and Kari Skrede. Levekår i landbruket 1995-2004. Livsformer og rammebetingelser i endring. Statistiske Analyser. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå. Forbord, Magnar and Hilde Bjørkhaug (2009): Rekruttering til landbruket: Hva mener organisasjonene og forvaltningen? In Barstad, Anders and Kari Skrede. Levekår i landbruket 1995-2004. Livsformer og rammebetingelser i endring. Statistiske Analyser. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå. Bjørkhaug, Hilde and Arild Blekesaune (2008): Gender and Work in Norwegian Family Farm Business. Sociologia Ruralis 48/2:152-165. Bjørkhaug Hilde and Carol A Richards (2008): Multifunctional agriculture in policy and practice? A comparative analysis of Norway and Australia. Journal of Rural Studies 24/1: 98111. 3 CV Hilde Bjørkhaug Recent selected paper presentations • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Oslo April 5 2013 Strukturendring: Ulike definisjoner ulike resultat? Formidlingsseminar, Statens landbruksforvaltning. Trondheim June 14. 2013 Frogs, fuel, finance or food? Cultures, values, ethics, arguments and justifications in the management of agricultural land (FORFOOD). Globalization Workshop, Britannia Hotel, Trondheim Oslo June 10 2013. FORFOOD: Kultur, verdier, etikk og politikk når matjord forvaltes. Dialogmøte SAMKUL – Departementer. Norges Forskningsråd. Skeikampen 25-27 January 2013 Store forskjeller på bygda? En Bourdieu-inspirert klasseanalyse av norske bygdesamfunn. Vinterseminar sosiologiforeningen. With Johan Fredrik Rye Lisbon 30 July-August 4 2012 Changes in the Norwegian Agri-food system: The chicken game. Paper presented at IRSA world Congress. With Jostein Vik and Carol Richards. Lisbon 30 July-August 4 2012 Financialisation, Forests and Food: A Norway/Uganda Case Study. Paper presented at IRSA world Congress. With Carol Richards and Kristen Lyons. Lisbon 30 July-August 4 2012 The new farmer: Control of land and structural change in Norwegian agriculture. Paper presented at IRSA world Congress. With Magnar Forbord and Rob Burton. Lisbon 30 July-August 4 2012 Rural-urban aspects of social exclusion in Norway. Paper presented at IRSA world Congress. With Johan Fredrik Rye. Joensuu 21-23 May Sustainable food production at the edge. Keynote at Rural at the Edge – the 2nd Nordic conference for rural research, University of Eastern Finland. Oslo 23 february 2012 landbruk og levede bygder – er det en sammenheng. Landbruk og levende bygder – Hva viser forskningen. Arr. Norges forskningsråd. Troms April 11, 2011 Landbruket som befolkningsmessig stabilisator. Innlegg på seminaret. Tromslandbruket – regional analyse: Mulighetsrom, utfordringer, virkemidler og veivalg. Gothenburg 11.-17. July 2010 The challenge of climate change and new policy responses: Sustainable development for Norwegian agriculture? Paper presented at XVII World Congress of Sociology. With Reidar Almås. Dublin 17.-19. June Power and the food supply chain: Proprietary and hybrid Governance in Australia and Europe. Paper presented at Regulation in the age of crisis. Third Biennial Conference of the European Consortium of Political Research’s Standing Group on Regulatory Governance, With Richards, Carol & Geoffrey Lawrence. Sydney, 9. April 2010. Who is joking? Power aspects of humor. Paper lagt frem på seminar, The University of New South Wales. Sydney, 12. March 2010. Negotiating authority: Signifying the backstage practises. Paper presentert på seminaret Gendered Concepts of Power and Authority, The Journalism and Media Research Centre (JMRC), The University of New South Wales, Oslo 10 June 2009 Kvotering til samvirkestyrer. Paper til seminaret: Kjønn og mangfold – i styrerommet og i næringslivets toppledelse. Institutt for samfunnsforskning. Trondheim 8 June 2009. Do women make a difference? Paper for Power and Privilege, Meaning and Management: Women in the Boardroom, One-day international seminar and work-shop Trondheim 9 March 2009. Kvinner i landbruket i 2009. Innlegg for Fylkesmannen i SørTrøndelag, avd. landbruk og bygdeutvikling, Avdelingsmøte. Updated August 2013 4 Curriculum vitae Dr. Katrina Rønningen, senior scientist, Centre for Rural Research (CRR), Norway Name: Born: Address: E-mail: Katrina Rønningen 1963-06-02, Norway, Centre for Rural Research, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway katrina.ronningen@bygdeforskning.no Education 1999 Dr.polit. in social sciences (Geography) Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Department of Geography. Thesis title: ”Agricultural policies and countryside management. A comparative European study.” 1989 Cand.agric., Land-use planning, Agricultural University of Norway. (Now: Norwegian University of Life Sciences) Institute of Land consolidation and land-use planning Professional Experience 1997Norwegian Centre for Rural Research, Trondheim 1996-1997: Lecturer and consultant. 1990-1996: Research fellow with grants from the Norwegian Research Council. Dept. of Geography, University of Trondheim (now NTNU). 1989-1990: Projects for the Ministry of Environment and The Agricultural Dev. Fund at the Institute of Planning and Law, Agricultural Univ. of Norway (Now University of Life Sciences), Consultant land use planning, municipality of Lørenskog. Ongoing funded research Second Generation Rural Tourism in Norway. Funded by the Research Council of Norway, County Governors and Regional counties of Sogn and Fjordane and South Trøndelag (2011-2013) Reindeer herding and commodification of the outfields and commons in Southern-Sami areas – challenging established rights and practices (2010-2013). Funded by the Research Council of Norway. (KR Project leader) Back to the future? Policy responses to increasing food prices and climate change in the new millennium” (20092013) (K.R. international coordinator) Funded by the Research Council of Norway. Conservation Covenants in Norway – moderating conflicts, reducing biodiversity loss and improving resource management? (2009-2013) Funded by the Research Council of Norway. Examples of previous funded research Villrein, ferdsel og inngrep i Dovrefjellregionen” (2009-2013, funded by the Directorate for nature management and a number of stakeholders) Ramsar-samarbeid mellom Frøya, Hitra og Ørland kommuner. Forprosjekt. (2012. Finansiert av kommunene. KR prosjektleder) iCoast – Integrated coastal area development: Working out a framework for sustainable development. (iKyst) Funded by the Research Council of Norway (2009-2012) Tromslandbruket – regional analyse. (2011. Finansiert av Troms fylkeskommune. K.R. prosjektleder (Coast-scenes –“Building scenarios as a tool for dialogue, business development and management in protected coastal areas” (Froan-scenarier) 2007-2009. (K.R. Project leader), Financed by the Research Council of Norway, cofinance from Frøya municipality, Frøya New Business Association, Fishermen’s Association, Mid-Norway, Trøndelag Fish Farming Association, SalMar ASA. Natural resources in forest and mountain communities – between marginalisation, commercialisation and conservation 2004-2010. (K.R. Project leader) Funded by the Research Council of Norway. "Scenarios for reconciling biodiversity conservation with declining agricultural use in the mountains of Europe" (”BioScene”) EUs Fifth Framework programme. (national project leader) 2002-2005 «Agriculture’s mulifunctionality - what importance has the Norwegian agriculture for the environment?» Contract from the Ministry of Agriculture. 1998-1999. ”Environmental commodities and rural viability in Norway. A literature study.” Contract for the OECD .2002 "Land management initiatives in Europe". Contract for the Scottish Natural Heritage. 2002. Project coordinator: Dr. Henry Buller, Cheltenham and Cloucester College, UK Jordbrukets rolle som kulturbærer.- The cultural heritage of agriculture". Oppdragsgiver: Forskningsrådet. I samarbeid med NIKU. Prosjektleder: Karoline Daugstad. 2003-2006 Some selected publications: In English: Rønningen, K., Burton, R. and Renwick, A. 2012: Western European approaches to and interpretations of multifunctional agriculture - and some implications of a possible neo-productivist turn. In Almås, R. and Campbell, H. (ed.) Rethinking Agricultural Policy Regimes: Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture (Research in Rural Sociology and Development, Volume 18), Emerald Group Publishing Limited: 73-97 Shucksmith, M. and Rønningen, K. 2011: The Uplands after Neoliberalism? - The role of the small farm in rural sustainability. Journal of Rural Studies 27 (2011); 275-287 Olsson, E.G.A., Rønningen, K., Hanssen, S. and Wehn, S. 2011: The interrelationship of biodiversity and rural viability: Sustainability assessment, land use scenarios and Norwegian mountains in a European context. Journal of Environmental Assessment policy and Management, Vol. 13, No.2 (June 2011):1-34 Burton R.J.F., Rønningen, K.; Wedderburn. L. 2011: Conducting Integrated Research. In: Kammili T., Tourrand J.F., Hubert B. (eds). A shift in natural resources management paradigm: from resource sufficiency to functional integrity? Cardere editeur Lirac, France. Blekesaune, A. and Rønningen, K. 2010: Bears and fears: Cultural capital, geography and attitudes towards large carnivores in Norway. Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography Vol.64(4) 185-198 Soliva, R., Rønningen, K. Bella, I., Bezak, P., Flø, B.E., Marty, P., Potter, C. 2008: Envisioning upland futures: Stakeholder responses to scenarios for Europe’s mountain landscapes. Journal of Rural Studies 24 (2008) 56-71 Daugstad, K., K. Rønningen & B. Skar 2006: Agriculture as an upholder of cultural heritage? Conceptualisations and value judgements – A Norwegian perspective in international context. Journal of Rural Studies 22 (2206) 67-81 Rønningen, K. 1999: Agricultural policies and countryside management. A comparative European study. Ph.d.thesis, University of Trondheim. Report no 18/99 Centre for Rural Research, Trondheim In Norwegian Vistad, O.I., Skjeggestad, T., Berglann, H., Bugge, H.C., Norderhaug, A., Rønningen, K., Swensen, G. og Øian, H. 2012: Grønt partnerskap i landskapsforvaltning – erfaringer fra prosjektet "Utvalgte kulturlandskap i jordbruket". Utmark – tidsskrift for utmarksforskning. Nummer 1 – 2013. ww.utmark.org Strand, O., Flemsæter, F., Gundersen, V. og Rønningen, K. 2013: Horisont Snøhetta. NINA Rapport Temahefte 51. Trondheim Flemsæter, F., Rønningen, K. og Holm, F.E. 2013: Dovrefjells moralske landskap. Rapport 4/ 2013. Norsk senter for bygdeforskning, Trondheim Rønningen, Katrina: Produksjonsøkning og produktivitetsøkning – eller arealforvaltning? Kronikk Bondebladet 21.2.2013 Rønningen, Katrina, Frode Flemsæter, og Eva Fjellheim: Konflikter om utmarka. Kronikk, Adresseavisen,14.02.2012 Rønningen, K. og Frisvoll, S. 2012: Ramsarområdene i Frøya, Hitra og Ørland - rammebetingelser og muligheter for bruk og vern. Rapport 6/2012 Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Trondheim Frisvoll, S. and Rønningen, K. 2012: Å ro uten årer. Om fylkeskommunens nye rolle i kystsoneforvaltningen. I Hersoug, B. og Johnsen, J.P. (red): Kampen om plass på kysten. Interesser og utviklingstrekk i kystsoneplanleggingen:121-137. Universitetsforlaget Rønningen, K., Bjørkhaug, H., Holm, F.E og Vik, J. Tromslandbruket – regional analyse. Rapport 6/2012. Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Trondheim Rønningen, K. og Blekesaune, 2011: Redd for rovdyr? Jakten på rovdyrkonfliktens materielle virkelighet. I Haugen, M.S. og Stræte, E.P. 2011: Rurale brytninger. 2013-226. Tapir Akademisk Forlag Frisvoll, S. og Rønningen, K., 2009. Kampen om gråsonene: oppdrett i Froan landskapsvernområde, Rapport 8/09. Bygdeforskning, Trondheim, 115 p. Daugstad, K., Forbord, M. og Rønningen, K. 2006: Bioenergi og kulturlandskap: resultater fra en intervjuundersøkelse i Møre og Romsdal. Notat nr 7/06, ISSN 1503-2027 Daugstad, K., K. Rønningen & B. Skar 2006: Jordbrukets kulturarv sett fra nasjonale og internasjonale premissgivere. En analyse av ”kulturarv”, ”aktivt jordbruk” og ”verdiskaping”. In Daugstad, K. (ed.) Jordbrukets rolle som kulturbærer. Rapport 8/06. Centre for Rural Research,Trondheim: 7-20 Other relevant experience/activities/honours Leader for Research Group for Nature, Cultural environments and Living conditions, Centre for Rural Research, 4 years in the period 2002-2006, member of Centre for Rural Research’s leadership committee same period Board member Centre for Rural Research Leader for the CRR’s branch of Researcher’s Union 2007-2009 Member of Assessment panel for Hagmarks-Mistra and Mistra Idea Support Grants, The foundation for strategic environmental research, Sweden, Member of scientific committees for evaluation of research projects to the Norwegian Research Council, evaluation of proposals to the Swiss Research Fund and the Swiss National Research Programme (NRP68) Lecturing, co-tuitioning and sensoring at the Department of Geography, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (from undergraduate to phd level), (1991->). Sensoring, Agricultural University of Norway Member of evaluation committees for Assistant professor evaluation, Agr. Univ of Norway/ University of Life Sciences Opponent/examinator phd Copenhagen University, Faculty of Life Sciences, 2012 Invited lecturer at Norway’s Agricultural University, Univ. of Lund, Sweden, Royal Univ. of Veterinary and Agriculture, Copenhagen, Univ. of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Commission for Rural Communities, England, Wageningen University Referee for various journals, incl. Landscape Research, Journal of Rural Studies, Norw. Journal of Geography, Environment and Planning A, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, Transactions of British Geographers Languages: Norwegian, English, German. I have carried out fieldwork with qualitative interviews in Germany, Switzerland, UK, Denmark, Sweden and Norway. Studies/Visiting researcher abroad: Technische Universität München, Germany, Centre for Rural Economy, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK CURRICULUM VITAE Personalia Name: Nationality: Address: Magnar Forbord Norwegian Centre for Rural Research, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) Dragvoll, N-7491 Trondheim, NORWAY magnar.forbord@bygdeforskning.no E-mail: Education 2003 1996 1990 1984 Dr.ing. (PhD) (industrial organization), Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim. Ground Level Course in Sociological Research Methods, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim. Business Economist, Institute of Business Administration, Oslo. Cand. Agric, Norwegian University of Agriculture, Ås. Professional Experience 2003 1999 – 2003 1998 – 2002 1994 – 1999 1991 – 1994 1990 – 1991 1986 – 1990 1984 – 1986 Researcher II, Centre for Rural Research Researcher III, Centre for Rural Research PhD-student (Dr.ing.), Department of Industrial Economics and Technology Management, Norwegian University of Science and Technology Research Consultant, Centre for Rural Research Project Co-ordinator, Centre for Rural Research Senior Consultant, Norwegian Institute of Agricultural Economics, Oslo Consultant, Norwegian Institute of Agricultural Economics, Oslo Economic Adviser, Oppdal Agricultural Research Ring Research Projects (most recent) 2010-2012 Vestlandslandbruket og den doble klimapåvirkningen 2011-2014 2010-2013 2008-2011 2007-2012 2012) 2007-2009 2006-2008 2005-2006 2005-2006 2004-2007 2003- 2007 2003 2002-2007 2001-2003 1998-2002 Cooperation to enhance coastal tourism development (CoastTour) (project leader) Structural changes in agriculture, rural communities and cultural landscapes Bioenergy and supply chains (project leader) Culturally grounded tourism and local food in rural development (proj.leader 2011Obligation of residency (“boplikt”) in agriculture (project leader) Bioenergy and cultural landscape Evaluation of Swedish University of Agricultural Science The new forest owner Municipal agricultural policy (project leader) Recruitment to agriculture Property legislation, business development and residing in agriculture (project leader) Regional food systems (REGMAT) Organic food: Harmony at the cost of ecology? Farm Dairies in Industrial Networks. PhD-project. Last update: 14.2.2013 1 1997-2001 Food and Environment: Consumer Attitudes and Challenges for Local Production and National Distribution of Organic Food (project leader). Publications (selected) Journal Articles Forbord, M., J. Vik and B. Hillring (2012). Development of local and regional forest based bioenergy in Norway - Supply networks, financial support and political commitment. Biomass and Bioenergy 47:164-176. Forbord, M., M. Schermer and K. Grießmair (2012): Stability and variety – Products, organization and institutionalization in farm tourism. Tourism Management 33(4):895-909. Forbord, M., J. Vik and B. G. Hillring (2011): Supply Chains for Heat from Wood Resources - Local Configurations and Critical Factors. Proceedings. 19th European Biomass Conference. From research to industry and markets. Berlin, 6-10 June 2011, ETA-Florence Renewable Energies. Forbord, M., B. G. Hillring and J. Vik (2009). Implementing bioenergy in a context of affluent energy: instruments and development in Norway. in M. Savolainen Book of Proceedings. Bioenergy2009: Sustainable Bioenergy Business. Conference 31 Aug - 4 Sept 2009. Jyväskylä: FINBIO - The Bioenergy Association of Finland. I: 91-94. Forbord, M. and H. Bjørkhaug (2009). Rekruttering til landbruket: Hva mener organisasjonene og forvaltningen? in A. Barstad and K. Skrede Levekår i landbruket 1995-2004: Livsformer og rammebetingelser i endring. Oslo: Statistisk sentralbyrå: 113-133. Forbord, M. (2005) Co-creating Successful New Industrial Networks and Products, in: Woodside, A.G. (ed.) Managing Product Innovation. Advances in Business Marketing and Purchasing, Vol. 13. Oxford: Elsevier Ltd.: 211-335. Forbord, M. (1998): New Co-operatives and Local Development - the Case of Jämtland and Trøndelag, in: Saukkonen, P. & Vihinen, H. (eds.) (1998): Rural and Regional Development. Publications 61. University of Helsinki, Mikkeli Institute for Rural Research and Training, Finland: 81-93. Almås, R. & Forbord, M. (1993): Nytt samarbeid i landbruket (New Co-operation in agriculture), in: Kooperativ Årsbok 1993, Stockholm: 101-117. Conference Papers Borch, T. and M. Forbord (2012): Professionalization through cooperation - cross-scale quality development via Norwegian cruise operators. The 21th Nordic Symposium in Tourism and Hospitality Research. Developing Tourism - Sustaining Regions. Book of abstracts, Department of Geography and Economic History, Umeå University. Forbord, M., H. Bjørkhaug and R. Burton (2012). The new farmer: Control of land and structural change in Norwegian agriculture. Paper. XIII World Congress of Rural Sociology. July 29 to August 4. Lisbon. Borch, T. and M. Forbord (2012): Innovation through strategic cooperation – the facilitating role of a tourism enterprise in the Lofoten Islands, Norway. Proceedings. 7th International Coastal & Marine Tourism Congress. 4-8 June 2012, Breda, The Netherlands, NHTV Breda University of Applied Sciences. Forbord, M., T. Borch and S. Frisvoll (2012): Food as attractor in accommodation: Specialty food, cooperation and coastal-urban linkages. Proceedings. 7th International Coastal & Marine Tourism Congress. 4-8 June 2012, Breda, The Netherlands, NHTV Breda University of Applied Sciences. Forbord, Magnar, Bengt Gunnar Hillring and Jostein Vik (2010): Supply networks for bioenergy. State support and local actors. Paper presented to Renewable Energy Research Conference, NTNU, Trondheim, 7-8 June. Forbord, M., M. Schermer and K. Grießmair (2009). Organization matters: Investigating organizational structures in farm tourism in North Tyrol, South Tyrol and Norway. Paper. The XXIII European Society for Rural Sociology congress, 17-21 August 2009. Vaasa, Finland. Frisvoll, S., M. Forbord and A. Blekesaune (2009). Consumption of 'local food' in rural tourism. Paper. Nettverksseminar om naturbasert reiseliv. Drøbak, Norway. Last update: 14.2.2013 2 Gressetvold, E., Forbord, M. and Torvatn, T. (2005): Managing Product Development – How Effects become Visible over Time. Paper submitted for The first IMP Journal Seminar: ”Managing in Networks”. Oslo the 26th to the 29th of May 2005. Forbord, M. & Kvam, G.-T. (2002): Investigating ’Thin’ and ’Thick’ Interaction Related to Development of a Rural Resource. Paper to the 18th Annual Conference on Industrial Marketing and Purchasing, 5-7 September 2002, Dijon, France. Forbord, M. (2000): Value Creation in an Agricultural Network: Taking care of a Product through New Resource Interfaces and Activity Patterns. Paper to: Forum for Interorganisatorisk Forskning, 4. December 2000 “Verdiskapning i relasjoner”, Norwegian School of Management BI, Sandvika. Forbord, M. (2000a): Efficiency and Effectiveness in Agricultural Related Activity Patterns. Paper to the 10th Nordic Workshop on Interorganisational Resarch, Orkanger, 18.-20. August 2000 and The 16th Annual Conference on Industrial Marketing and Purchasing, 7-9 September 2000, Bath, UK. Other Publications Forbord, M., K. Daugstad, S. Frisvoll og G.-T. Kvam (2012). Mat- og kulturbasert turisme i bygdene. Forskningsglimt nr. 2/2012. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Borch, T. og M. Forbord (2012). Hurtigruten går på land. Kronikk. Nordlys, 19.10. Forbord, M. og H. Bjørkhaug (2012). De nye leilendingene. Kronikk. Nationen 20.2. Forbord, M. and T. Borch (2012). Cooperation is the key. International Innovation. Bristol, UK: Research Media Ltd. July 2012: 113-115. Forbord, M., G.-T. Kvam og M. Rønningen (red.) (2012): Turisme i distriktene. Trondheim, Tapir Akademisk Forlag Forbord, M. og M. Schermer (2012): Felles organisasjoner og institusjonelle ordninger i gårdsturismen.i M. Forbord, G.-T. Kvam og M. Rønningen (red.): Turisme i distriktene. Trondheim: Tapir Akademisk Forlag: 391-417. Forbord, M., S. Frisvoll og A. Blekesaune (2012): Turisters forbruk av lokal mat – noen sammenhenger og implikasjoner.i M. Forbord, G.-T. Kvam og M. Rønningen (red.): Turisme i distriktene. Trondheim: Tapir Akademisk Forlag: 137-163. Forbord, M. (2012): Hvor ”stort” er reiselivet i distriktene? Omsetning og sysselsetting.i M. Forbord, G.T. Kvam og M. Rønningen (red.): Turisme i distriktene. Trondheim: Tapir Akademisk Forlag: 27-45. Forbord, M., G.-T. Kvam og M. Rønningen (2012): Turisme i distriktene – typer, perspektiver og tematiske tilnærminger.i M. Forbord, G.-T. Kvam og M. Rønningen (red.): Turisme i distriktene. Trondheim: Tapir Akademisk Forlag: 11-22. Vik, J., M. Forbord og B. G. Hillring (2012): Forsyningskjeder og kritiske faktorer for videre utvikling av bioenergi. Bioenergi (Nr.1 Februar): 24-26. Forbord, M. og J. Vik (2011). Forsyningskjeder for bioenergi - nettverk og kritiske faktorer. Rapport 1/11. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Vik, J. and M. Forbord (2009). Håp for bioenergi? Kronikk. Nationen, 23. november. Forbord, M. and J. Vik (2009). Bioenergi mellom nasjonal politikk og regional variasjon - en sammenlignende studie av omfang og drivkrefter i Hedmark, Møre og Romsdal og NordTrøndelag. Rapport 6/09. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Storstad, O., M. Forbord and R. Almås (2009). Boplikt i landbruket – bolyst eller botvang? Resultater fra en spørreundersøkelse blant eiere av landbrukseiendommer. Rapport 02/09. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Forbord, M. (2008): Boplikten kan ha effekt. Debatt. Aftenposten, 28.11. Forbord, M. og O. Storstad (2008): Konsesjonsplikt på boligeiendom i fritidskommuner: Sikrer det helårsbosetting? Rapport 11/08. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Daugstad, K., Forbord, M. og Rønningen, K. (2008): Erfaringer fra prosjektet ”Frå kratt til kroner” i Møre og Romsdal. Notat nr. 9/08. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Forbord, M. og E. P. Stræte (2008): Hva betyr reiseliv, kultur og lokal mat for omsetning og sysselsetting i distriktene? Rapport 4/08. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Forbord, M. og O. Storstad (2008): Presiseringer om boplikt. Kronikk. Nationen, 6.2. Last update: 14.2.2013 3 Forbord, M. og O. Storstad (2008): Praktisering av regelen om boplikt på landbrukseiendom: En analyse basert på saker i utvalgte kommuner. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Storstad, O., M. Forbord og A. Blekesaune (2007): Boplikt i landbruket - en analyse av kommunal praksis. Rapport 7/07. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Forbord, M. (2007): Økt landbruksmakt til kommunene. Samlede erfaringer fra prosjektet "Kommunalisering Pluss". Rapport 4/07. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Forbord, M. og F. E. Holm (2007): Utprøving av læringsverksted for landbruks- og samfunnsutvikling: Noen erfaringer og betraktninger. Notat nr. 3/07. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Forbord, M. og F. E. Holm (2007): Økt kommunal myndighet i landbruket: Effekter på bygdeutvikling, næringsutvikling og lokal politikk. Rapport 2/07. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Forbord, M. og R. Almås (2007): Social capital and regional development in Norway. Note to OECD evaluation of Norwegian regional policy. February 2007. Oslo: Ministry of local government and regional development. Almås, R., Forbord, M., Kvam, G.-T. og Vik, J. (2006): Det Gröna Universitetet i en skiftande omvärld: Hur Sveriges Lantbruksuniversitet kan utforma en proaktiv sektorsroll i en allt mer global framtid. En utredning från Norsk senter for bygdeforskning, Trondheim til det svenske Jordbruksdepartementet. Daugstad, K., Forbord, M. og Rønningen, K. (2006): Bioenergi og kulturlandskap: resultater fra en intervju-undersøkelse i Møre og Romsdal. Notat nr. 7/06. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Follo, G., Forbord, M., Almås, R., Blekesaune, A. og Rye, J.F. (2006): Den nye skogeieren. Hvordan øke hogsten i Trøndelag? Rapport 1/06. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Forbord, M, Holm, F E og Meistad, T (2005): Hvordan arbeider kommunene i forhold til landbruk? Noen resultater og inntrykk på bakgrunn av kommunereformen i landbruket. Delrapport 1 fra forskningsprosjektet Kommunalisering Pluss. R-7/05. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Kvam, G.-T. og Forbord, M. (2005) Samhandling, relasjonsbygging og nettverk. I: Borch, O.-J., Kvam, G.-T. og Stræte, E.P. Matgründeren – om å utvikle småskala og spesialiserte matbedrifter. Trondheim: Tapir akademisk forlag. 161-172 Forbord, M. and Kvam, G.-T. (2005) The relevance of interaction: Skånaliseter farm dairy and development of rural business. (Revised version of paper presented at the 18th Annual IMP Conference, Dijon, France, September 5 – 7, 2002.) P-1/05. Trondheim: Centre for Rural Research. Forbord, M. and Johnsen, J.P. (2004) Political rhetoric, conception of ‘the farmer,’and implications for recruitment. (Revised version of paper presented at the XI World Congress of Rural Sociology, Trondheim, Norway, July 25 – 30, 2004.) P-9/04. Trondheim: Centre for Rural Research. Forbord, M. (2003): New Uses of an Agricultural Product. A case study of development in an industrial network. Dr.ing.-thesis 2003:36. Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim. Forbord, M. & Stavrum, T. (eds.) (2000): Rural and Regional Development in Northern Periphery. SFBnr: R-4/00 Forbord, M. (1997): Nye kooperativer i Jämtland og Trøndelag - en sammenlignende undersøkelse (New Co-operatives in Jämtland and Trøndelag - a comparative study). Report 102 - 97. Swedish Institute for Regional Research, Östersund/Fritzes, Stockholm. Other Relevant Experiences (selected) Leader of committee for the national conference “Bioenergi – løsninger og tilpasninger for framtida” (Bioenergy – solutions and adaptations for the future), Mære Landbruksskole, 9.3.2011 Leader of committee for the national conference ”Økt kommunal landbruksmyndighet: Hva har det ført til?” (Increased municipal power in agriculture) Rica Hell Hotel, Stjørdal, 19.1.2007 Administrative Leader of Conference in Nordic-Scottish University Network for Rural and Regional Development: Local Development – new businesses – rural women. September 16-19, 1999, Stjørdal, Norway. Project Leader Research Project ‘Food and Environment: Consumer Attitudes and Challenges for Local Production and National Distribution of Organic Food’. Together with National Institute of Consumer Research. From 97.10.01 Last update: 14.2.2013 4 CURRICULUM VITAE Dr. polit Jostein Vik Born: Phone: E-mail: Web: 20th of February 1962 +47 90925917 Jostein.Vik@rural.no http://www.bygdeforskning.no/ansatte/jostein-vik Positions: • Senior researcher at the Centre for Rural Research, Trondheim, • Associate professor II at NTNU, Department of Sociology and Political Science. Education: 2006 2000 1986 Dr polit. Political science. Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim Cand. Polit. Political Science. Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim Agro- technician, Mære agricultural school, Steinkjer Teaching Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Sociology and Political Science: Courses: • The European Union (POL3516), autumn 2011; autumn 2012, Autumn 2013. • Theories and models in political economy (POL 2012) spring 2011, autumn 2012. • Political economy (POL2008), spring 2008/spring 2009/spring 2010. • International Relations (SVPOL203), Spring 2003. • Analysis of Political Risk (SVPOL109) Autumn 2001 • Examen Philosophicum (Ex.Phil. Modul 2), Autumn 2000 and Spring 2001 • Additional lectures in Regional policy and Political economy (Pol 1002), spring 2013. Other professional activities • Member of the Norwegian advisory committee for agricultural statistics • Member of Management Committee of COST 866 Green Care in Agriculture. (finalized) 2008 -2010 • Member of COST action FP1201 Forest Land Ownership Changes in Europe: Significance for Management And Policy (FACESMAP). 2012 - ongoing • Member of the board for Centre for Rural Research 2010 – 2012 • Reviewer for several scientific journals (Journal of Rural Studies; European Urban and Regional Studies; Journal of Small Business Management; Land Use Policy; Health Policy; Tourism Management; Journal of Development and Rural Depopulation Studies; European Political Science; Theory and Science). • Session organizer for session 62, ”Forest Ownership and Challenges for Forest Policies and Management of Forestry” on the “XIII World Congress of Rural Sociology” in Lisbon July/August 2012. • Session organizer for session 67, ”Farm diversification and rural sustainability” on the “XIII World Congress of Rural Sociology” i Lisbon July/August 2012 • Co-chair for section 72: ”Political entrepreneurship in the public sphere” on the ECPR conference in Reykjavik 2011. • Co-chair for panel 412: ”New models of governance in the public sector – politics and entrepreneurship” on ECPR conference in Reykjavik 2011 Oppdatert pr 29.08.2013 Publications Review articles and book chapters. Johnsen, Jahn Petter, Jostein Vik and Signe Sønvisen (2013). Pushed or pulled? Understanding fishery exit in a welfare society context. Maritime Studies (MAST), 2013. 12:4. Johnsen, Jahn Petter and Jostein Vik (2013, In print): Farvel til fiskeren? Om frafall og rekruttering til fiske. Chapter 3 pp. 301-314, in Jentoft, Nergård og Røvik (eds). Hvor går Nord-Norge vol, 3, Stamsund: Orkana Akademisk. Aasetre, Jørund and Jostein Vik (2013): Framing the environment – disputes and developments in the management of Norwegian salmon fjords. Ocean and Coastal Management. Vol.71 (2013), pp. 203-212 Forbord, Magnar, Jostein Vik and Bengt Gunnar Hillring (2012): Development of local and regional forest based bioenergy in Norway - Supply networks, financial support and political commitment. Biomass and Bioenergy. Vol. 47 (2012), pp. 164-176. Vik, Jostein og Gerard McElwee (2011): Diversification and the entrepreneurial motivations of farmers in Norway. Journal of Small Business Management 49 (3) pp.390-410. Sønvisen, Signe, Jahn Petter Johnsen og Jostein Vik (2011): The Norwegian coastal employment system: what it was and what it is. Maritime Studies (MAST). Vol. 10 (1), pp 31-56. Vik, Jostein, Ingrid Bay-Larsen and Jørund Aasetre (2011): Bruk og vern, brytninger om demokrati. Book chapter in Haugen and Stræte (ed): Rurale brytninger, Trondheim: Tapir forlag. Vik, Jostein, Jahn Petter Johnsen and Signe Sønvisen (2011): Kysten i endring: om fiskeripolitikken som distrikts- og lokalsamfunnspolitikk, Book chapter in Haugen og Stræte (ed): Rurale brytninger, Trondheim: Tapir forlag. Solberg, Terje og Jostein Vik (2011): Finanskrisens bakteppe - De neoliberale ideene og liberaliseringen på Island. Norsk statsvitenskapelig tidsskrift Vol 27(1), pp. 5-29. Vik Jostein and Mariann Villa (2010): Books, branding and boundary objects. On the use of image in rural development. Sociologia Ruralis Vol 50(2)156-170. Vik, Jostein and Maja Farstad. (2009): Green Care Governance: Between Market, Policy and Intersecting Social Worlds. Journal of Health Organization and Management. Vol.23. No 5 pp. 539-553. Haugen, Marit .S. and Jostein Vik (2008): “Farmers as entrepreneurs: the case of farm-based tourism”, Int. J. of Entrepreneurship and Small Business, Vol.6 No.3. 2008. Vik, Jostein. (2008): Makt og kultur. Ch 7 in Sørensen et al. (ed) Faglighet og tverrfaglighet i den nye kunnskapsøkonomien. Trondheim: Tapir forlag. Haugen, Marit .S. and Jostein Vik. (2008): ”Bonde og turistentreprenør, en god kombinasjon?” in Almås et al. (ed) Den nye bygda, Trondheim: Tapir forlag. Vik, Jostein and Mariann Villa. (2008): ”Brokete bygdebilete - Om små bygder med store image” in Almås et al. (ed) Den nye bygda, Trondheim: Tapir forlag. Dr.polit thesis. Vik, Jostein (2006): ”Knowledge, Mobility and Configurations of Power: an Asset Specificity Perspective on Power in the Knowledge Society.” Dr.Polit thesis in political science, 2006:214. Trondheim: Department of Sociology and Political Science. Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Selected reports and other publications Rønning, Lars, Jostein Vik and Trine Magnus (2013). Kontraktsproduksjon i landbruket. En annen hverdag for bonden, Report No 1/2013. Trondheim, Centre for rural research. Vik, Jostein, Magnar Forbord and Bengt Gunnar Hillring (2012). Forsyningskjeder og kritiske faktorer for videre utvikling av bioenergi. Bioenergi, no 1/2012. s 24-27 Vik, Jostein and Maja Farstad (2012): Hest, hestehold og foring: Status for hesteholdet i Norge, Report No. 2/2012. Trondheim: Centre for rural research. Vik, Jostein (2011). Tilnærminger og strategier i norsk melkeproduksjon – en typologi. Report No 8/2011. Trondheim: Centre for rural research. Rønningen, Katrina, Hilde Bjørkhaug, Frank Egil Holm og Jostein Vik (2011): Tromslandbruket – regional analyse. Report No 6/2011. Trondheim, Centre for rural research Oppdatert pr 29.08.2013 Forbord, Magnar and Jostein Vik (2011): Forsyningskjeder for bioenergi – nettverk og kritiske faktorer. Report no.1/2011.Trondheim. Centre for rural research. Vik, Jostein and Arild Kroken (2010): Arbeidsinnvandring i landbruket 2004-2010. Notat no. 9/2010. Trondheim: Centre for rural research. Johnsen, Jahn Petter and Jostein Vik (2009): Rekrutteringsutfordringer for marin sektor i framtida. Norsk Sjømat, No. 4 (2009) Vik, Jostein (2009): Samhandling i endring. Om makt og marked i skognæringa Report No. 01/09. Trondheim: Centre for rural research Forbord, Magnar og Jostein Vik (2009): Bioenergi mellom nasjonal politikk og regional variasjon. En sammenlignende studie av omfang og drivkrefter i Hedmark, Møre og Romsdal og NordTrøndelag. Report No 06/09. Trondheim: Centre for Rural Research Storstad, Oddveig og Jostein Vik (2009): Bygdeutviklingsmidlene og bonden. En delrapport om BUmidlenes effekt på bønders holdninger og tilpasninger. Report No. 07/09. Trondheim: Centre for Rural Research. Forbord, Magnar, Bengt Gunnar Hillring og Jostein Vik (2009). Implementing bioenergy in a context of affluent energy: instruments and development in Norway. Conference proceedings. Bioenergy2009 : Sustainable Bioenergy Business, Jyväskylä, Finland, FINBIO - The Bioenergy Association of Finland. Pettersen, Ivar, Lars Øystein Eriksen, Julie Nåvik Hval, Oddveig Storstad og Jostein Vik (2009): Tilslørt, virksom og treffsikker - Evaluering av Bygdeutviklingsordningen. Nilf report No 4/09. Oslo: NILF. Johnsen, Jahn Petter and Jostein Vik. (2008): Mellom marked og nettverk: Om fiskerirekruttering og sysselsettingssystemer i fiske. Report No. 07/08. Trondheim: Centre for Rural Research Vik, Jostein (2008). Arbeidsinnvandring til landbruket 2003 til 2007: Frekvenser fra undersøkelsene ’Trender i norsk landbruk’ 2004, 2006 og 2008. Notat nr. 6/08. Trondheim: Centre for Rural Research Vik, Jostein. (2008). Book report: ’Økonomisk globalisering og politisk styring’ in Tidskrift for samfunnsforskning nr 1. 2008 Vik, Jostein (2008): “Trender i norsk landbruk 2008. Dokumentasjonsnotat - spørsmål, metode og kodebok”. Notat nr 5/05, Trondheim: Centre for Rural Research. Vik, Jostein (2007): ”Samdriftsbøndene – en typologi” in Stræte, Egil Petter og Reidar Almås (red): Samdrift i melkeproduksjonen - En samvirkestrategi for økt velferd og fleksibel drift. Rapport nr 03/07. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Ch.4. Vik, Jostein (2007)”Samdriftene – stereotyper og kategorier” i Stræte, Egil Petter og Reidar Almås (red): Samdrift i melkeproduksjonen - En samvirkestrategi for økt velferd og fleksibel drift. Rapport nr 03/07. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Ch. 7. Stræte, Egil Petter og Jostein Vik (2007) ”Hvem er og hva mener samdriftsbøndene?” i Stræte, Egil Petter og Reidar Almås (red): Samdrift i melkeproduksjonen - En samvirkestrategi for økt velferd og fleksibel drift. Rapport nr 03/07. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Ch. 3 Almås, Reidar, Magnar Forbord, Gunn Turid Kvam og Jostein Vik (2006): ”Det Gröna Universitetet i en skiftande omvärld: Hur Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet kan utforma en proaktiv sektorsroll in i en allt mer global framtid” En utredning från Norsk senter for bygdeforskning Trondheim. Vik, Jostein og Johan Fredrik Rye (2006): ”Trender i norsk landbruk 2006. Frekvensrapport.” Rapport nr 11/06. Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Vik, Jostein og Johan Fredrik Rye (2006): “Trender i norsk landbruk 2006. Dokumentasjonsnotat spørsmål, metode og kodebok”. Notat nr 2/05, Trondheim: Norsk senter for bygdeforskning. Vik, Jostein (2005): “Trønderbonden: Typer og tilpasninger i trøndersk landbruk”. Rapport nr 5/05, Trondheim: Norsk senter for Bygdeforskning Vik, Jostein (2000): “The Wealth of Industries; Explaining Trade Policy Formation in European fish markets”, Master thesis in Political Science. Trondheim: Norwegian University of Science and Technology Papers Vik, Jostein and Gro Follo (2012): The changing political economy of fragmented forest ownership in Norway. Paper for the XIII World Congress of Rural Sociology, Lisbon, July 29th to August 4th, 2012. Bjørkhaug, Hilde, Jostein Vik and Carol Richards (2012): Changes in the Norwegian Agri-food system: The chicken game. .Paper for the XIII World Congress of Rural Sociology, Lisbon, July 29th to August 4th, 2012. Oppdatert pr 29.08.2013 Almås, Reidar og Jostein Vik: (2011): Interaction, Integration and Market Strategies In Norwegian Food Supply Chains. Paper presentert på XXIV ESRS Congress. Chania, Greece, 22.25.08.11 Vik, Jostein, Ingrid Bay-Larsen and Jørund Aasetre (2011): Bruk og vern, brytninger om demokrati. th th. Paper presented on the annual national political science conference, Bergen, January, 5 - 7 Vik, Jostein (2010): Changing governance in Norwegian forestry. Paper to the annual national conference in political science. Kristiansand, 6-8 January 2010. Forbord, Magnar, Bengt Gunnar Hillring og Jostein Vik (2009): Implementing bioenergy in a context of affluent energy: Instruments and development in Norway. Poster on the 4th International Bioenergy Conference. Jyväskylä, Finland. 31 August - 4 September 2009. Vik, Jostein, Ingrid Bay-Larsen and Jørund Aasetre (2009): Governance or bureaucratic mess: Combined use and protection policies within Norwegian environmental management. Paper to the Nordic Environmental Social Science (NESS) Conference in London, UK. 10th to 12th of June, 2009 Vik, Jostein and Gerard McElwee (2008): ”Pluriactivity and the entrepreneurial motivations of farmers in Norway”. Paper presented at the 6th Rural Entrepreneurship conference, 22-23rd May 2008, Dumfries, Scotland. Vik, Jostein and Mariann Villa (2007): “Rural communities with messy images: Images as boundary objects in rural development strategies.” Paper presented at the XXII ESRS Congress 20-24 August 2007 in Wageningen Gates, Scott; Jonaton W. Moses; Håvard Strand; Jong-In Jo; and Jostein Vik, (2003): “Mini-Skirts, Hula-Hoops and Exchange Rate Regimes: Information Cascades across Central Banks”, Paper presentert på the 2003 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, PA, August 28-31 Vik, Jostein (2001): “The Wealth of Industries; A factor specificity based theory on trade policy activism and trade barriers.” Paper presentert på “the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association i San Francisco, Aug. 30 – Sept. 2, 2001 Selected projects • “Agropro – Agronomy for increased food production. Challenges and solutions” 2013 – 2016. • “GoFood – governing food in a globalised environment…” 2010 - 2014 • “Making words into deed: Analyzing supply chains for bioenergy and factors for development in different regions” 2008 – 2011 • “Implementing Environmental Policy – analysing the governance of integrated use and protection policies” (in coastal regions) 2008 - 2011 • “Labour migration to agriculture – demands for labour, legitimation and normalisation” 2010 - 2011 • ”Networks or markets? The recruitment challenge in future fisheries and marine industries” 2007 - 2010. • "Hvordan oppnå bedre samhandling i skog- og trenæringa?" [How to achieve better governance in forestry/Changing governance in forestry] 2008 - 2009 • ”Trends in Norwegian Agriculture” 2006 - 2009 • ”Utredning av Sveriges Landbruksuniversitets (SLU’s) sektorsrolle”. 2005 – 2006. Academic work experience/employment 2005 – ongoing Senior Researcher at the Centre for Rural Research, Trondheim 2011 – ongoing Associate professorII at the Department of Sociology and Political Science. Norwegian University of Science and Technology Spr 08, 09 and 10 20 percent position as Associate Professor at the Department of Sociology and Political Science. NTNU. 2001 – 2004 PhD research fellow at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology 2000 – 2001 Lecturer at the Department of Sociology and Political Science. Norwegian University of Science and Technology 1999 Scholarship holder at The Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), Department of International Economics, Oslo. Oppdatert pr 29.08.2013 Dr Rob Burton – curriculum vitae 22nd April 1965 New Zealand, British Rob Fischer Universitetssenteret Dragvoll N-7491 Trondheim rob.burton@bygdeforskning.no +47 73591733 Date of Birth: Nationality: Married name: Address: E-mail: Phone: Academic qualifications: 1998 1992 1985 PhD Geography, DeMontfort University, Leicester. PhD thesis topic: “The role of farmer self-identity in agricultural decision making in the Marston Vale Community Forest” MSc Geography, University of Otago, Dunedin. MSc thesis topic: “Public Perceptions of the Greenhouse Effect” BSc Geography, University of Otago, Dunedin Positions 1998 – Current: 20112009-2011 2007-2009 2005-2007 2000-2004 1999-2000 1998-1999 Senior Research Scientist for the Centre for Rural Research (Trondheim, Norway) Contract Research Scientist for the Centre for Rural Research (Trondheim, Norway) and Agresearch (NZ) Senior Scientist (Agresearch, Invermay, NZ) Senior Researcher (Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, UK) Researcher (Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, UK) Lecturer in Geography (temporary) (Bournemouth University, UK). Research Fellow (Kingston University, London) Peer Esteem: 2007 – 2013: Reviewer for: Agriculture and Human Values, Environmental Engineering and Management Journal, Geoforum, International Journal of Sociology and Anthropology, Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning, Land Use Policy, Journal of Rural Studies, Land Use Policy, Rural Sociology Weather, Climate & Society, Finnish Journal for Rural Policy Research, Journal of Agricultural Economics, European Urban and Regional Studies, The Geographical Journal, The Norwegian Journal of Geography, Sociologia Ruralis, Journal of Environmental Management, European Review of Agricultural Economics, Annals of American Geographers. Speaker invitations: 2009 2006 2006 Invited symposium speaker at European Congress of Conservation Biology (Nature Conservation on farmland: linking ecology with social sciences): “Exploring Farmers’ Cultural Resistance to Voluntary Agrienvironmental Schemes” Prague, 1st – 5th September, 2009. Invited speaker at Economic and Social Research Council seminar on the future of the Uplands, Exeter University 28th February 2006: “Social Capital in Hill Farming” Keynote speaker at 8th October 2006: CSIRO Horizons in Livestock Science Conference, Brisbane, Australia “Global culture: global agriculture” PhD. Vivas: 2012 Stine Wamberg Broch, “Environmental Motivation and Contract Design from a Landowner Perspective” Friday 21 September, Danish Centre for Forest and Landscape, University of Copenhagen. Publications: International Peer Reviewed Publications: In press 2013 2013 2013 2012 2012 2012 Indicates 50+ citations in Web of Knowledge Wynne-Jones, S., Schwarz, G., Burton, R.J.F. Payment-by-results agrienvironmental support for grasslands in Europe: Lessons learnt for future agri-environmental support in Wales. Grassland Science in Europe 18. G.R. de Snoo, I. Herzon, H. Staats, R.J.F. Burton, S. Schindler, J. van Dijk, A. Lokhorst , J.M. Bullock , M. Lobley, T., S Wrbka, G. Schwarz, C.J.M. Musters. Towards Effective Nature Conservation on Farmland: Making Farmers Matter. Conservation Letters 6: 66–72. L-A Sutherland, Mills, J., Ingram, J., Burton, R.J.F., Dwyer, J., Blackstock, K. Considering the Source: Establishing trust in public, private and charitable agri-environmental information and advice in England. Journal of Environmental Management 118: 96-105. Burton, R.J.F.; Schwarz, G. Result-oriented agri-environmental schemes in Europe and their potential for promoting behavioural change. Land Use Policy 30: 628– 641. Sutherland, L-A.; Burton, R.J.F.; Ingram, J.; Blackstock, K.; Slee, B. Triggering Change: Towards a conceptualisation of major change processes in farm decision-making. Journal of Environmental Management 104, 142-151. Burton, R.J.F., Peoples, S., Cooper, M. Building ‘cowshed cultures’: A cultural perspective on the promotion of stockmanship and animal welfare on dairy farms. Journal of Rural Studies 28, 174-187. Burton, R.J.F. Understanding Farmers' Aesthetic Preference for Tidy Agricultural Landscapes: A Bourdieusian Perspective, Landscape Research 37:1, 51-71. 2011 2011 2011 2009 2009 2009 2009 2008 2007 2007 2006 2006 2006 2005 Stock, P.; Burton, R.J.F. Defining terms for integrated (multi-inter-transdisciplinary) research in sustainability research. Sustainability. 3 (8), 1090-1113. Sutherland, L-A.; Burton, R.J.F. Good Farmers, Good Neighbours?: The role of cultural capital in social capital development a Scottish farming community. Sociologia Ruralis. 51 (3), 238-255. Burton, R.J.F.; Paragahawewa, U. Creating culturally sustainable agrienvironmental schemes. Journal of Rural Studies 27: 95-104. Reed, M.S., Arblaster, K., Bullock, K., Burton, R.J.F., Davies, A.L., Hubacek, K., May, R., Mitchley, J., Morris, J., Nainggolan, D., Potter, C., Quinn, C.H., Swales, V., Thorp, S.: Using scenarios to explore UK upland futures. Futures 41 (9): 619-630. Blackstock K.L.; Ingram J.; Burton R.J.F.; Brown K.M.; Slee B.: Understanding and influencing behaviour change by farmers to improve water quality. Science of the Total Environment 408 (23): 5631-5638. Campbell, H.; Burton, R.J.F.; Cooper, M.; Henry, M.; Le Heron, E.; Le Heron, R.; Lewis, N.; Pawson, E.; Perkins, H.; Roche, M.; Rosin, C.; White, T.: From Agricultural Science to ‘Biological Economies’? NZ Journal of Agricultural Research 52: 91-97. Spash, C., Urama, K., Burton, R.J.F., Kenyon, W., Shannon, P., Hill, G.: Motives Behind Willingness to Pay for Improving Biodiversity in a Water Ecosystem: Economics, Ethics and Social Psychology. Ecological Economics 68 (4): 955-964. Burton, R.J.F., Kuczera, C., Schwarz, G.: Exploring farmers’ cultural resistance to voluntary agri-environmental schemes. Sociologia Ruralis 48 (1): 16-37. Schwarz, G. and Burton, R.J.F.: Public good provision on common land in the Cumbria uplands in the UK: A case study for an integrated rural policy for the uplands. Rural Development 3 (1): 193-198. Schwarz, G., Burton, R.J.F., Wright, I. A., Gilbert, A., McLeod, J., McKeen, M., Wilson, R. M., and Swales, V.: Appraisal of options for the Less Favoured Area Support Scheme in Scotland post 2010. Agricultural Sciences (Žemės ūkio mokslai) 14: 99 – 107. Mansfield, L.; Burton, R.J.F.; Schwarz, G.; Brown, K.; Convery, I.: The heft: a multifunctional management tool. The International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystem Services and Management 2 (3): 238-241. Burton, R.J.F. (2006): An alternative to farmer age as an indicator of lifecycle stage: the case for a farm family age index. Journal of Rural Studies 22: 485-492. Burton, R.J.F. and Wilson, G. (2006): Injecting social psychology theory into conceptualisations of agricultural agency: towards a ‘postproductivist’ farmer self-identity. Journal of Rural Studies 22 (1): 95-115. Burton, R.J.F.; Schwarz, G. and Fischer, H. (2005): Main-d’oeuvre agricole et Plan de développment rural en Écosse. [Changes in farm labour structures in Scotland and its implications for the Rural Development Program]. Économie Rurale 289-290: 106-127. 2005 2004 2004 1999 Burton, R.J.F. and Walford, N. (2005) Multiple succession on family farms in the South East of England: a counterbalance to agricultural concentration? Journal of Rural Studies 21(3): 335-347. Burton, R.J.F. (2004): Seeing through the 'good farmer's' eyes: towards developing an understanding of the social symbolic value of 'productivist' behaviour. Sociologia Ruralis 44 (2): 195-216. Burton, R.J.F. (2004): Reconceptualising the ‘behavioural approach’ in agricultural studies: a socio-psychological perspective. Journal of Rural Studies 20 (3): 359-371. Burton, R.J.F. and Wilson, G. (1999): The Yellow Pages as a Sampling Frame for Farm Surveys: Assessing Potential Bias in Agri-environmental Research. Journal of Rural Studies 15 (1): 91-102. Book Chapters (peer rviewed): 2012 2012 2011 2009 2004 + 33 R.J.F. Burton, Geoff A. Wilson, The Rejuvenation of Productivist Agriculture: The Case for ‘Cooperative Neo-Productivism’, in Reidar Almås, Hugh Campbell (ed.) Rethinking Agricultural Policy Regimes: Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture (Research in Rural Sociology and Development, Volume 18), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp.51-72 Katrina Rønningen, Alan Renwick, R.J.F. Burton, Western European Approaches to and Interpretations of Multifunctional Agriculture – and Some Implications of a Possible Neo-Productivist Turn, in Reidar Almås, Hugh Campbell (ed.) Rethinking Agricultural Policy Regimes: Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture (Research in Rural Sociology and Development, Volume 18), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp.73-97 Burton R.J.F., Rønningen, K.; Wedderburn. L. Conducting Integrated Research. In: Kammili T., Hubert B., Tourrand J.F. (eds), 2011. A paradigm shift in livestock management: from resource sufficiency to functional integrity. 28th and 29th June 2008, Hohhot, China. Cardère éditeur Lirac, France, 272 p., pp. 239-265. Burton, R.J.F., Schwarz, G., Brown, K.M., Convery, I.T., Mansfield, L.: The future of hefted upland commons in areas of high public goods provision: Learning from the Lake District experience. In: A. Bonn, K. Hubacek, J. Stewart & T. Allott (Eds) Drivers of Change in Upland Environments. London, Routledge. Burton, R.J.F.: Establishing "Community Forests" in England: can public forests be provided through private interests? In: B. Fitzharris and J. Kearsley (Eds): Glimpses of a Gaian World: Essays on Geography and Senses of Place. Dunedin, University of Otago Press. Occasional papers, technical reports, conference papers and published book reviews. CURRICULUM VITAE Name: Date of Birth: Nationality: Address: Arild Blekesaune 1959-11-06 Norwegian Department of Sociology and Political Science Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU N-7491 TRONDHEIM NORWAY August 27, 2013 Education: Dr.polit. in Sociology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), 1996 Thesis: Family Farming in Norway. An Analysis of Structural Changes within Farm Households between 1975 and 1990. Cand.polit. in Sociology, the University of Trondheim, 1987 Post-graduate thesis: Utdanning og arbeid. En studie av 1981-kullet av sivilingeniører fra NTH (Education and work. A study of engineers graduated in 1981). Post-Graduate Certificate in Education, the University of Trondheim, 1984 Cand.mag. The University of Trondheim, 1985 A-levels in science, Heimdal Videregående Skole, 1979 Professional/Occupational experience: Chairman, Department of sociology and political science, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU, From August 1st 2012 – July 31th 2013 Professor, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU, From September 15th 2009. Visiting Scholar, University of California - Berkeley, May 1th – August 1th 2009 Associate Professor, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NTNU, August 1st 1999 September 14th 2009 Research Manager, Centre for Rural Research, NTNU, December 1st 1995 - July 31th 1999 Research Fellow, Centre of Rural Research, Univ. of Trondheim, January 1st 1991- November 30th 1995. Researcher, Centre of Rural Research, Univ. of Trondheim, July 1st 1989 - December 31th 1990 Research Assistant, Centre of Rural Research, Univ. of Trondheim, January 1st - June 31th 1989 Consultant in Marketing Research (Norfakta) January 1st - December 31th 1988. Publications/Papers: Journal article: Reitan, M., K. Gustafsson and A. Blekesaune (forthcoming). Do Local Government Reforms Result in Higher Levels of Trust in Local Politicians? Local Government Studies (accepted July 2013). Logstein, B., A. Blekesaune and R. Almås (2013). Physical activity among Norwegian adolescents- a multilevel analysis of how place of residence is associated with health behaviour: the YoungHUNT study. International Journal for Equity in Health, 12(56). Alberg, T., A. Blekesaune and E. Elvestad (2013). Media choice and informed democracy. Towards increasing news consumption gaps in Europe? The International Journal of Press/Politics, 18(3) 281-303. Bjørkhaug, H. and A. Blekesaune (2013). Development of organic farming in Norway: A statistical analysis of neighbourhood effects. GEOFORUM, 45 201-210. Blekesaune, A., E. Elvestad and T. Aalberg (2012). Tuning out the World of News and Current Affairs. An empirical study of Europe’s disconnected citizens. European Sociological Review, 28(1) 1101 126. Blekesaune, A. and K. Rønningen (2010). Bears and Fears. Cultural capital, geography and attitudes towards large carnivores in Norway. Norwegian Journal of Geography, 64(4) 185-198. Blekesaune, A., M. S. Haugen and M. Villa (2010). The Dream of a Small-holding. Sociologia Ruralis, 50(3) 225-241. Blekesaune, A., B. Brandth and M.S. Haugen (2010). Visitors to Farm Tourism Enterprises in Norway. Scandinavian Journal of Hospitality and Tourism, 10(1) 54-73. Elvestad, E. and A. Blekesaune (2008). Newspaper Readers in Europe. A Multilevel Study of Individual and National Differences. European Journal of Communication, 23(4) 425-447. Moen, K.H., A. Blekesaune and H.K. Bakke (2008). Hvem bruker natur- og friluftsbarnehager? Barn 26(3) 37-56. Bjørkhaug, H. and A. Blekesaune (2008). Gender and Work in Norwegian Family Farm Business. Sociologia Ruralis 48(2) 152-165. Bjørkhaug, H. and A. Blekesaune (2007). Masculinisation or Professionalisation of Norwegian Farm Work - a Gender Neutral Division of Work on Norwegian Family Farms? Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 37(3) 423-434. Rye, J.F. and A. Blekesaune (2007). The Class Structure of Rural-to-Urban Migration: the Case of Norway. YOUNG, 15(2) 169-191. Haugen, M.S. and A. Blekesaune (2005). Farm and Off-farm Work and Life Satisfaction among Norwegian Farm Women. Sociologia Ruralis, 45(1-2) 71-85. Blekesaune, A. and M.S. Haugen (1999). Landbrukskvinners bidrag til husholdets levekår - arbeid og inntekt i et komparativt perspektiv. Landbruksøkonomisk forum, 16(2) 27-38. Blekesaune, A. and G. Follo (1999). Melkens bestridte meningsinnhold. Dimensjoner i den norske melkedebatten. Landbruksøkonomisk forum, 16(1) 17-27. Blekesaune, A. and M.S. Haugen (1998). Inntektsforskjeller mellom kvinnelige og mannlige brukere. Landbruksøkonomisk forum 15(2) 21-35. Blekesaune, A. (1997). Agrarsosiologien og dens bidrag til de samfunnsvitenskapelige perspektiver på dagens jordbruk. Landbruksøkonomisk forum, 14(2) 31-42. Blekesaune, A., Haney, W. and Haugen M. (1993). On the Question of the Feminization of Production on Part-time Farms: Evidence from Norway, Rural Sociology 58(1):111-129. Blekesaune, Arild (1991). Changes in Ways of Making a Living among Norwegian Farmers 1975 1990, Sociologia Ruralis, Vol. XXXI-1. Books and articles in books: Forbord, M., S. Frisvoll and A. Blekesaune (2012). Turisters forbruk av lokal mat – noen sammenhenger og implikasjoner. Pp. 137-163 in M. Forbord, G.T. Kvam and M. Rønningen (eds.) Turisme i distriktene. Trondheim: Tapir akademisk forlag. Blekesaune, A., B. Brandth and M.S. Haugen (2012). Endringer i nordmenns bruk av gårdsturisme. Pp. 89-105 in M. Forbord, G.T. Kvam and M. Rønningen (eds.) Turisme i distriktene. Trondheim: Tapir akademisk forlag. Rønningen, K. and A. Blekesaune (2011). Redd for rovdyr? Jakten på rovdyrkonfliktens materielle virkelighet. Pp. 203-225 in M.S. Haugen og E.P. Stræte (eds.) Rurale brytninger. Trondheim: Tapir akademisk forlag. Bjørkhaug, H. and A. Blekesaune (2004). Work and income patterns of men and women of Norwegian family farms. Masculinisation, feminisation, or professionalisation of farm work? Pp. 139-150 in A. Cristóvão (ed.), Farming and Rural Systems Research and Extension. European Farming and Society in Search of New Social Contract - Learning to Manage Change. Vila Real: UTAD. Blekesaune, A. and M.S. Haugen (2002). Landbrukskvinners bidrag til husholdets levekår. Arbeid og 2 inntekt i et komparativt perspektiv. Pp. 141-154 in R. Almås, M.S. Haugen and J.P. Johnsen (eds.). Bygdeforskning gjennom 20 år. Trondheim: Tapir Akademisk forlag. Blekesaune, A. and R. Almås (2002). Fra reguleringsiver til markedslogikk. Pp. 19-44 in R. Almås, M.S. Haugen and J.P. Johnsen (eds.). Bygdeforskning gjennom 20 år. Trondheim: Tapir Akademisk forlag. Blekesaune, A. and J. Aasetre (2001). Hvordan kan vi senke konfliktnivået i rovviltdebatten? Pp. 77-82 in V. Jaren and J. P. Løvstad (eds.). Utmarksbeite og store rovdyr. Delrapport 3 fra forskningsprogrammet Bruk og forvaltning av utmark. Området for miljø og utvikling, Norges Forskningsråd. Blekesaune, A. and Hagen, K. (1996): «Levekår», in: Johansen, S. (ed.): Levekår, utvikling og omstilling i landbruket. Norges forskningsråd, Kultur og samfunn. Blekesaune, A. (1994): Structural Changes in Norwegian Agriculture 1975-1990. From family farms to one-man farms?. Pp. 111-127 in Symes, D. and Jansen, A.J. (eds.): Agricultural Restructuring and Rural Change in Europe, Wageningen Studies in Sociology 37. Blekesaune A. and Almås, R. (1992): Bondehusholdets ulike strategier for å overleve (Farm household survival strategies), Pp. 138-164 in Simonsen, J. and Vatn, A. (eds.): Landbruk i endring - fra opptrapping til omstilling (Agriculture in transition - From market intervention to market liberalization), Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. Blekesaune, A., Conradi, R. and Listhaug, O. (1986): Siv.ing.-jobb og EDB. En studie av 1981/82-kullet av sivilingeniører fra NTH. (Graduated engineers and their use of computers. A study of engineers graduated in 1981), Trondheim: Tapir. Conference Papers (last 5 years): Aalberg, T., A. Blekesaune and E. Elvestad: Media choice and informed democracy. An empirical study of increasing information gaps in Europe. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. New Orleans, Louisiana, August 30 - September 2 2012. Almås, R. and A. Blekesaune: Economic and social inequality between urban and rural areas in Europe. Paper to the XIII World Congress of Rural Sociology, Lisbon, Portugal July 29-August 4 2012. Almås, R: and A. Blekesaune: Rural radicalism- a political response to economic hardships or thankfulness to a generous state? Paper to the XXIII ESRS Congress, Vaasa, Finland 17-21 August 2009. WG 1.9 Regional Differentiation and the Distribution of Rural Welfare. Frisvoll, S., M. Forbord and A. Blekesaune: Consumption of ‘local food’ in rural tourism. Results from a tourist survey. Paper to a network workshop on nature based tourism, Drøbakk, Norway, March 31 to April 3, 2009. Blekesaune, A., B. Brandth and M.S. Haugen: Visiting a farm based tourist enterprise – who are the visitors and what is the future potential? Paper to the 17th Nordic Symposium in Tourism and Hospitality Research, Lillehammer, Norway, September 25-27 2008. Blekesaune, A., B. Brandth and M.S. Haugen: Farm tourism – who are the potential visitors? Paper at the XII World Congress of Rural Sociology, Goyang, Korea, July 6 -11 2008. Blekesaune, A., M. S. Haugen and M. Villa: The Dream of a Small-holding. Paper at the XXII Congress of the European Society for Rural Sociology, Wageningen, the Netherlands, August 20-24 2007. Referees: Reviewer Acta Sociologica, Journal of the Scandinavian sociological association. Reviewer Sosiologisk Tidsskrift, Scandinavian University Press. Reviewer Journal of Rural Studies, Elsevier Science Ltd. 3 Reviewer Norwegian Journal of Geography, Taylor & Francis. Reviewer European Sociological Review, Oxford University Press. Reviewer Sociologia Ruralis, Wiley-Blackwell. Consulting service to the Research Council of Norway. Awards & Honourable task: Norwegian Sociologist Association award for the best article published in 2012 for the article "Tuning out the World of News and Current Affairs. An empirical study of Europe's citizens disconnected", published in European Sociological Review 28(1) with co-authors Eiri Elvestad and Toril Aalberg. SVT faculty candidate SINTEF Group's award for outstanding educational activities in 2003. Member of the Norwegian Sociological Association. Invited to give the Young Scientist Lecture during the closing plenary session of the XVth European Congress for Rural Sociology in Wageningen (the Netherlands) August 2-6 1993. Organisational Experience: Chair at the Department of sociology and political science, NTNU (2012 - 2013). Member of the National Academic Council for Sociology (2009 - 2013). Teaching Executive at the Department of sociology and political science, NTNU (2009 - 2012). Deputy Chair at the Department of sociology and political science, NTNU (2009 - 2012). Member of the Education Affairs Committee at the Department of sociology and political science, NTNU, (2007 - 2009). Member of the programme committee for NTNU’s Master in project management (2003 - 2005) Member of the Norwegian Ministry of Environment’s expert board for evaluation of carnivore estimates (2007 – 2011). Member Board of the Researchers Federation, the University of Trondheim (1991-1992). International Experience: Member of the Editorial Board of Sociologia Ruralis (Journal of the European Society for Rural Sociology), from 2010. Visiting Scholar at University of California – Berkeley, 2009. Administrator of the PhD comity of Terje Andreas Eikemo’s thesis “Social inequalities in self-assessed health between European welfare regimes”, 2008. Member of the Executive Group in European Science Foundations program “Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences (QMSS)”, 2003-2005. Member of the Steering Committee in European Science Foundations program “Quantitative Methods in the Social Sciences (QMSS)”, 2003-2005. Member of EU-network COST A12 ”Rural Innovation”, working group Theory, 1998-2002. Group leader for the workshop "Lifemodes, Family-forms, and Life-course", The 16th Scandinavian Conference of Sociology, August 23-25 1991. Supervision of PhD thesis: Hilde Bjørkhaug: Agricultural Restructuring and Family Farming in Norway. Strategies for sustainable practices. Doctoral theses at NTNU, 2007: 187. Norwegian University of Science and Technology. 4 Wenche Elisabet Dramstad Contact details and biographical: Work address: Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute P.O.Box 115 N-1431 Ås Norway Phone: (+47) 64 94 80 00 Direct line: (+47) 64 94 96 84 Fax: (+47) 64 94 80 01 e-mail: wenche.dramstad@skogoglandskap.no Biographical: Date of birth: August 19th 1964 Marital status: Married, two children (born 1996 and 1999) Nationality: Norwegian Education: 2002-10 University of Life Sciences, Norway (UMB)1 Approved as special student, and allowed to follow independent study plan at the Department of Landscape Architecture and Spatial Planning. 1992-96 Agricultural University of Norway (NLH)1 Ph.D.-studies in landscape ecology, Dept. of Biology and Nature Conservation. Awarded the degree Dr. scient. 1996. 1994-95 Graduate School of Design, Harvard University, Cambridge, USA Special student for one semester. 1986-90 Agricultural University of Norway Dept. of Biology and Nature Conservation, studying natural resources management. Awarded the degree cand. agric. (M.Sc.) 1990. Current affiliation and research environment: 2011- Professor in landscape ecology at the Dept. of landscape architecture and spatial planning, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (20% position) Responsible for a landscape ecology course (LAØ370, MSc level) 2010- Senior research scientist at the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute Head of landscape section 1997- Research scientist at the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute Main responsibilities include management of and reporting from research projects as well as the Norwegian monitoring programme for agricultural landscapes, with particular focus on the development and use of indicators of biodiversity, cultural history, recreational potential and access to the landscape. Particular interest is in landscape ecology as a bridge between ecologists and land use planners. 1 The Agricultural University of Norway changed name to University of Life Sciences, January 1 st 2005. I have used the new name when referring to events taking place from 2005 onwards, and Agricultural University of Norway elsewhere. 1 1 Current and recent research projects focus on documenting (primarily agricultural) landscape change, quantifying aspects of visual landscape qualities, the use of birds and vascular plants in developing and testing biodiversity indicators, assessing key drivers of rural landscape change, scenario development, and the development of indicators of the multifunctionality of the agricultural landscape. The department for landscape resources’ research team includes natural and human geographers, ecologists, botanists, soil scientists as well as experienced users of advanced GIS-tools and interpretation of aerial photographs and satellite imagery. Project experience (since 2008, externally funded): 2013- Responsible at the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute for the project “UrbanLand: Planning and sustainable urban land use”. Cooperative project between the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute, the Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research, and led by the Dept. of landscape architecture and spatial planning, UMB, financed by the Norwegian Research Council. 2010- Participating in the project “Structural changes in agriculture, rural communities and cultural landscapes (STRUCTURES)”. Cooperative project between the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute, the Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute and the Centre for Rural Research, financed by the Norwegian Research Council. 2010- Participating in the project “Accounting for carbon and GHG emissions: balancing multiple landscape functions on farmland”. Cooperative project between the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute, the Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute and the Centre for Rural Research, financed by the Norwegian Research Council. 2009-11 Responsible at the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute for the project “Research and maintaining of biodiversity in historical structures of agricultural landscape of Slovakia” in cooperation with the Institute for Landscape Ecology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, funded by EEA Financial Mechanism, Norwegian Financial mechanism and Government Office of the Slovak Republic. 2009-12 Participating in the project “Development of appropriate indicators of the relationship between organic/low-input farming and biodiversity (BioBio)” Small collaborative project financed by the Seventh Framework, Theme KBBE-2008-1-2-01. 2009- Participating in the project “Cultural landscapes of tourism and hospitality: Character, management and perceptions of tourism-related cultural landscapes” (Cultour), financed by the Norwegian Farmer’s Union, Innovation Norway, the Norwegian Forest Owners’ Federation, Directorate for Cultural Heritage, and the Norwegian Research Council. 2008-09 Responsible for the Strategic Institute Programme “Landscape Change” financed by the Norwegian Research Council. 2008-13 Responsible at the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute for the project “Cultural heritage as an asset for economic added value; selection processes from a coast – inland perspective” lead by the Centre for Rural Research, and in cooperation with the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research, financed by the Norwegian Research Council. 2007-11 Responsible for the project “Landscape planning versus landscape change” financed by the Norwegian Research Council. 2007-10 Responsible at the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute for the project “Building scenarios as a tool for dialogue, business development and management in protected coastal areas” lead by the Centre for Rural Research, and in cooperation with Norwegian Water 2 Research Institute, financed by the Norwegian Research Council and co financed by Frøya municipality, Frøya business chaimber, the regional association of fish-farmers. 2006-09 Participating in the project “Landscape protection as a management tool – does it fulfil its aims?” Cooperative project with The Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute and the Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute, financed by the Norwegian Research Council. Refereed publications (since 2008): 1. Koppen, G., Sundli-Tveit, M. Sang, Å. & Dramstad, W.E. ‘The challenge of enhancing accessibility to recreational landscapes’. Submitted to Norwegian Journal of Geography. 2. Dramstad, W. & Fjellstad, W. 2013. ‘Twenty-five years into ‘‘our common future’’: are we heading in the right direction?’ Landscape Ecology, 28: 1039-1045. 3. Holcova, V., Semancikova, E., Dramstad, W.E. & Edwards, K. 2012. ‘Landscape Changes and their Influence on Heterogeneity of Landscape of the South Bohemian Region, The Czech Republic’. International Journal of Sustainable Development & World Ecology 19: 546-556. 4. Dramstad, W.E. & Fjellstad, W.J. 2011. ‘Landscapes: Bridging the gaps between science, policy and people’. Landscape and Urban Planning, 100; 330-332. 5. Dramstad, W.E. & Sang, N. 2010. ‘Tenancy in Norwegian agriculture’. Land Use Policy, 27: 946956. 6. Bryn, A., Dramstad, W., Fjellstad, W. & Hofmeister, F. 2010. ‘Rule-based GIS-modelling of coastal heath vegetation changes for management purposes: A case study from the islands of Froan, SørTrøndelag, mid-western Norway.’ Norwegian Journal of Geography, 64; 165-184. 7. Mittenzwei, K., Lien, G., Fjellstad, W., Øvren, E. & Dramstad, W. 2010. ‘Effects of Landscape Protection on Farm Management and Farmers' Income in Norway.’ Journal of Environmental Management, 91; 861-868. 8. Dramstad, W.E. 2009. ‘Spatial metrics – useful indicators for society or mainly fun tools for landscape ecologists? ’ Norwegian Journal of Geography, 63; 246-254. 9. Fjellstad, W.J., Mittenzwei, K., Dramstad, W.E. & Øvren, E. 2009. ‘Landscape protection as a tool for managing agricultural landscapes.’ Environmental Science and Policy, 12; 1144-1152. 10. Fjellstad, W.J. & Dramstad, W.E., 2008. ‘Landscape monitoring as a tool in improving environmental security.’ In Petrosillo, I., Müller, F., Jones, K.B., Zurlini, G., Krauze, K., Victorov, S., Li, B.-L. & Kepner, W.G. (Eds.), 2007, Use of Landscape Sciences for the Assessment of Environmental Security. Springer, The Netherlands, pp. 131-141. Selected other publications (since 2008): 11. Krøgli, S.O. & Dramstad, W.E. 2013. ‘Arealbruk i endring – landskap i endring? In; Flø, B.E. (Ed.) Kulturarv og verdiskaping i eit kyst- innlandsperspektiv. Trondheim, Norsk senter for bygdeforskning / Norwegian Centre for Rural Research, Rapport 2/2013: 55-97. (In Norwegian.) 12. Fjellstad, W., Dramstad, W., & Stensgaard, K. 2012. ‘Norway. High Nature Value Farming in Europe’ R. Oppermann, G. Beaufoy and G. Jones (Eds.) ‘HNV farming in 35 countries – diversity and heritage for the future’, Basel: verlag regionalkultur, pp. 318-327. 3 13. Krøgli, S.O., Dramstad, W. & Puschmann, O. 2011. ‘Overvåking av fredete kulturmiljøer - utvikling av metode for langsiktig overvåking’. Oppdragsrapport 22/11 fra Skog og landskap. (In Norwegian.) 14. Mazzoni, S., Dramstad, W.E. & Fjellstad, W.J. 2010. ‘Planning changes or changing plans?’ In Bryn, A., Dramstad, W. & Fjellstad, W. (Eds.) Proceedings from the conference ‘Mapping and monitoring of Nordic vegetation and landscape.’ Sept. 16th-18th, Hverager Iceland, pp. 81-84. 15. Engan, G., Pedersen, C. & Dramstad, W. 2010. ‘Fremmede arter i jordbrukslandskapet’ Fakta 5/2010. (In Norwegian.) 16. Rønningen, K., Frisvoll, S. Bekkby, T., Dramstad, W., Fjellstad, W. & Bryn, A. 2010. ‘Vern, forvaltning og oppdrett i uklare vernelandskap’ Plan, 3-4/2010, 64-71. (In Norwegian.) 17. Puschmann, O. & Dramstad, W. 2009. ‘Tilbakeblikk – et dokumentasjonsprogram om norske landskap i endring’ Glimt No. 08/09. Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute, Ås. (In Norwegian.) 18. Bryn, A., Hofmeister, F., Dramstad, W. & Fjellstad, W. 2009. ‘Froan. Kulturlandskap og kystlynghei i havgapet’ Kulturarven no. 48, pp. 30-33. (In Norwegian.) 19. Dramstad, W. & Fjellstad, W. 2009. ‘Landskapsvern og landskapsbruk’ Glimt No. 5/09. Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute, Ås. (In Norwegian.) 20. Bryn, A., Dramstad, W., Hofmeister, F. & Fjellstad, W. 2009. ‘Froan - kulturlandskap og kystlynghei i havgapet’ http://www.kulturlandskap.net/fagartikler.aspx?id=3116979 (In Norwegian.) 21. Dramstad, W. & Hofmeister, F. 2008. ‘Naturindeks for dyrka mark. Metodeutvikling og eksempler fra Nord-Trøndelag’ NINA report 426: 52-58. (In Norwegian.) 22. Dramstad, W. & Puschmann, O. 2008. ‘Kulturlandskapets verdier – en tapt kamp?’ In Berntsen, B. & Hågvar, S. (Eds.) ‘Norsk natur – farvel? En illustrert historie’ Unipub, Oslo. pp. 205-221. (In Norwegian.) Selected presentations at conferences & seminars (since 2008): 2013: Dramstad, W.E. & Pedersen, C. Monitoring the landscape of the Northern lapwing. Abstract accepted for presentation at international Association for Landscape Ecology meeting in Manchester, September 2013. 2013: Dramstad, W.E. & Sang, N. Agricultural subsidies as driving forces of change in Norwegian agricultural landscapes. Presented at Nordic Geographers Meeting in Reykjavik, June 2013. 2012: Dramstad W., Krøgli S.O., Fjellstad W. Trends in land use change inside and outside high-value areas. Poster at EcoSummit 2012: Ecological sustainability - Restoring the Planet's Ecosystem Services. Columbus, Ohio, 30th Sept. – 5th Oct. 2012. 2012: Jordbruk og landskap i endring. Presented at meeting with the Norwegian Small Farmer Association in Ås, January 2012. 2012: Dramstad, W.E. & Krøgli, S.O. Jordbruksarealer- og arealplanlegging. Presented at workshop on soil sealing in Ås, March 2012. 2012: Sundli-Tveit, M. & Dramstad, W. Landskapsøkologi – i by og tettsted. Presented at workshop on Biodiversity in urban areas in Ås, March 2012. 2012: Dramstad, W.E. Dialogue & Difficulties. Presented at RESILIENCE THINKING -Coordinating Science and Action for the Governance of Socio-Ecological Systems, an international workshop at the University of Venice, May 2012. 2012: Dramstad, W.E. & Puschmann, O. Working with landscape photos at The Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute. Presented at COMPILE seminar in Lund, Sweden, August 2012. 2011: Dramstad W. & Krøgli S.O ‘Monitoring landscape change’. Presented at the conference ‘People and nature in mountains: Changing land use and landscape dynamics’, in Trondheim, September 2011. 2011: Dramstad, W.E. ‘Experience from nearly 15 years landscape monitoring: how to engage and relate with people.’ Presented at seminar ‘Progresses in assessing the provision of public goods at the landscape level: methodological challenges’, in Evora, Portugal, January 2011. 2009: Dramstad, W.E. ‘Scenarier for Froan.’ Presented at final project seminar in Trondheim, September 2009. 4 CURRICULUM VITAE GRETE STOKSTAD Senior Scientific Advisor Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute Raveien 9, 1432 Ås phone: + 47 64 94 97 86 grete.stokstad@skogoglandskap.no BORN: Oslo, 8. March 1960. HIGHER EDUCATION: Agriculture University of Norway (Norwegian University of Life Sciences) , Ph.D (economics and resource management), 1999 Oregon State University, MSc (agricultural and resource economics), 1989 Agriculture University of Norway (Norwegian University of Life Sciences), MSc. (animal science), 1986 RESEARCH INTERESTS: Farm management, policy design, operation research, cultural landscape. CURRENT PROJECTS WITH A PROJECT LEADER ROLE WITHIN SKOG OG LANDSKAP: Monitoring of Norwegian Agricultural Landscapes (3Q): Ongoing monitoring program funded by the Norwegian Ministry of Food and Agriculture, and the Norwegian Ministry of the Environment. Structural changes in agriculture, rural communities and cultural landscapes (STRUCTURES), financed by the Norwegian Research Council. PUBLISHED WORK : Stokstad, G. & Puschmann, O. (2012). Status og utvikling i jordbrukets kulturlandskap. Buskerud, Telemark, Aust-Agder, Vest-Agder og Rogaland. Rapport fra Skog og landskap 13/12: VIII, 59 s. Næss, G. and G. Stokstad (2011). «Dairy barn layout and construction: Effects on initial bulding costs.” Biosystems Engineering, 109:196-202. Pedersen, C., Stokstad, G. & Engan, G. (2011). “Plants in the agricultural landscape: Relationships between plant diversity and distribution in relation to land use.” In: Nesheim, L. (ed.): Biodiversity in agriculture - lessons learned and future directions. NJF Seminar 436, Ulvik in Hardanger, Norway 24-26 May, 2011. NJF Report 7(1): 27-32. Stokstad, G. & Puschmann, O. (2011). Status og utvikling i jordbrukets kulturlandskap. Hordaland, Sogn og Fjordane, Møre og Romsdal, Sør-Trøndelag og Nord-Trøndelag. GRETE STOKSTAD SIDE B Rapport fra Skog og landskap 13/11: XXIV, 70 s. Puschmann, O. & Stokstad, G. (2010). Status og utvikling i jordbrukets kulturlandskap i Nordland, Troms og Finnmark. Rapport fra Skog og landskap 06/10: 91p. Stokstad, G. (2010).”Rented or owned land – implications for land abandonment”. Viten fra Skog og landskap 01/10: 105-108. Jensen,S. K.Louhichi, A. Kanellopoulos, P. Zander, G. Flichman, H. Hengsdijk, E. Meuter, E. Andresen, H. Belhouchette, M.Blanco, N. Borkowski, T. Heckeley, M. Hecker, H. Li A.O. Lansink, G. Stokstad, P. Thorne & H. van Keuler M.K.van Ittersum (2010). ”A generic bio economic fam modell for environmental and economic assesment of agricultural systems”, Enviromental Management.46(6):862-877. Stokstad, G. 2010. “Exit from farming and land abandonment in northern Norway.” In: Arfini, F., Cernicchiaro, S. & Donati, M. (eds.): International EAAE-SYAL seminar. Spatial Dynamics in Agri-food Systems: Implications for Sustainability and Consumer Welfare, p. 1-5. Parma Italy, October 27.-30-2010. Stokstad, G. (2009). “Nordnorske landbruksarealer i endring”. Bioforsk FOKUS, 4(6):13-15. Stokstad Grete & Geir Næss (2009).”Arealbruk og kostnader i løsdriftsfjøs.” Husdyrforsøksmøtet 2009:163-166. Borkowski, N., Hecker, J.-M., Louhichi, K., Blanco Fonseca, M., Janssen, S., van Ittersum, M.K., Stokstad, G. & Zander, P. (2007). “Surveying crop management data for bioeconomic farm models”. In: Hatfield, J., Donatelli, M., Rizzoli, A. (Eds.), Farming Systems Design 2007: An international symposium on Methodologies for Integrated Analysis of Farm Production Systems, Catania, Sicily, Italy, Vol. 1, pp. 33-34. SHORT POPULAR SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS Stokstad, G & Krøgli, S.O. 2013. Fulldyrka areal og små jordstykker. Fakta fra Skog og landskap 10/13: 2 s. Stokstad, G. 2012. Endring i jordbruksareal i drift fordelt på jordbruksregioner. Fakta fra Skog og landskap 08/12: 2 s. Stokstad, G. 2012. Endring i jordbruksareal i drift per fylke. Fakta fra Skog og landskap 10/12: 2 s. Pedersen, C. & Stokstad, G. 2012. Gårdsdammer - viktige biotoper. Fakta fra Skog og landskap 11/12: 2 s. Stokstad, G. 2012. Nedbygging av jordbruksareal. Fakta fra Skog og landskap 09/12: 2 s. Stokstad, G. & Krøgli, S.O. 2012. Størrelsen på jordstykker. Fakta fra Skog og Landskap 01/12: 2 s. Puschmann, O., Krøgli, S.O. & Stokstad, G. 2011. Økende avstand mellom aktive bruk i Nord. Fakta fra Skog og landskap 07/11: 2 s. Stokstad, G. & Puschmann, O. 2010. Mer leiejord betyr økt gjengroing i nord. Glimt fra Skog og landskap 02/10: 2 p. Curriculum Vitae Svein Olav Krøgli Birth: 19.05.1976 Address: Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute PO Box 115, N-1431 ÅS, Norway Phone: +47 64 94 97 75 E-mail: svein.olav.krogli@skogoglandskap.no Education 2006 – 2010 Ph.D. University of Oslo, Department of Geosciences Geomatics/Geoinformatics (GIS and remote sensing) and meteorite impact structures 2000- 2004 Cand.scient. University of Oslo, Department of Geosciences, Physical Geography section Geomatics and landforms 1995-2000 Cand.mag. University of Oslo, Department of Geosciences, Physical Geography section Physical geography, mathematics, informatics Work experience 2010 - Scientific researcher. Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute, Dept. of Landscape Resources GIS analyses related to landscape change, project based research work and project management. 2004 – 2006 Scientific assistant at the Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo Meteorite impact craters and geoscience: Research and publicity Teaching at the Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo 2010, 2008 2005, 2004 2005 2004, 2003 Spatial analyses of geographical information (lecturer) Digital terrain analysis (GIS laboratory teacher) Spatial analyses of geographical information (GIS laboratory teacher) Maps and geodata (GIS laboratory teacher) 2003 Contract work at the Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate (NVE) GIS-work related to river networks 1 Projects “Structural changes in agriculture, rural communities and cultural landscapes (STRUCTURES)”. Cooperative project between the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute, the Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute and the Centre for Rural Research, financed by the Norwegian Research Council. “Landscape Change”. Strategic Institute Programme financed by the Norwegian Research Council. “Cultural heritage as an asset for economic added value; selection processes from a coast – inland perspective” Cooperative project between the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute, the Centre for Rural Research, and the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research, financed by the Norwegian Research Council. “Landscape planning versus landscape change” financed by the Norwegian Research Council. Development of a method for monitoring protected cultural heritage environments. On assignment for and financed by the Directorate for Cultural Heritage (RA). 3Q: Monitoring Norwegian Agricultural Landscapes. Ongoing monitoring programme funded by the Norwegian Ministry of Food and Agriculture, and the Norwegian Ministry of the Environment. Publications Journals Riis, F., Kalleson, E., Dypvik, H., Krøgli, S.O. & Nilsen, O. 2011. The Ritland impact structure, southwestern Norway. Meteoritics & Planetary Science 46: 748-761. Krøgli, S.O., Dypvik, H., 2010. Automatic detection of circular outlines in regional gravity and aeromagnetic data in the search for impact structure candidates. Computers & Geosciences 36, 477-488. Krøgli, S.O., Dypvik, H., Etzelmüller, B., 2009. Correlation of radial profiles extracted from automatic detected circular features, in the search for impact structure candidates, In: Geomorphometry 2009, Zurich, Switzerland, 50-54. Krøgli, S.O., Dypvik, H., Etzelmüller, B., 2007. Automatic detection of circular depressions in digital elevation data in the search for potential Norwegian impact structures. Norwegian Journal of Geology 87, 157-166. Thesis Krøgli, S.O., 2010. Automatic extraction of potential impact structures from geospatial data – examples from Finnmark, Northern Norway. University of Oslo. Doctoral dissertation. Project reports Krøgli, S.O. & Dramstad, W.E. 2013. ‘Arealbruk i endring – landskap i endring? In; Flø, B.E. (Ed.) Kulturarv og verdiskaping i eit kyst- innlandsperspektiv. Trondheim, Norsk senter for bygdeforskning / Norwegian Centre for Rural Research, Rapport 2/2013: 55-97. (In Norwegian.) 2 Krøgli, S. O. and W. E. Dramstad (2013). Landskapet og bygningene, slår de følge? Kulturarv og verdiskaping i eit kyst- innlandsperspektiv. B. E. Flø. Trondheim, Norsk senter for bygdeforskning / Norwegian Centre for Rural Research Rapport 2/2013: 98133. Krøgli, S.O., Puschmann, O., Eiter, S., Wallin, H. & Dramstad, W. 2012. ‘Langtidsovervåking av fredete kulturmiljøer – forslag til metode.’ Oppdragsrapport Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute. (In Norwegian). Krøgli, S.O., Dramstad, W. & Puschmann, O. 2011. ‘Overvåking av fredete kulturmiljøer - utvikling av metode for langsiktig overvåking’. Oppdragsrapport 22/11 fra Skog og landskap. (In Norwegian.) Short popular scientific communication Stokstad, G & Krøgli, S.O. 2013. Fulldyrka areal og små jordstykker. Fakta 10/13: 2 s. Stokstad, G. & Krøgli, S.O. 2012. Størrelsen på jordstykker. Fakta 01/12: 2 s. Eiter, S., Krøgli, S.O. & Strand, G.-H. 2011. Norges mest utsatte åkre: Behovspotensialet for jordvernområder som følge av risiko for nedbygging. [Plakat]. Puschmann, O., Krøgli, S.O. & Stokstad, G. 2011. Økende avstand mellom aktive bruk i Nord. Fakta 7/2011: 2 s. Conference & seminar presentations Krøgli, S.O. & Stokstad, G. 2013. Land cover changes and farm structure, three sites in Norway. Nordic Geographers Meeting, Reykjavik. Eiter, S. Krøgli, S.O. & Stokstad, G. 2013. Agricultural landscape change: quantifying and understanding mechanisms behind regional differences. Nordic Geographers Meeting, Reykjavik. Fjellstad W., Krøgli S.O. & Heggem E.S.F. 2013.Analysing agricultural geography using a flexible system for landscape characterization. Nordic Geographers Meeting, Reykjavik. Puschmann, O. & Krøgli, S.O. 2013. «Timelines» – a methodology to rediscover historical landscape structures. Nordic Geographers Meeting, Reykjavik. Krøgli, S.O. 2012. Metodikk, utfordringer og muligheter ved bruk av GIS-analyser. Seminar at Nasjonalt utdanningssenter for samfunnssikkerhet og beredskap (NUSB). Pedersen, C. Krøgli S.O., Fjellstad W. 2012. Farmland birds in Norway: relationships between bird presence and land use. Poster at EcoSummit 2012: Ecological sustainability - Restoring the Planet's Ecosystem Services. Columbus, Ohio. Puschmann, O. & Krøgli S.O. 2012. Overvåking av fredede kulturmiljø. 2012. Stiftelsen på Havrå, Museumsnettverk Hordaland. Dramstad W., Krøgli S.O., Fjellstad W. 2012. Trends in land use change inside and outside high-value areas. Poster at EcoSummit 2012: Ecological sustainability Restoring the Planet's Ecosystem Services. Columbus, Ohio. 3 Krøgli, S.O 2011. Norway’s most threatened fields Potential need of farmland conservation areas due to risk of development. European Forum for Geostatistics. Lisabon. Krøgli, S.O. 2011. Land-use change surrounding cultural heritage elements in a coast and inland landscape, Norway. Institute of Landscape Ecology of Slovak Academy of Sciences, Viničné, Slovakia. Krøgli, S.O., Dypvik, H., Etzelmüller, B., 2007. Automatic and semi-automatic detection of possible meteorite impact structures in the Fennoscandian shield using pattern recognition of spatial data, In: ScanGIS'2007: The 11th Scandinavian Research Conference on Geographical Information Science, Ås, Norway, 227-235. 4 CURRICULUM VITAE Personal data Name: Date of birth: Place of birth: Home address: Phone: Mobilphone: Klaus Mittenzwei 25.06.1967 Mannheim, Germany Stensgata 8A NO-0358 Oslo Norway + 47 22 59 85 84 + 47 47 40 86 80 Current position Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute (NILF) Postboks 8024 Dep. NO-0030 Oslo Phone: + 47 22 36 72 72 Fax: + 47 22 36 72 99 email: klaus.mittenzwei@nilf.no URL: http://www.nilf.no Academic education 1977-87 Humboldt-Gynmasium, Dortmund (German secondary school) 1989-1993 Dipl. Ing. Agr. (Diploma in Agricultural Economics) Rheinische Friedrich Wilhelms Universität, Bonn, Germany January 2002 Dr. scient. from the Agricultural University of Norway, Ås with Ph.D. Dissertation Formalizing the Rules of the Game: A Study on the Role of Institutions in Norwegian Agricultural Policy Making (Doctor Scientiarum Theses 2001:27) Work positions 02.1991.-04.1991 Trainee at the Directorate for Agriculture in the Rhineland, Bonn (Landwirtschaftskammer Rheinland) 06.1991-09.1992 Trainee at the AFC consulting group, Bonn 21.05.1993-30.04.1996 Researcher at the NILF 01.05.1996-18.01.2002 Doctorate Fellow at the NILF, and external Ph.D. student at the Department of Economics and Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ås. Since 19.01.2002 Senior Researcher at the NILF Languages Fluent in English, Norwegian, and German Basic knowledge in French Other relevant activities Project leader for several projects financed by the Research Council of Norway External examiner at the Agricultural University of Norway, Ås. 2008. Reviewer for XIIIth European Congress of Agricultural Economists in Zurich, 30 August - 2 September 2011. Reviewer for XIIth European Congress of Agricultural Economists in Ghent, 26-29 August 2008. Reviewer for European Review of Agricultural Economics (ERAE) 2002, 2010. Reviewer for Xth European Congress of Agricultural Economists in Zaragoza, 28-31 August 2002. Reviewer for the 2001 annual meeting of the AAEA in Chicago, IL, 5-8 August. Selected publications Mittenzwei, K. and Wangsness, P. (forthcoming). Balancing public goods in agriculture through Safe Minimum Standards. European Review of Agricultural Economics. Hasselmann, F., Mann, S. and Mittenzwei, K. (forthcoming). The importance of succession on business growth: A case study of family farms in Switzerland and Norway. Yearbook of Socioeconomics in agriculture. Bryden, J. and Mittenzwei, K. (2013). Academic Freedom, Democracy And The Public Policy Process. Sociologia Ruralis 53(3): 311. (DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/soru.12012) Josling, T. and Mittenzwei, K. (2013). Transparency and timeliness: the monitoring of agricultural policies in the WTO using OECD data. World Trade Review 12(3) (July 2013): 509-531. (DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1474745613000013) 2 Mittenzwei, K., Bullock, D.S. and Salhofer, K. (2012). Towards a theory of policy timing. Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics 56(4) (October 2012): 583-596 (DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8489.2012.00601.x) Mittenzwei, K., Lien, G., Fjellstad, W., Øvren, E. and Dramstad, W. (2010). Effects of Landscape Protection on Farm Management and Farmers’ Income in Norway. Journal of Environmental Management 91: 861-868. Fjellstad, W., Mittenzwei, K., Dramstad, W. and Øvren, E. (2009). Landscape Protection As A Tool For Managing Agricultural Landscapes in Norway. Environmental Science & Policy 12 (8): 1144-1152. Britz, W. and Mittenzwei, K. (2009): “Spatial Down-Scaling as a Tool to Improve Multifunctionality Indicators in Economic Models”, in: P. N. Findley (ed.). Environmental Modelling: New Research, Nova Science Publishers, New York. pp. 121-135. Mittenzwei, K. and Gaasland, I. (2008): Dokumentasjon av Jordmod: Modellbeskrivelse og analyser. NILF-rapport 2008-3. NILF. Oslo. [In Norwegian with English summary] Lie, S. A. and Mittenzwei, K. (2008): Større og færre, men hvilke konsekvenser? Strukturutvikling og jordbrukspolitiske målsettinger. NILF-notat 2008-10. NILF. Oslo. [In Norwegian] Mittenzwei, K., Fjellstad, W., Dramstad, W., Flaten, O., Gjertsen, A.K., Loureiro, M. and S.S. Prestegard (2007): “Opportunities and limitations in assessing the multifunctionality of agriculture within the CAPRI model”. Ecological Indicators 7 (4): 827-838. Mittenzwei, K., Asheim, L.J., Adenäuer, M. and S.S. Prestegard (2006): “Medium-term integration effects on Norwegian agriculture: A partial equilibrium analysis”. Food Economics 3 (1): 35-47 Mittenzwei, K., Fjellstad, W. (2006): Operationalization of multifunctionality in the CAPRI modelling system. Report 2006-6. NILF, Oslo. [In Norwegian with English summary] Mittenzwei, K., Loureiro, M., Dramstad, W., Fjellstad, W., Flaten, O., Gjertsen, A.K. and S.S. Prestegard (2004): A cluster analysis of Norwegian municipalities with respect to agriculture’s multifunctionality, Working paper No. 2004-22, NILF, Oslo. Mittenzwei, K. and D.S. Bullock (2004): ”Rules and Equilibria: A Formal Conceptualization of Institutions with an Application to Norwegian Agricultural Policy Making”, in: Van Huylenbroeck, G., Verbeke, W. og L. Lauwers (eds): Role of Institutions in Rural Policies and Agricultural Markets, Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 109-121. Mittenzwei, K. and S.S. Prestegard (2004): Dokumentasjon av modellsystemet CAPRI: Modellbeskrivelse og analyser, Report 2004-6, NILF, Oslo. Mittenzwei, K. and N.K. Nersten (2004): Scenarier for norsk landbruk og landbrukspolitikk med vekt på WTO: Konsekvensanalyse med JORDMOD, Working Paper 2004-16, NILF, Oslo. 3 Øyvind Hoveid, CV Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute Storgata 2-4-6 P.O. Box 8024 dep 0030 Oslo Work phone: Fax: Cell phone: Email: Home phone: Home address: (++47) 2236 7264 (++47) 2236 7299 (++47) 9268 1135 oyvind.hoveid@nilf.no (++47) 6779 1415 Drengs vei 50, 1385 Asker Personal Born on March 25, 1949 Norwegian citizen. Education Cand. mag. science (mathematics, statistics), University of Oslo, 1973 Agronomy, Vinterlandbruksskolen 1974 Other qualifications Courses in economics at University of Oslo, 1987-88 Qualified as senior researcher in NILF 1988 Visiting Scholar at Department of Agricultural Economics, University of California, Davis. 01.0131.12.1990 Qualified as senior researcher in Statistics Norway 1996 Employment 1974-76: Teacher, Sjursnes barne- og ungdomsskole, Tromsø 1976-81: Dairy farmer, Åmdal, Tokke, Telemark 1981-86: Sekretariatet for budsjettnemnda for jordbruket 1986- Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute Publications Journal Articles O. J. Bergfjord, G. Lien & Ø. Hoveid. Factors influencing farmer migration in Norway: A study based on survey results linked to financial data, 2011 Food Economics – Acta Agricult Scand, Section C 8, 92–104 Presentations Linking models of climate, weather, crops and economic behavior by Bayesian calibration. MACSUR Workshop, March 03-05, 2013. University of Haifa, Israel. Solving non-Gaussian spatio-temporal state space models with INLA-ish tricks. Poster at The Second Workshop on Bayesian Inference for Latent Gaussian Models with Applications, Trondheim, May 30 – June 1, 2012. Øyvind Hoveid 2 A model for prediction of spatial farm structure (with Grete Stokstad). Poster at EAAE Congress. August 30 – September 2, 2011. Zürich. Approximate inference for approximate Bayes models with multi-hyper-parametric GMRFs using quasi-Monte Carlo integration. 16th Norwegian Statistical Conference. June 14–17, 2011. Røros, Norway. Information theory and survey statistics: Endogenous post-stratification and latent probability weights. 23rd Nordic Conference on Mathematical Statistics. June 14–17, 2010. Voss, Norway. Dynamics of income, wealth and capital in Norwegian farm household accounts: A state-space model (with Arvid Raknerud). EAAE Congress, August 26-29, 2008. Ghent, Belgium. Last updated: September 3, 2013 Arild Spissøy Born 31. january 1969 Address: Aarstadgeilen 26 5009 Bergen NORWAY Phone: + 47 22 36 72 47 Mobil: +47 99 38 23 37 E-mail: arild.spissoy@nilf.no WORK EXPERIENCE 2005 - Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute, researcher Working on agricultural policy and rural development, especially issues connected to the multifunctionality of agriculture, local food and HSE .Have led two studies on local food producers and consumers perception of food festivals as a marketplace. 2000-2004 Chr. Michelsens Institute, research assistant Research assistant on different research projects regarding social development in poorer countries. 1995-2000 ISV-industrisikring, Manager of an emergency central, 75% position as manager of a security and emergency central. 1992-1993 Distriktskommando Vestlandet, officer in the Norwegian Army Commanding officer, personnel management and different administration functions. 1990 Bil-automatic AS, accountant 1988-1989 Brig. N, officer in the Norwegian Army Trainer and educator of soldiers in the standing forces of Norway. Special responsible for personnel management. EDUCATION Cand.polit. (Master +) 2003 Universtity of Bergen, Norway (UiB) Economics In my master thesis I developed a model that describes why different companies choose different standards in relation to environment, working conditions and support to local communities. I undertook an empirical study in Malaysia where I studied local and western companies. Cand. Mag. (Bachelor +) Universtity of Bergen, subjects: Economics, Administration and Organisation Science, Public Policy, Philosophy, Methodology in Social Science 1990-1992 Vordiplom in Economics at Alb. Ludwig Universität, Freiburg, Germany Other: 2008 and 2009 2003 2002 2002 1998 International Comparative Rural Policies Studies Summer Institute, at University of Columbia, Missouri, USA (2008) and UHI Millennium Institute, Scotland (2009) Researcher course in Ethics and Economics, Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration Title: Lectures on ethical Issues in Market Settings, Robert H. Frank, Cornell University, USA Researcher course in Ethics and Economics, Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration Title: Business Ethics: The State of the Art, R. Edward Freeman, University of Virginia, USA International Ethics and Political Philosophy, UiB, semester course Econometrics II – Advanced Econometric Methodology, UiB, semester course. 1994 Theoretical Resource Economics. UiB, semester course PUBLICATIONS Kystlynghei og utegangarsau. Tiltak for auka verdiskaping, Oslo: Norsk Institutt for landbruksøkonomisk forskning (NILF Notat 2013:9 med Agnar Hegrenes and Samson Øpstad) Betalingsvillighet for landbrukets produksjon av kollektive goder. En litteraturgjennomgang, (NILF Notat 2012:11 with Anna Birgitte Milford and Sjur Spildo Prestegard) Grensehandel - utvikling, årsaker og virkning, (NILF Notat 2012:11 with Anna Birgitte Milford Ivar Pettersen) Towards Sustainable Rural Regions in Europe, Exploring Inter ‐ Relationships Between Rural Policies, Farming, Environment, Demographics, Regional Economies and Quality of Life Using System Dynamics, Edited by John M. Bryden, Sophia Efstratoglou, Tibor Ferenczi, Karlheinz Knickel, Thomas G. Johnson, Karen Refsgaard and Kenneth J. Thomson; Routledge 2011. Helse, miljø og sikkerhet i landbruket. En kunnskapsstatus om HMS og ulykker, Bygdeforsk (R-11/09) i samarbeid med: Oddveig Storstad, Brit Logstein, Reidar Almås og Tor-Petter Johnsen. Bergen matfestival 2007 - Profil og appell hos publikum og utstillarar, Oslo: Norsk Institutt for landbruksøkonomisk forskning (NILF Notat 2007:14) Økologisk mat i offentlig sektor, Oslo: Norsk Institutt for landbruksøkonomisk forskning (NILF Notat 2007:4 i samarbeid med Heidi Knutsen, Charlotte Nymoen, Ane Margrethe Lyng, Mads Svennerud) Bønder i byd'n - Bergen matfestival 2006 - ei undersøking blant publikum og utstillarar, Oslo: Norsk Institutt for landbruksøkonomisk forskning (NILF Notat 2006:17) Selskapers sosiale ansvarlighet – en teoretisk analyse med empiri fra Malaysia, 2004, Bergen: Chr. Michelsens Institute (CMI Report R 2004:7) Fra motstander til medspiller: Partnerskap mellom norske frivillige organisasjoner og norsk næringsliv, 2002, Bergen:Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI Report R 2002:18 sammen med Siri Lange og Marie Brudvik) Socio-economic effects of HIV/AIDS in African countries, 2002, Bergen:Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI Report R 2002:10 in coopertation with Jan Isaksen and Nils Gunnar Songstad) LANGUAGE AND COMPUTER SKILLS: Language Norwegian – mother tongue English (very good skills) German (good skills) Computer skills Microsoft Windows Microsoft Office. Knowledge of different statistical programs ORGANISATIONAL EXPERIENCE AND VOLUNTARY WORK 2000-2005 1992-2000 1998 1988-90 Group member Amnesty International, group leader from 2003 trainer, board member and event manager in a local skiing club. Student representative at the Institute of Economics, UiB. Representative in a labour union for military officers. ACADEMIC AND CHARACTER REFERENCES Sjur Spildo Prestegaard, reserach director NILF, phone: + 47 22 36 72 68 Jan Isaksen, senior researcher, CMI, phone: + 47 55 57 41 63 Curriculum Vitæ Helga Rachel Høgåsen Birthdate: November 16, 1963 Citizenship: Norwegian and French Permanent Residence: Norway Work phone : (47) 23216364 Mobile phone: (47) 95486882 Internet: helga.hogasen@vetinst.no Education Employment Epidemiology Section Department for Health Surveillance Norwegian Veterinary Institute PO Box. 750 Sentrum N-0106 Oslo, Norway French Baccalaureate C (Paris) Lycée St Louis (Paris): Math Bio Sup/Spé School of Veterinary Medicine, Toulouse INRA, Toulouse: Veterinary thesis School of Veterinary Medicine, Oslo PhD in Veterinary Physiology (Salmonid migration) Risk Analysis for Animal Health and Food Safety Professionals (2 weeks, David Vose) Risk Analysis and Risk Management for the Livestock Sector (1 week, Reading, UK) 1981 1981-83 1983-87 1987-89 1989 1997 Veterinarian practitioner in France Research and teaching in physiology, Norwegian School of Veterinary Science Research in epidemiology and risk assessment, Norwegian Veterinary Institute 1987-89 2000 2000 1989-1999 1999- today Publications 1. Refereed journals Høgåsen, H.R., Er, C., Di Nardo, A., Dalla Villa, P., 2013. Free-roaming dog populations: A costbenefit model for different management options, applied to Abruzzo, Italy. Prev. Vet. Med. (In Press) Available Online doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2013.07.010 Lindboe, M., Henrichsen,E.N.,Høgåsen,H.R., Bernhoft,A. (2012) Lead concentration in meat from lead-killed moose and predicted human exposure using Monte Carlo simulation. Food Addit.Contam Part A Chem.Anal.Control Expo.Risk Assess. 29(7) : 1052-57. Kadohira,M., Stevenson,M.A., Høgåsen,H.R., de Koeijer,A. (2012) A Quantitative Risk Assessment for Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy in Japan. Risk Anal.32(12) 2198-2208 Article first published online : 29 MAY 2012, DOI: 10.1111/j.1539-6924.2012.01846.x Høgåsen, H. R., G. Kapperud, and H. K. Knutsen (2012) Bruk og nytte av risikoanalyse i beredskapssammenheng. Temanummer: Beredskap mot matbårne sykdommer.(Usage of risk analysis in preparedness. Special issue on foodborne diseases) Norsk Veterinærtidsskrift 124 (4): 253-60. Lund, A., A. M. Bratberg, and H. R. Høgåsen. (2010) Vaksinasjon av hund og katt mot rabies (Vaccination of dogs and cats against rabies.). Norsk Veterinærtidsskrift 122 (3): 147-54. Høgåsen, H.R., Brun, E. and Jansen, P.A. (2009) Quantification of free-living Gyrodactylus salaris in an infested river and consequences for inter-river dispersal. Dis.Aquat.Organ. 87 (3):217223, 2009 Høgåsen, H.R. and Næss, I.S. (2009) Risikoanalyse og beredskap (Risk analysis and disease preparedness). Norsk Veterinærtidsskrift 1/2009: 80-86. Høgåsen, H.R. and de Koeijer,A.A. (2007) Quantitative risk assessment for Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy in low or zero-prevalence countries: the example of Norway. Risk Analysis 27 (5) 1105-1117. Antal, E.A., Høgåsen, H.R., Sandvik, L., Mæhlen, J.(2007) Listeriosis in Norway 1977-2003. Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases, 39:5, 398-404 Jorgensen, H. J., Mork, T., Hogasen, H. R., and Rorvik, L. M. (2005) Enterotoxigenic Staphylococcus aureus in bulk milk in Norway. J Appl Microbiol 99, 158-166 Høgåsen, H.R. and Brun, E. (2003) Risk of inter-river transmission of Gyrodactylus salaris by migrating Atlantic salmon smolts, estimated by Monte Carlo simulation. Dis Aquat Org 57 (3): 247-254 Heier, B.T., Høgåsen, H.R., Jarp, J. (2002) Factors associated with mortality in Norwegian broiler flocks. Prev Vet Med 53 (1-2): 147-58 Høgåsen H. R. (1998) Physiological Changes Associated with the Diadromous Migration of Salmonids. Can Spec Publ Fish Aquat Sci 127. 128 pp . http://pubs.nrccnrc.gc.ca/eng/books/books/9780660176376.html accessed 31.08.2009 Harbitz, I., David, R. B., Blom, A. K., Framstad, T., Chowdhary, B. P., Høgåsen, H. R., Sjaastad, Ø. V. (1997) Erythropoietin in pigs: perinatal changes, stimulatory effect of iron and characterization of the EPO gene. Hematology 74 (5): A 168 Høgåsen H. R. and Prunet P. (1997) Plasma levels of cortisol, prolactin and thyroxine in migrating and resident Arctic char, Salvelinus alpinus. Can J Fish Aquat Sci 54 (12): 2947-2954 Høgåsen H. R. (1995) Changes in blood composition during sampling by caudal vein puncture or caudal transection of the teleost Salvelinus alpinus. Comp Biochem Physiol 111A: 99-105. 3. Scientific reports Hamnes, Inger Sofie; Klevar, Siv; Davidson, Rebecca K.; Høgåsen, Helga Rachel; Lund, Arve. Parasittologisk og serologisk undersøkelse av prøver fra gatehunder importert til Norge fra land i Øst-Europa (Parasite and serological examination of stray dogs from Eastern Europe, imported to Norway) Veterinærinstituttet 2013 20 s. Veterinærinstituttets rapportserie 152013 http://www.vetinst.no/ Renate Johansen (Redaktør) og medforfattere (2013) Fiskehelserapporten 2012 (Fish Health Report 2012). 44 s. http://www.vetinst.no/content/download/10605/134088/file/2012_Fiskehelserapporten_ web.pdf (8.5.2013) Sviland S, Benestad SL, Eikenæs O, Høgåsen HR, Norström M. (2012) The surveillance and control programme for bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in Norway 2011. In: Sviland S, Hellberg H (editors). Surveillance and control programmes for terrestrial and aquatic animals in Norway. Annual report 2011. Oslo: Norwegian Veterinary Institute; 2012 Høgåsen, Helga Rachel; Hamnes, Inger Sofie; Davidson, Rebecca K.; Lund, Arve. Importrisikovurdering av gatehunder fra Øst-Europa. (Import risk assessment of stray dogs from Eastern Europe) Oslo: Veterinærinstituttet 2012 25 s. Veterinærinstituttets rapportserie 11-2012 http://www.vetinst.no/Publikasjoner/Rapportserie/Rapportserie2012/Importrisikovurdering-av-gatehunder-fra-OEst-Europa (28.01.2013) Høgåsen, Helga Rachel; Lium, Bjørn. Risikovurdering for import av yorkshirepurker og –sæd fra Nederland. (Import risk assessment of Yorkshire sews and semen from Netherland) Oslo: Veterinærinstituttet 2012 67 s. Veterinærinstituttets rapportserie 1-2012 http://www.vetinst.no/Publikasjoner/Rapportserie/Rapportserie-2012/Risikovurdering-forimport-av-yorkshirepurker-og-saed-fra-Nederland (28.01.2013) Høgåsen HR, Kampen AH, Hopp P, Valheim M, Hektoen L, Melkild I, Framstad K, Steen H, Nesbakken T (2012). Risiko- og sårbarhetsanalyse av norsk sauenæring: konsekvenser for dyrehelse og folkehelse. (Risk and vulnerability assessment of the Norwegian sheep industry: consequences for human and animal health). Veterinærinstituttets rapportserie 10-2011. Oslo: Veterinærinstituttet; 2011:1-121. http://www.vetinst.no/Forskning/Publikasjoner/Rapportserie/Rapportserie-2011/10-2011Risiko-og-saarbarhetsanalyse-av-norsk-sauenaering-konsekvenser-for-dyrehelse-ogfolkehelse (28.09.2011) Sviland S, Benestad SL, Eikenæs O, Høgåsen HR, Norström M. (2011) The surveillance and control programme for bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in Norway. In: Sviland S, Hellberg H (editors). Surveillance and control programmes for terrestrial and aquatic animals in Norway. Annual report 2010. Oslo: Norwegian Veterinary Institute; 2011. ISSN 1503-1454. Olsen AB, Jensen BB, Nilsen H, Grøntvedt R, Gjerset B, Taksdal T, Høgåsen HR (2011) Risikovurdering for spredning av pancreas disease virus (PD-virus) ved bruk av leppefisk i norsk laksefiskoppdrett. (Risk assessment for the spread of pancreas disease virus with cleaner fish in Norwegian salmonid industry) Veterinærinstituttets rapportserie 07- 2011 Oslo: Veterinærinstituttet 2011 33 s. http://www.vetinst.no/Publikasjoner/Rapportserie/Rapportserie-2011/7-2011Risikovurdering-for-spredning-av-pancreas-disease-virus-PD-virus-ved-bruk-av-leppefisk-inorsk-laksefiskoppdrett (28.1.2013) Adolfsen,P., Jansen,P.A., Høgåsen,H., Brun,E., Skår,K. (2011). Utredning om forhold knyttet til bekjemping av Gyrodactylus salaris i Vefsnaregionen. (Analysis of elements related to the control of Gyrodactylus salaris in the Vefsna region). Rapport til Mattilsynet 21.03.2011. 11 pp. Jore S, Høgåsen H. (2010) Risikovurdering for spredning av Salmonella fra avlsflokker – endring ved prøvetaking hver 3. uke i stedet for hver 2. uke. (Risk assessment for the spread of Salmonella in breeding flocks – effect of changing the sampling interval from three to two weeks).10.2010 Svar til Mattilsynet. Benestad S, Eikenæs O, Høgåsen H, Karlsson A, Moldal T, Sviland S, Tarpai A (2010). The surveillance and control programme for bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in Norway. Annual report 2009. Surveillance and control programmes for terrestrial and aquatic animals in Norway. Oslo: National Veterinary Institute. VKM (2009) Risk assessment for parasites in drinking water (In Norwegian. Original title: Risikovurdering av parasitter i norsk drikkevann.) 24 August 2009. Ad-hoc group: Lucy Robertson (leader), Helga Høgåsen, Truls Krogh, Nina Langeland, Vidar Lund, Line Vold. Hamnes IS, Hopp P, Høgåsen HR, Jor E, Mørk T, Sviland S, Tollersrud T. (2009) Blutongue in Norway - status and risk assessment per 15. May 2009 (In Norwegian). National Veterinary Institute's Report Series, 06-2009. Oslo: National Veterinary Institute. Høgåsen HR, Er C, Lium B (2008) Import risk assessment for live boars and boar semen from Norway to Iceland. National Veterinary Institute's Report Series, 5 – 2008 36 pp. Oslo: National Veterinary Institute Lyngstad TM, Høgåsen HR, Ørpetveit I, Hellberg H, Dale OB, Lillehaug A (2008) Scientific assessment of the VHS epidemic in Storfjorden (In Norwegian. Original title: Faglig vurdering I forbindelse med bekjempelse av viral hemoragisk septikemi (VHS) I Storfjoden). National Veterinary Institute's Report Series, 3 -2008. Oslo: National Veterinary Institute, 2008. 20s. Er C, Brun E, Høgåsen H. Qualitative Risk Assessment of the spread of nodavirus from an infected cod farm to neighbouring cod farms in a fjord system. Veterinærinstituttets rapportserie 9- 2007. Veterinærinstituttet, Oslo, Norge 2007; ISSN 0809-9197 (trykt utg.), ISSN 1890-3290 (online). Anonymous (2007). Norway’s case to the OIE to be recognised as a country with BSE negligible risk status according to OIE terrestrial animal health code of 2006. (Based upon the OIE BSE questionnaire, revised version – 13 December 2005). 55 pages + 7 annexes. Oslo: The Norwegian Food Safety Authority, May 2007. Håstein,T., Høgåsen,H., Hjeltnes,B., Valle,P.S. (2006). Import risk analysis for tropical shrimps from Hawaii (In Norwegian. Original title: Risikovurdering ved import av tropiske reker fra Hawaii for oppdrett i Norge). 130 pp. National Veterinary Institute’s Report Series 9/2006. Oslo: National Veterinary Institute Hofshagen, M., Grahek-Ogden, D., Kapperud, G., Høgåsen,H.R. (2006) Risk assessment for Salmonella Typhimurium DT104 in imported raw material for minced meat (In Norwegian. Original title: Risikovurdering av Salmonella Typhimurium DT104 i importert råstoff til kjøttdeig.) 10 pp. Oslo: National Veterinary Institute Høgåsen, H. R. (2005). Evaluation of the surveillance program for BSE in light of new OIE requirements (In Norwegian. Original title: Vurdering av overvåkingsprogrammet for BSE i lys av nye OIE krav) 13pp. Oslo: National Veterinary Institute Lyngstad, T., H. Høgåsen, and P. Hopp. (2005). Evaluation and optimization of the surveillance system for BSE using EU’s ”BsurvE” model. (In Norwegian. Original title: Evaluering og optimalisering av overvåkingsprogrammet for BSE ved hjelp av EUs modell "BSurvE".) Oslo: National Veterinary Institute Høgåsen,H. (2005). Probability of rabies entry to Norway through dogs and cats. Quantitative model, description and results. 29 pp. 30.juni 2005 VKM (2005). The probability of rabies entry to Norway through dogs, cats and wild fauna. 24 pp. 25 July 2005. [partner in an ad-hoc working group] Oslo: Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food Safety Jansen P.A., Høgåsen H., Brun,E. (2005) Estimating the risk of spread of Gyrodactylus salaris by different pathways (In Norwegian. Original title: En vurdering av risiko for spredning av Gyrodactylus salaris knyttet til ulike potensielle smitteveier.) Oslo: National Veterinary Institute Curriculum Vitae Gustav Fystro Lyshaug 2943 Rogne Telephone – home: +47 47602353 office: +47 40623818 E-post: gustav.fystro@bioforsk.no Date of birth: 28.09.1959 Education - Graduated a Ph.D. in October 1995 in the field of soil science within Department of Soil and Water Sciences, Agricultural University of Norway (renamed as the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, UMB). - Completed Cand. agric. in May 1986, Agricultural University of Norway Employment - Consultant in Øslandsmeieriet (dairy - now Tine Øst) from May 1986 to November 1988. - Permanent in the Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research (now Bioforsk) since November 1988. (Address: Bioforsk Øst Løken, Nyhagavegen 35, 2940 Heggenes, Norway). Work experience - Advisor related to the Dairy Herd Recording System (Husdyrkontrollen), responsibilities within economic and hygiene matters in milk production, two years - Nitrogen dynamics in plant and soil – various projects since 1989 o Doctor scientiarum theses 1994: 26. Nitrogen in the soil and plant system of timothy leys situated in mountain areas of South-East Norway. o Project “C and N dynamics after breaking leys” (founded by the Research Council in Norway), since 2002. - Participated in the Agricultural and Environmental Monitoring Program in Norway – reported each year since 1992 - Participated in various projects related to plant nutrients o Balanced plant nutrient supplies, - application and report to the Norwegian Agricultural Authority (SLF) each year since 1996. Nitrogen and phosphorous in focus Management and fertiliser planning o Lime and plant nutrient response, 1998 – 2004 - Responsible for the technical formulation related to a revision of the fertilising planning program “Skifteplan”. - Leader of the laboratory at Bioforsk Løken, including NIRS lab – method developments published. - Various activities related to sustainable agriculture - Project leader of the multi-/inter-disciplinary organised NFR funded project (190170/110) on land use changes and the threats to food production and landscape qualities, since 2009 - LCA studies on important food products, a NFR founded project 2009-2013. - Work package leader in the recently NRF funded project AGROPRO (2013-2017) focusing agronomy for an increased and sustainable future food production in Norway; responsible for organising interdisciplinary activity (socital, economical and natural science). Other - - External sensor at Dept. of Plant and Environmental Science (IPM at UMB) o Various courses (in particular JK340 - main course in soil science) since 1998 o Various theses (Cand. agric, MSc, Cand. Scient), since 1999 o Opponent on several Ph.D’s – plant nutrient and environmental related. Opponent Ph.D. at the Swedish University of Agriculture (SLU) in 2000 – green manure related External advisor at Hedmark University College in 1996, thesis: Nitrogen in dairy production, a nitrogen account. Organised NJF seminar 322 in 2001: Optimal Nitrogen Fertilization – Tools for Recommendation. Deputy Chairman in the municipality Øystre Slidre, and simultaneous member of the executive committee and the committee for land use planning, 2007-2011. Board member in Bioforsk since 2009 Selected publications since 2002 Fystro, G. 2013. Jordressurser i pressområde – infrastruktur eller matproduksjon?. I Føistad E. og Günter M. (red.) Bioforsk-konferansen 2013. Bioforsk FOKUS 8 (2) 36-38 Fystro, G. 2013. Land use changes in urban pressure areas - threats to food production and landscape qualities. Report NRF project 190170: 6 Fystro, G. 2013. N-effektivitet og husdyrgjødsel – kalkulator på nett. Rapport til SFL, januar: 4 Roer, A.-G., Johansen, A., Bakken, A.K., Daugstad, K., Fystro, G., Hammer Strømman, A. 2013. Environmental impacts of combined milk and meat production in Norway according to a life cycle assessment with expanded system boundaries. Livestock Science, 155 (2); 384396. Fystro, G. Kristoffersen A.Ø., Krogstad T., Løes A-K & Lunnan, T. 2012. Differensiert fosforgjødsling- betydning for avling og miljø. Bioforsk RAPPORT 7(165): 63 Hauken, M., Øgaard, A., Pedersen, R., Bechmann, M., Deelstra, J., Eggestad, H., Sørbotten, L.-E., Stenrød, M., Fystro, G., Riley, H., Dreyer, L., Molversmyr, Å., Paulsen, L.I. 2012. Jord- og vannovervåking i landbruket (JOVA). Feltrapporter fra programmet i 2010. Bioforsk Rapport 7 (48): 54 Hovstad, K.A., Fystro, G., Hegrenes, A. & Norderhaug, A. 2011. Designing sustainable systems for dairy farming – a flexible approach to modelling multifunctionality in agriculture. In: Pötsch, E.M., Krautzer, B. & Hopkins, A. (eds). Grassland farming and land management systems in mountainous regions. Grassland Science in Europe 16: 302-204 Pedersen, R., Bechmann, M., Deelstra, J., Eggestad, H., Sørbotten, L., Meinert Rød, L., Stenrød, M., Fystro, G., Nerjordet, P., Selnes, S., Stubhaug, E., Dreyer, L., Molværsmyr, Å. & Paulsen, L. 2011. JOVA Feltrapport 2009. Bioforsk RAPPORT 6(9): 42 Skøien, S., Hansen, S., Nesheim, L., Fystro, G., Øgaard, A., Øpstad, S. & Bechmann, M. 2011. Evaluering av pilotordning for miljøvennlig spredning av husdyrgjødsel. Bioforsk RAPPORT 6 (9): 42 Fystro, G. 2010. Husdyrhold. I A. Korsæth (red) Bærekraftig landbruk. Utfordringer, muligheter og kunnskapsbehov. Bioforsk FOKUS 5 (3): 48-52. Fystro, G. 2010. Jordvern. I A. Korsæth (red) Bærekraftig landbruk. Utfordringer, muligheter og kunnskapsbehov. Bioforsk FOKUS 5 (3): 17-22. Fystro, G. 2010. Urbant press på jord og kulturlandskap. Bioforsk-konferansen 2010. Bioforsk FOKUS 5 (2): 52-54 Daugstad, K., Fystro, G., Strømman, A.H., Johansen, A. og Korsæth. A. 2009. Bruk av livssyklusanalyse (LCA) i landbruket – muligheter og begrensninger. Rapport til Landbruksog Matdepartementet (LMD), 12 pp Fystro, G. and T. Lunnan 2009. Roughage quality analysis using NIRS. NJF seminar no 413: Agricultural applications of NIR and NIT. Flakkebjerg, Denmark, April 2009 . 4 pp Fystro, G. L. Nesheim and A.K. Bakken. 2008. The N:P ratio in plant tissue as a diagnostic tool for P supply. NJF 401 seminar: Phosphorus management in Nordic-Baltic agriculture reconciling productivity and environmental protection. NJF Report 4(4); 52:56 Fystro, G. 2008. Sluttrapport til NFR for prosjektet Mineralisering av C og N etter pløying av eng – 147062. 4 (in Norwegian) Norderhaug, A., B. Bele, K.A. Hovstad, G. Fystro, L.Nilsen, E. Revdal og Line Rosef 2008. Driftssystemer i landbruket og kulturlandskap. Plantemøtet 2008. Bioforsk FOKUS 3 (1): 4243 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. 2007. Fosforgjødsling til eng – behov for endring. I L. Sekse (red) Plantemøte Vest 2007, Bergen. FOKUS 2(7): 40-42 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. 2007. Viktige faktorar for N-verknad frå forkultur – produksjon og miljø. Bioforsk FOKUS 2(1): 116-118 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G., P. Nerjordet, H.O. Eggestad, A. Pengerud, M. Beckmann og M. Øygarden 2007. Jord- og vannovervåking i landbruket (JOVA). Volbubekken 2006. Bioforsk Rapport 2 (123): 21 (in Norwegian) Viken, H., H.Volden, G. Fystro & T. Lunnan 2007. Prediction of in situ degradation characteristics of neutral detergent fibre (aNDF) in temperate grasses and red clover using near-infrared reflectance spectroscopy (NIRS). Animal Feed Science and Technology 139: 92-108 Fystro, G. 2006. Fosfor i grovfôrdyrkinga, og bruk av husdyrgjødsel. Bioforsk FOKUS 1(3): 18-19 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. & T. Lunnan 2006. Analysar av grovfôrkvalitet på NIRS. Bioforsk FOKUS 1(3): 180-181 (in Norwegian) Nesheim, L. & G. Fystro 2006. Effect of fertilizer phosphorus on soils initially low in phosphorus. Grassland Science in Europe 11: 113-115 Sognnes, L.S., G. Fystro, S. Øpstad, A. Arstein, & T. Børresen 2006. Effects of adding moraine soil or shell sand into peat soil on physical properties and grass yield in western Norway. Acta Agriculturae Scandinavica, B 56 (3): 161-170 Fystro, G. 2005. Global NIRS-database og analyse av grovfôrkvalitet i Norden. I E.K. Kaurstad (red.). Husdyrforsøksmøtet 2005. Quality Hotell, Sarpsborg 7.-8. februar. Institutt for husdyr- og akvakulturvitenskap (UMB), Norges veterinærhøgskole, Veterinærinstituttet. p 237-240 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. & A.K. Bakken 2005. Soil reaction, yields and herbage element content as affected by lime applied on established leys in a multi-site field trial. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 143: 407-420 Fystro, G., S. Abrahamsen og T. Lunnan 2005. Utvikling av nye metodar for gjødslingsplanlegging. Grønn kunnskap 9(2): 383-389 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. & S. Fjelltun 2005. Volbubekken 2004. I: R. Skjevdal og S. Vandsemb (red.) Jord og vannovervåkning i landbruket. Feltrapport fra programmet i 2004. Jordforsk rapport 84: 137-144 (yearly report - in Norwegian) Paul, C., M. Hellamäki, G. Fystro, L. Sørensen, L. Brohede, P. Dardenne, I. Cowe, M. Lagerholm & B. Büchmann. 2004. Testing global NIRS equations for forage quality constituents in Scandinavia. In: Lüscher A., B. Jeangros, W. Kessler, O. Huguenin, M. Lobsiger, N. Millar & D. Suter (eds.). Land use systems in grassland dominated regions. Book of abstracts. EGF2004, 21-24 June 2004 Luzern, Switzerland: p 175 Nesheim,L., G. Fystro & O. Harbo 2005. Respons på fosfor til eng på fosforfattig jord. Grønn kunnskap 9(2): 467-473 (in Norwegian) Sognnes, L.S., G. Fystro & S. Øpstad 2005. Effects of adding moraine soil or shell sand into peat soil on soil properties and grass yields in western Norway. XX International Grassland Congress: Offered papers, p 731 Viken, H.N., H. Volden, G. Fystro & T. Lunnan 2005. Bruk av NIRS-metoden til bestemmelse av ufordøyeleg NDF i gras og kløver. I E.K. Kaurstad. Husdyrforsøksmøtet 2005. Quality Hotell, Sarpsborg 7.-8. februar. Institutt for husdyr- og akvakulturvitenskap, Norges veterinærhøgskole, Veterinærinstituttet. p 237-240 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. & A.K. Bakken 2004. Overflatekalking på eng – pH, avling og næringsopptak. Grønn kunnskap 8(3): 65-77 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. 2003. Gjødsling til eng etter våt mai. Bondebladet 25/26:8 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. & A.K. Bakken 2003. Mikromineral i gras etter overflatekalking av eng. I: H.A. Kirkbak (red.). Kvithamardagane 2003. Plantemøtet Midt-Norge. Planteforsk. Grønn kunnskap 7 (3):138-145 (in Norwegian) Hoel, B., G. Fystro, H. Hole & H.Riley 2003. Gjødslingshåndbok på Internett. Grønn kunnskap 7 (2): 69-72 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. 2002. Nitrogen til eng i eit kronår. Bondebladet 29(23): 23 (in Norwegian) Fystro, G. 2002. Potential C and N mineralisation – Near Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy. I: Spelling Østergaard, H., G.Fystro & I. Thomsen (eds.). Optimal nitrogen fertilisation –tools for recommendation. Proceedings from NJF seminar 322, Ås, March 29-30 2001. DIAS report 84: 133-134 Fystro, G. 2002. The prediction of C and N content and their potential mineralisation in heterogeneous soil samples using Vis-NIR spectroscopy and comparative methods. Plant and Soil 246 (2): 139-149 Lunnan, T. & G. Fystro 2002. Nitrogengjødsling til eng – bruk av mineralsk N på våren, glødetap og ugjødsla ruter som korreksjonsfaktorar. Grønn forskning 2: 193-200 (in Norwegian) Spelling Østergaard, H., G. Fystro & I. Thomsen 2002. Optimal nitrogen fertilisation –tools for recommendation. Proceedings from NJF seminar 322, Ås, March 29-30 2001. DIAS report 84: 164 New Zealand RS&T Curriculum Vitae Template 1a. Personal details Title First name Second name(s) Full name Prof Hugh Roberts Present position Professor of Sociology Organisation/Employer University of Otago Contact Address PO Box 56 Dunedin Work telephone Email Personal website (if applicable) Family name Campbell Post code 9054 027 2773912 03-4798749 Mobile hugh.campbell@otago.ac.nz http://www.csafe.org.nz/research_staff/professor_hugh_campbe ll 1b. Academic qualifications Qualification name: Ph.D. in Sociology M.A in Social Anth, BA(Hons) in Social Anth Institution: Charles Sturt University Otago University Otago University Graduation: April 1995 May 1989 May 1986 1c. Professional positions held • 1994-present. University of Otago, New Zealand. • 2001-2010. Seconded as Founding Director of CSAFE (Centre for the Study of Agriculture, Food and Environment), University of Otago. • 2011 – Appointed Chair of Sociology and HOD, Dept of Sociology, Gender and Social Work, University of Otago. 1d. Present research/professional speciality Rural Sociology, Agri-Food Theory, Organic Agriculture, Audit and Governance, Food Waste, Sociology of Food. 1e. Total years research experience 1g. Total number of peer reviewed publications and patents Journal articles 28 23 years Books, book chapters, books edited 33 Conference proceedings 7 Patents 0 2a. Research publications and dissemination Peer-­‐reviewed journal articles (since 2001): Campbell, H., Rosin, C., Hunt, L. and Fairweather, J. (2012). The Social Practice of Sustainable Agriculture under Audit Discipline: Initial Insights from the ARGOS Project in New Zealand. Journal of Rural Studies. Vol 28(1):129-­‐141. Campbell, H. and Rosin, C. (2011) After the ‘Organic Industrial Complex’: An Ontological Expedition through Commercial Organic Agriculture in New Zealand. Journal of Rural Studies. Vol 27(4): 350-­‐361. Pretty, J., Sutherland, W. J., Ashby, J., Auburn, J., Baulcombe, D., Bell, M. M., Bentley, J., Bickersteth, NZRSTCV–092009 NZ-RS&T-CV S., Brown, K., Burke, J., Campbell, H., Chen, K., Crowley, E., Crute, I., Dobbelaere, D., Edwards-­‐Jones, G., Funes-­‐Monzote, F., Godfray, C. J., Griffon, M., Gypmantisiri, P., Haddad, L., Halavatau, S., Herren, H., Holderness, M., Izac, A-­‐M., Jones, M., Koohafkan, P., Lal, R., Lang, T., McNeely, J., Mueller, A., Nisbett, N., Noble, A., Pingali, P., Pinto, Y., Rabbinge, R., Ravindranath, N. H., Rola, A., Roling, N., Sage, C., Settle, W., Sha, J. M., Shiming, L., Simons, T., Smith, P., Strzepeck, K., Swaine, H., Terry, E., Tomich, T. P., Toulmin, C., Trigo, E., Twomlow, S., Vis, J-­‐K., Wilson, J. and Pilgrim, S. (2010). The top 100 questions of importance to the future of global agriculture. International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, 8(4): Pp. 219–236. Campbell, H., Murcott, A. and Mackenzie, A. (2010) Kosher in New York City, Halal in Aquitaine: Challenging the relationship between neoliberalism and food auditing. Agriculture and Human Values. Vol 28(1): 67-­‐79. Haggerty, J. Campbell, H. and Morris, C. (2009) Keeping the stress off the sheep?: Agricultural intensification, neoliberalism and 'good' farming in New Zealand Geoforum. Vol 40 (5): 767-­‐777. Campbell, H. (2009) ‘Breaking new ground in food regimes theory; Corporate environmentalism, ecological feedbacks and the ‘food from somewhere’ regime’, Agriculture and Human Values 26(4): 309-­‐319. Rosin, C. and Campbell, H. (2009). Beyond bifurcation: examining the conventions of organic agriculture in New Zealand. Journal of Rural Studies Vol 25(1): 35-­‐47. Campbell, H. (2006). Consultation, Commerce and Contemporary Agri-­‐Food Systems: Ethical Engagement of New Systems of Governance under Reflexive Modernity. Integrated Assessment Journal, http://journals.sfu.ca/int_assess/index.php/iaj Campbell, H. (2005). The Rise and Rise of EurepGAP: The European (Re)Invention of Colonial Food Relations? International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food. Vol 13(2): 6-­‐19. December. McKenna, M.M. and Campbell, H. (2003). It’s Not Easy Being Green: The Development of ‘Food Safety’ Practices in New Zealand’s Apple Industry, International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food 10(2):45-­‐55. Fairweather, J. and Campbell, H. (2003). Environmental Beliefs and Farm Practices of New Zealand Farmers: Contrasting Pathways to Sustainability. Agriculture and Human Values. Vol 20(3): 287-­‐300 (October 2003). Campbell, H. and Liepins, R. (2001). ‘Naming Organics: understanding organic standards in New Zealand as a discursive field’ Sociologia Ruralis 41(1): 21-­‐39. Peer reviewed books, book chapters, books edited (since 2005) Evans, D., Campbell, H. and Murcott, A. (eds.) (In Press-­‐2013) Waste Matters: New Perspectives on Food and Society. Sociological Review Monographs. Almas, R. and Campbell, H. (eds.) (2012) Rethinking Agricultural Policy Regimes: Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture. Emerald: UK. Rosin, C., Stock, P. and Campbell, H. (eds.) (2011). Food Systems Failure: The Global Food Crisis and the Future of Agriculture, Earthscan: London. Rosin, C. and Campbell, H. (2012) The Complex Outcomes of Neoliberalisation in New Zealand: Productivism, Audit and the Challenge of Future Energy and Climate Shocks. In Almas, R. and NZRSTCV–092009 NZ-RS&T-CV Campbell, H. (Eds.). Rethinking Agricultural Policy Regimes: Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture. Emerald: UK. Muirhead, B. and Campbell, H. (2012) The Worlds of Dairy: Comparing Dairy Frameworks in Canada and New Zealand in Light of Future Shocks to Food Systems. In Almas, R. and Campbell, H. (Eds.). Rethinking Agricultural Policy Regimes: Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture. Emerald: UK. Almas, R. and Campbell, H. (2012). Introduction: Emerging Challenges, New Policy Frameworks and the Resilience of Agriculture. In Almas, R. and Campbell, H. (Eds.). Rethinking Agricultural Policy Regimes: Food Security, Climate Change and the Future Resilience of Global Agriculture. Emerald: UK. Campbell, H. (2011). Let us eat cake?: Historically reframing the problem of world hunger and its purported solutions. In Rosin, C., Stock, P. and Campbell, H. (eds.) Food Systems Failure: The Global Food Crisis and the Future of Agriculture, Earthscan: London. Campbell, H., Rosin, C., Norton, S., Carey, P., Benge, J. and Moller, H. (2009). ‘Examining the Mythologies of Organics: Moving beyond the Organic/Conventional Binary?’ Pp. 238-­‐251 in Lawrence, G., Lyons, K, and Wallington, T. (eds.) Food Security, Nutrition and Sustainability. Earthscan: London. Campbell, H. and Rosin, C. (2008). Global Retailer Politics and the Quality Shift in NZ Horticulture. Pp 11-­‐25 in M. Butcher, J. Walker, and S. Zydenbos (eds.) Future Challenges in Crop Protection: Repositioning New Zealand’s Primary Industries for the Future. NZ Plant Protection Society: Hastings. Campbell, H. and Le Heron R. (2007). Supermarkets, Producers and Audit Technologies: The Constitutive Micro-­‐Politics of Food, Legitimacy and Governance. Pp. 131-­‐153 in Lawrence, G. and Burch. D. (eds) Supermarkets and Agri-­‐Food Supply Chains: Transformations in the Production and Consumption of Foods. Edward Elgar: London. Rosin, C., H. Campbell and L. Hunt. (2007). ‘Audit Me This! Orchard-­‐Level Effects of the EurepGAP Audit System on New Zealand Kiwifruit Producers’. Pp. 61-­‐74 in Stringer, C. and Le Heron, R. Agri-­‐ Food Commodity Chains and Globalising Networks. Ashgate: Avebury . Campbell, H., Lawrence, G. and Smith, K. (2006). Audit Cultures and the Antipodes: the Implications of EurepGAP for New Zealand and Australian Agri-­‐food Industries. Pp. 69-­‐94 in Murdoch. J. and Marsden, T. (eds.) Between the Local and the Global: Confronting Complexity in the Contemporary Agri-­‐Food Sector. Research in Rural Sociology and Development, Vol. 12. Elsevier. Campbell. H. McLeod, C. and Rosin, C. (2006). Auditing Sustainability: The Impact of EurepGAP in New Zealand. Pp. 157-­‐173 in Holt, G. and Reed, M. (eds) Organic Agriculture: A Sociological Perspective. CABI: Oxon. Campbell, H. and Stuart, A. M. (2005). ‘Disciplining the Organic Commodity’, Pp. 84-­‐97 in Higgins, V. and Lawrence, G. (eds.) Agricultural Governance: Globalization and the New Politics of Regulation, London: Routledge. 2b. Previous research work: Since 2003 Research Grants (2003-­‐2008) (1) Please list below any research grants you have received where you are a named PI or AI. Period of Funding Agency Title of Project Value of University of Contract Otago share of Grant NZRSTCV–092009 NZ-RS&T-CV 2000-­‐2003 FRST, PGSF 2002-­‐2007 FRST, PGST 2003-­‐2009 FRST PGST 2005-­‐2008 FRST, PGST 2008 – 2010 FRST -­‐ SET 2008-­‐2010 FRST -­‐ SRU 2009-­‐2012 FRST PGST 2010 -­‐ 2013 Marsden Fund ‘Greening’ Food 2: Social and Industry Dynamics’ ‘Socio-­‐Economic Impacts of Biotechnologies’ (Lincoln University) The ARGOS Programme Constructive Conversations (University of Canterbury) Enhancing innovation and innovation governance (Lincoln University) Rural Futures (AgResearch) The ARGOS Programme (ARGOS2) Biological Economies: Knowing and Making New Rural Value Relations NZ$585k NZ$676k UoO = NZ$3.93m Total Programme Value = $10.1m UoO = NZ$170k UoO = NZ$276k UoO = NZ$502k UoO = NZ$1.02m Total Programme Value = $2m NZ$761k 2d. Relationships with end-­‐users Invitations to present significant Conference addresses (to academic and industry conferences): • Keynote Speaker: Green Protectionism, Food Scares and Organic Food Exporting from New Zealand. Conference of the NZ Society of Food Scientists and Technologists. 31 August, 2001. • Keynote Speaker – Committee on Sustainable Agriculture, American Society of Agronomists Tri-­‐ Societies Conference, Pittsburgh Convention Centre, Pittsburgh, USA. 2nd November, 2009. • Keynote Speaker – Agriculture after Neoliberalism: How the Social Sciences will re-­‐write the agenda for Primary Production in NZ. Sociological Association of Aotearoa/NZ. Massey University, Palmerston North. 23rd November, 2009. • Keynote Speaker – Understanding the New Zealand Experiment in Deregulation: Lessons for the Farming of Tomorrow. Canadian Dairy Farmers annual conference Dairy Farming for Tomorrow. 2 February, 2012. Ottawa, Canada. • Keynote Speaker (with Prof Henrik Moller) – Achieving Sustainability via Eco-­‐Labels: The social and ecological significance of the ‘food from somewhere’ regime. International Farming Systems Association conference, Aarhus, Denmark. 2nd July, 2012. NZRSTCV–092009 NZ-RS&T-CV CURRICULUM VITAE Name: Address: Date of birth: Current Position: THOMAS HECKELEI Thomas Heckelei Mittweidaer Str. 2, D-53332 Bornheim 18. November 1963 Professor in Economic and Agricultural Policy Institute for Food and Resource Economics (ILR), University of Bonn Research interests Analysis of agricultural and environmental policies Agricultural sector and trade modelling Bayesian econometrics and mathematical programming Academic education 2002 Habilitation, University of Bonn 1995 Ph.D. Agricultural Economics and Economics at Washington State University, Pullman, August 1995 1991 "Diplom" in Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology at University of Bonn 1990 Masters of Arts in Agricultural Economics at Washington State University, Pullman, 1990 Academic positions 2003 – today Professor for Economic and Agricultural Policy, Institute for Food and Resource Economics (ILR), University of Bonn 2002 – 2003 Assistant professor at the IMPACT Center/Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, Washington State University, 1996 – 2001 Assistant professor (“Hochschulassistent”) Institute for Agricultural Policy, Market Research, and Economic Sociology, University of Bonn Teaching Current courses in bachelor program: Politik und Märkte der Ernährungswirtschaft (Teilbereich Politik) Agrar- und Umweltpolitik (Teilbereich Agrarpolitik) Angewandte Mikroökonomik (Teilbereich „Neoklassik“) Current courses in master program: Microeconomics Advanced Applied Econometrics (master program version) Policy Analysis Seminar 1 CURRICULUM VITAE THOMAS HECKELEI Current courses in doctoral program Publishing and Writing in Agricultural Economics Advanced Applied Econometrics (doctoral program version) Previously taught Applied Trade Theory and Policy (University of Bonn) European and International Agricultural Policy (University of Bonn) Introduction to Econometrics (Washington State University) Quantitative Methods in Ag-Business (Washington State University) Doctoral research supervision (only main advisor cases) Götz, Christian: Economic incentives of the WTO dispute settlement system with an empirical focus on the agro-food sector Zimmermann, Andrea Empirical analysis of farm structural change at EU level Annen, Dominic N. Farm Animal Welfare: Measurement and Compliance Schlüter, Simon W. Impact of regulatory measures on international trade in meat products Adenäuer, Lucie Foreign Direct Investment in the Agribusiness Sector, 2011 Becker, Arno Impact of European bioful policies on global bioful and agricultural markets, 2011 Doerr, Rainer Agrarpolitische Willensbildung in Deutschland, in der Europäischen Union und auf internationaler Ebene, 2009 Heidecke, Claudia Economic analysis of water use and management in the Middle Drâa valley of Morocco, 2009 Gocht, Alexander Methods in Economic Farm Modelling, 2009 Junker, Franziska Trade liberalisation between the EU and the Mercosur countries: An economic assessment for the case of beef, 2009 Gruber, Ina The Impact of Socio-Economic Development and Climate Change on Livestock Management in Benin, 2008 Jansson, Torbjoern Econometric specification of constrained optimization models, 2007 Adenäuer, Marcel Modelling the European Sugar Sector - Incentives to Supply Sugar Beets and Analysis of Reform Options, 2006 Wieck, Christine Development of Marginal Cost Distributions in Dairy Production Regions of the EU, 2005 Bauer, Kai EU-Enlargement: Perspectives for Agriculture and Rural Areas in Major Accession Countries, 2005 Bilame, Odass Performance and Prospects of Agriculture during Structural Adjustment Programmes in Tanzania, 2003 2 CURRICULUM VITAE THOMAS HECKELEI Peer review Agricultural Economics Agricultural Economics Review American Journal of Agricultural Economics Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) Environmental & Resource Economics Environmental Modelling & Software Environmental Modelling & Assessment European Research Council (ERC) European Review of Agricultural Economics German Journal of Agricultural Economics Journal of Agricultural Economics Journal of Policy Modelling Leibniz-Gemeinschaft Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (SNF) Honors, professional service and association membership Stipend of the "Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft" (DFG, German Research Foundation) in support of research on Positive Mathematical Programming models: September 2000 – August 2001 Scholarship of the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) for participation in the Ph.D.-Program at Washington State University, 1992/1993 Outstanding graduation award for best Diplom in Agricultural Economics at the University of Bonn, Spring 1991. Exchange scholarship between Washington State University and University of Bonn, (Fall 1989 and Spring 1990). Board member of the International Agricultural Trade Research Council (IATRC, 2007 – 2009) Chair of the Taiwanese-German Association for Economic and Social Research Editor of the European Review of Agricultural Economics (until December 2011) American Agricultural Economics Association (AAEA) European Association of Agricultural Economists (EAAE) German Association of Agricultural Economists (GeWiSoLa) 3 CURRICULUM VITAE THOMAS HECKELEI Recent Publications PODHORA, A., K. HELMING, L. ADENÄUER, T. HECKELEI, P. KAUTTO, P. REIDSMA, K. RENNINGS, J. TURNPENNY AND J. JANSEN (2013): The policy-relevancy of impact assessment tools: Evaluating nine years of European research funding, Environmental Science & Policy 31: 8595 BRITZ, W., M. VAN ITTERSUM, A. OUDE LANSINK AND T. HECKELEI (2012): Tools for Integrated Assessment in Agriculture. State of the Art and Challenges, Bio-based and Applied Economics 1: 125-150 HECKELEI, T. AND J. SWINNEN (2012): Introduction to the Special Issue of the World Trade Review on ‘standards and non-tariff barriers in trade’, World Trade Review 11(3): 353-355. ZIMMERMANN, A. AND T. HECKELEI (2012): Structural Change of European Dairy Farms - A Crossregional Analysis, Journal of Agricultural Economics 63(3): 576-603. JUNKER, F. and T. HECKELEI (2012): TRQ-complications: who gets the benefits when the EU liberalizes Mercosur's access to the beef markets?, Agricultural Economics 43(2): 215-231 STORM, H., T. HECKELEI and C. HEIDECKE (2011): Estimating Irrigation Water Demand in the Moroccan Drâa Valley using Contingent Valuation, Journal of Environmental Management 92(10): 2803-2809. EWERT, F., M. VAN ITTERSUM, T. HECKELEI, O. THEROND, I. BEZLEPKINA and E. Andersen (2011): Scale changes and model linking methods for integrated assessment of agri-environmental systems, Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 142(1-2): 6-17. ADENÄUER, L. and T. HECKELEI (2011): Foreign Direct Investment and the Performance of European Agribusiness Firms, Journal of Agricultural Economics 62(3): 639-654. JANSSON, T. and T. HECKELEI (2011): Estimating a Primal Model of Regional Crop Supply in the European Union, Journal of Agricultural Economics 62(1): 137-152. KEMPEN, M., B.S. ELBERSEN, I. STARITSKY, E. ANDERSEN and T. HECKELEI (2011): Spatial allocation of farming systems and farming indicators in Europe, Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 142(1-2): 51-62. HECKELEI, T. (2010): Publishing as an Agricultural Economist: Thoughts on Why, Where and How, German Journal of Agricultural Economics 59(3): 133-143. LOUHICHI, K., A. KANELLOPOULOS, S. JANSSEN, G. FLICHMANN, M. BLANCO, H. HENGSDIJK., T. HECKELEI, P. BERENTSEN, A. OUDE LANSINK, and M. VAN ITTERSUM (2010): FSSIM, a bioeconomic farm model for simulating the response of EU farming systems to agricultural and environmental policies, Agricultural Systems 103(8): 585-597. WOLFF, H.,T. HECKELEI. and R. MITTELHAMMER (2010): Imposing Curvature and Monotonicity on Flexible Functional Forms: An Efficient Regional Approach, Computational Economics 36(4): 309-339. KANELLOPOULOS, A., P. BERENTSEN, T. HECKELEI, M. VAN ITTERSUM. and A. OUDE LANSINK. (2010): Assessing the Forecasting Performance of a Generic Bio-Economic Farm Model Calibrated With Two Different PMP Variants, Journal of Agricultural Economics 61(2): 274294. HEIDECKE, C. and T. HECKELEI (2010): Impacts of changing water inflow distributions on irrigation and farm income along the Drâa River in Morocco, Agricultural Economics 41(2): 135 – 149. WIECK, C., T. HECKELEI and A. RUETHER (2010): Aspekte der Agrarpolitik 2009, German Journal of Agricultural Economics (Agrarwirtschaft) 59(1): 1-15. 4 Curriculum Vitae Name: Markus Schermer Date and Place of Birth: Nationality: 10.9.1957, Innsbruck Civil Status: Married since 1990 with Gertraud Schermer Rupprechter, nurse 2 children born 1991 and 1996 Contact: Institute of Sociology School of Political Science and Sociology University of Innsbruck Universitätsstrasse 15 A-6020 Innsbruck /Austria/Europe Tel:0043 512 507 5690 Fax: 0043 512 507 2817 e-mail: markus.schermer@uibk.ac.at Languages Fluent in German and English, basics in French Austrian Education Since 2008 2002 – 2004: 1989 – 1993: 1976 – 1983: 1967 – 1976: 1963 – 1967: Associate Professor at the Institute of Sociology, University Innsbruck (Habilitation in Sociology) Doctoral studies at the University Innsbruck, Institute of Sociology. Awarded Degree: Dr. rer.soc.oec Various courses in agricultural marketing, participatory planning, monitoring, community development etc. Diploma Studies in agriculture, specialization in agricultural economics at the University of Natural Resources and Life Science, Vienna. Awarded Degree: Dipl.Ing. rer.nat.techn. Secondary school at the ‘Humansitisches Gymnasium der Franziskaner’ in Hall/Tyrol Primary school in Reith / Seefeld, Tyrol/Austria Work experience Since 2010 Director of studies, Vice Head of the Institute of Sociology 2008 -2010 Head of the Institute of Sociology Since 2004: Faculty member at Institute of Sociology, School of Political Science and Sociology 2001 - 2004: Centre for Mountain Agriculture 1999 - 2001: Institute of High Alpine Research and Alpine Agriculture and Forestry 1999: Research Institute of Alpine Agriculture and Forestry Since 1999: University Innsbruck: researcher and lecturer 1995 – 1999: Agricultural expert at Bureau Falch, Landeck Tyrol (Bureau for Architecture, Regional Planning and Development Projects) 1993 –1995: Teamleader, Agricultural expert, Village Oriented Development Project (VODP) MSEKHOCHIKA, Zambia, Eastern Province, 1989 – 1993: Head of department; responsible for f direct marketing Chamber of Agriculture, Tyrol 1986 – 1989: Agricultural advisor and officiating head of office, District Chamber of Agriculture Imst/Tyrol, 1984 – 1986: Agricultural expert, Village Oriented Development Project (VODP) MSEKHOCHIKA, Zambia, Eastern Province, Short term assignments in development co-operation: Zambia (1988, 1989, 1995, 2001) Tanzania (1992, 1995) Pakistan (2002) Ethiopia (1996, 1997, 1998, 1999) Bhutan (1995, 1996, 1997) Participation in major International Research Projects - Organic Marketing Initiatives and Rural Development (OMIaRD) 2001-2004, EU 5th Framework www.irs.aber.ac.uk/omiard/ - European Information System for Organic Markets (EISfOM) 2003-2005, EU 5th Framework (concerted action) www.eisfom.org/ - Implementation of Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development in Alpine Mountains (IMALP) 2005-2006 EU-5th Framework www.alpes-dunord.com/imalp/index.html - Encouraging Collective Farmers Marketing Initiatives (COFAMI) 2005- 2007 EU 6th Framework www.cofami.org/ - European Mountain Agrofood Products, Retailing and Consumers (Euro-MARC) 2007-2009 EU 6th Framework - Kultur.(Land).Wirtschaft: Strategien für die Kulturlandschaft der Zukunft (KuLaWi) 2009-2012 Interregg IV www. kulawi.eurac.edu/ - HealthyGrowth: form Niche to volume with Integity and Trust 2013-2016 Era-net: Core Organic II http://www.coreorganic2.org/ - REsilience of marginal GrAsslands and biodiveRsity management Decision Support (REGARDS) 2012 -2015 Era-net: Biodiversa http://www.biodiversa.org/523 Selected Publications (last 5 years) Edited Books: 1. TASSER E., SCHERMER M., SIEGL G., TAPPEINER U. (2012) Wir Landschaftmacher. Vom Sein und werden der Kulturlandschaft in Nord-, Ost- und Südtirol. Athesia, Bozen. Edited special issues of Journals 1. RENTING H SCHERMER M.. (2011) Collective Farmers’ Marketing Initiatives International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food Vol 18 (1) http://ijsaf.org/ 2. RENTING H. SCHERMER M. ROSSI A.(2012) Civic Food Networks International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food Vol 19 (3) http://ijsaf.org/ Book chapters 1. SIEGL G. SCHERMER M. (2012) Kulturlandschaft woher? In: TASSER E., SCHERMER M., SIEGL G., TAPPEINER U. (2012) Wir Landschaftmacher. Vom Sein und werden der Kulturlandschaft in Nord-, Ost- und Südtirol. Athesia, Bozen. Pp: 57-102 2. BACHER M. TASSER E.,SCHERMER M. RÜDISSER J. TAPPEINER U. (2012) Kulturlandschaft wohin? In: TASSER E., SCHERMER M., SIEGL G., TAPPEINER U. (2012) Wir Landschaftmacher. Vom Sein und werden der Kulturlandschaft in Nord-, Ost- und Südtirol. Athesia, Bozen. Pp: 187 – 212 3. STEINBACHER M. SCHERMER M.TASSER E. TAPPEINER U. (2012) Aus der Sicht der Bäuerinnnen und Bauern In: TASSER E., SCHERMER M., SIEGL G., TAPPEINER U. (2012) Wir Landschaftmacher. Vom Sein und werden der Kulturlandschaft in Nord-, Ost- und Südtirol. Athesia, Bozen. Pp: 213-230 4. SCHERMER M. SIEGL G. STEINBACHER M.,TAPPEINER U. TASSER E. (2012) Strategien für die Kulturlandschaft der Zukunft In: TASSER E., SCHERMER M., SIEGL G., TAPPEINER U. (2012) Wir Landschaftmacher. Vom Sein und werden der Kulturlandschaft in Nord-, Ost- und Südtirol. Athesia, Bozen. Pp: 231-247 5. FORBORD, M. SCHERMER M. (2012) Felles organisasjonerog institutjonelle ordninger i gardsturismen In: FORBORD, M. KVAM G. RONNINGEN M.(eds) Turisme I distrikene Tapir Akademisk Forlag Trondheim pp:391417 6. SIEGL G., SCHERMER M. TAPPEINER u., TASSER E. (2011) Kultur.Land.(Wirt)schaft – Strategien für die Kulturlandschaft der Zukunft In:Garstenauer R./ Müller G. Aus der Mitte der Landschaft. Jahrbuch für Geschichte des ländlichen Raumes. Studienverlag Innsbruck p.:235-242 7. SCHERMER M. BACHER M. TAPPEINER U. (2011) Wer will welche Land(wirt) schaft in den Alpen? Zur Konzeption von Kulturlandschaft in Nord-und Südtirol Yearbook of Socioeconomics in Agriculture 2011pp. 85-110 8. SCHERMER M (2010) Lokale Bioprodukte als Chance für Regionalentwicklung? In: Petra C. Gruber (Hrsg) Wie wir überleben! Ernährung und Energie in Zeiten des Klimawandels, Verlag Barbara Budrich Opladen & Farmington Hills MI pp.143-157 9. MEIXNER W. RIEDER E. SCHERMER M. (2010) Von der Sommerfrische zum Agrotourismus. Die Auswirkungen von Urlaub am Bauernhof auf Lebens- und Arbeitsverhältnisse auf Tiroler Bauernhöfen. In: Garstenauer R., Landsteiner E, Langthaler E. (Hg.) Land-Arbeit, Arbeitsbeziehungen in ländlichen Gesellschaften Europas (17.20.Jahrhundert). Jahrbuch für Geschichte des ländlichen Raumes 2008 Studia Verlag Innsbruck 10. SCHERMER M. (2009) Sozialkapital als Faktor für den Erfolg gemeinschaftlicher Vermarktungsinitiativen In: Peyerl H. (2009) Jahrbuch der österreichischen Gesellschaft für Agrarökonomie Bd 18, Heft 1 Fakultas Verlag pp101-111 11. RIEDER E. SCHERMER M. MEIXNER W. (2009) Die Auswirkungen des Tourismus am Bauernhof auf die Lebensund Arbeitsverhältnisse der Tiroler Bergbäuerinnen. Aufgezeigt anhand einer Fallstudie zum Urlaub auf dem Bauernhof In: Furter R. König A.; Lorenzini L (2009) Rückwanderungen Geschichte der Alpen 2009/14 Chronos Verlag pp 269-284 Peer-reviewed international Journals 1. SCHIRPKE, U. LEITIGER G., TASSER E., SCHERMER M., STEINBACHER M., TAPPEINER U. (2013) Multiple ecosystem services of a changing Alpine landscape: past, present and future International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystem Services & Management Vol 9(2) pp.: 123-135 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21513732.2012.751936 2. SCHREINER K., PECHER C., SCHERMER M., SIEGL G., TAPPEINER U., TASSER E. (2011): „KuLaWi“ – Strategies for the cultural landscape of the future. Ekológia/ Ecology (Bratislava), Vol. 30, No. 2, p. 187-198 3. FORBORD, M. SCHERMER M. GRIESSMAIR K. (2011online, 2012 hard copy) Stability and variety – Products, organization and institutionalization in farm tourism Tourism Management 33(4). p.:895-909 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tourman.2011.08.015 4. RENTING H. SCHERMER M. ROSSI A. (2012) Building Food Democracy: Exploring Civic Food Networks and Newly Emerging Forms of Food Citizenship Int. Journal. of Sociology of Agriculture & Food, Vol. 19, No. 3, pp. 289307 5. LAMARQUE P.• TAPPEINER U.• TURNER C• STEINBACHER M BARDGETT R.• SZUKICS U.• SCHERMER •M. LAVOREL S. (2011) Stakeholder perceptions of grassland ecosystem services in relation to knowledge on soil fertility and biodiversity Regional Environmental Change Vol 11 http://www.springerlink.com/content/1436-3798/ 6. SCHERMER M. RENTING H. OSTINDIE H. (2011) Collective Farmers’ Marketing Initiatives in Europe: Diversity, Contextuality and Dynamics International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food Vol. 18 (1) pp 1-11 http://ijsaf.org/ 7. MEGYESI B. KELEMEN E. SCHERMER M. (2011) Social Capital as a Success Factor for Collective Farmers Marketing Initiatives International Journal of Sociology of Agriculture and Food Vol. 18 (1) pp 89-103 http://ijsaf.org/ 8. SCHERMER M. KIRCHENGAST Ch. PETIT S. MAGNIANI N. MIEVILLE-OTT V., (2010) Mobilizing and Managing Social Capital: On Roles and Responsibilities of Local Facilitators in Territorial Development Journal of Agricultural Education and Extension Vol 16(3) pp.:321-334 9. MATSCHER A. SCHERMER M. (2009) Zusatznutzen Berg: Argumente für den Konsum von Bergprodukten Agrarwirtschaft Jahrgang 58/2 S.:125-134 MAUREEN KILKENNY 2915 Susileen Dr Reno, NV 89509 USA e-mail: maureenkilkenny@gmail.com cell phone: +1 515 450 8991 Ph.D., Agricultural & Applied Economics, University of Minnesota, 1987 Current/recent appointments Senior Fellow, National Center for Food and Agricultural Policy (NCFAP), Washington, D.C. 2010-date. Honorary Professor, School of Management & Business, Aberystwth University of Wales, 2010-date. CiRCLE International Advisory Group, Lund University, Sweden, 2012-date. Visiting Professor, NCRRD, Michigan State University, 5/2011-11/2011. Professor (tenured), Department of Resource Economics, University of Nevada, through 6/2011. Associate Professor (tenured), Department of Economics, Iowa State University, through 6/2005. Professeur Invitée, Economics, Université de Toulouse, France: 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2006, 2013. Selected Awards Among the top ten internationally according to Google Scholar in all of her fields: regional science - rural development - banking and finance - computable general equilibrium Outstanding Article of the Year 2005, American Agricultural Economics Association. Outstanding Scholar Award, North American Regional Science Council, 2000. Outstanding Performance Award, USDA-ERS, 1987. Selected Publications Kilkenny, Maureen, and Nerys Fuller-Love (2013?) “Network Analysis and Business Networks” International Journal of Entrepreneurship & Small Business (in press). Calmette, Marie-Francoise and Maureen Kilkenny (2012) “Rural Roads versus African Famines” Annals of Regional Science 49(2):373-396. Monchuk, Daniel, Maureen Kilkenny, and Euan Phimister (2012) “Rural Homeownership and Labour Mobility in the U.S.” Regional Studies. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00343404.2012.661850 Irwin, Elena, Andrew Isserman, Maureen Kilkenny, and Mark Partridge (2010) “A Century of Research on Rural Development and Regional Issues” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 100th Anniversary Issue 92(2): 522–553. Kilkenny, Maureen (2010) “Urban/Regional Economics and Rural Development” Journal of Regional Science 50th Anniversary Issue 50(1) 449-470. Daniel, Karine and Maureen Kilkenny (2009) “Agricultural Subsidies and Rural Development” Journal of Agricultural Economics 60(3):504-529. Ahearn, Mary, Maureen Kilkenny, and Sarah Low (2009) “Trends and Volatility in School Finance” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 91(5):1201-1208. Kilkenny, Maureen and Mark Partridge (2009) “Export Sectors and Rural Development” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 91(4):910-929. Kilkenny, Maureen (2008) “Heteromorphous Community Networks” in Spatial Dispersed Production And Network Governance Invited Papers of the 11th Uddevalla Symposium 2008, edited by Irene Bernhard; Trollhattan : Department of Economics and IT, University West, Sweden. Huffman, Sonya and Maureen Kilkenny (2007) “Regional Welfare Program & Labor Force Participation” October 2012 Papers in Regional Science 86(2):215-239. Kilkenny, Maureen, and Robert Jolly (2005) "Are Rural Credit Markets Competitive? Is there room for competition in rural credit markets?" CHOICES 20(1): http://www.choicesmagazine.org/20051/lending/2005-1-06.htm. (Article of the Year, 2005) Kilkenny, Maureen and Sonya Huffman (2003) “Rural/Urban Welfare Program and Labor Force Participation” American Journal of Agricultural Economics November, 85(4):914-927. Daniel, Karine and Maureen Kilkenny (2002) “Découplage des aides directes à l’agriculture et localisation des activités”(Decoupled Subsidies & the Localization of Agriculture) Economie Internationale 91(3):73-92. Kilkenny, Maureen and Tigran Melkonyan (2002) “Local Fiscal Strategy to Retain Heterogeneous Firms,” Journal of Regional Science 42(4):753-772. Calmette, Marie-Françoise and Maureen Kilkenny (2002) “International Charity: For the Poor?” Economic Inquiry 40(3):497-507. Kilkenny, Maureen (2002) “The New Rural Economy” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 84(5):1253-1255. Kilkenny, Maureen (2002) “Community Credit” International Regional Science Review 25(3):247-251. Calmette, Marie-Françoise and Maureen Kilkenny (2001) “International Charity under Asymmetric Information” Economics Letters 74:107-111. Kilkenny, Maureen and Gerald Schluter (2001) “Value Added Agriculture Policies across the 50 States,” Rural America 16(1):12-18. http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/ruralamerica/ra161/ra161c.pdf Gale, Fred and Maureen Kilkenny (2000) “Agriculture’s Role Shrinks as the Service Economy Expands” Rural Conditions and Trends: Rural Industry 10(2) http://www.ers.usda.gov//epubs/pdf/rcat/rcat102/rcat102f.pdf. Kilkenny, Maureen (2000) “A Classroom Experiment about Tradable Permits” Review of Agricultural Economics 22(2):586-606. Kilkenny, Maureen , Helen Jensen, Steven Garasky, and Jennifer Olmsted (2000) “Welfare and Food Assistance at the State and Sub-state level: A Framework for Evaluating Economic and Programmatic Changes,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 82(3) August:649-655. Kilkenny, Maureen (1999) “Explicitly Spatial Rural-Urban Computable General Equilibrium,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 81(3)August:647-652. Kilkenny, Maureen (1999) “Interregional Fiscal Accounting ,” Growth and Change 30(4) Fall:567-589. Kilkenny, Maureen and Jacques Thisse, (1999) “The Economics of Location: A Selective Survey,” Computers and Operations Research 26(14):1369-1394. Kilkenny, Maureen, Laura Nalbarte and Terry Besser (1999) “Reciprocated Community Support and Small Town, Small Business Success,” Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, 11, August:231-246. Kilkenny, Maureen (1998) “Transport Costs, The New Economic Geography, and Rural Development” Growth and Change 29; Fall:259-280. 1 Kilkenny, Maureen (1998) “Transport Costs and Rural Development” Journal of Regional Science, 38(2): 293-312. Wohlgemuth, Darin and Maureen Kilkenny (1998) “Firm Relocation Threats and Copy Cat Costs” International Regional Science Review, 21(2):139-162. Kilkenny, Maureen and Dan Otto (1994) “A General Equilibrium Perspective on Structural Change in the Rural Economy,” American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 76(5)December: 1130-37. Kilkenny, Maureen (1993) “Rural vs. Urban Effects of Terminating Farm Subsidies,” American Journal 1 two years of citations to this paper alone earned Dr. Kilkenny a ranking as one of “the intellectual leaders of the 90s generation” Isserman, Andrew (2004) “Intellectual Leaders of Regional Science: A Half-Century Citation Study,” Papers in Regional Science 83(1):91-126. 2 October 2012 of Agricultural Economics, 75(4) , November: 968-980. Kilkenny, Maureen (1993) “Liberalization in Segmented or Integrated Markets, with Scale Economies” Journal of Economic Integration, 8(2)Autumn:210-218. Kilkenny, Maureen (1991)”Nonfarm Prospects Under Agricultural Liberalization” Journal of Agricultural Economics Research, Summer. Kilkenny, Maureen and Sherman Robinson (1990) “Computable General Equilibrium Analysis of Agricultural Liberalization: Factor Mobility and Macro Closure,” Journal of Policy Modeling, 12(3)Fall: 527-557. Kilkenny, Maureen (1990) “Differential Sectoral Productivity and the Real Exchange Rate: The U.S.” International Trade and Finance 1989 Proceedings:139-152. Invited Presentations outside USA “Ideas for Regional Social Network Analysis from the Hard Sciences” March 18, 2013; Jönköping International Business School, Jönköping, Sweden. “University Knowledge Transfer Activities: Best Practice Case Studies” March 20, 2013; Jönköping International Business School, Jönköping, Sweden. Keynote Speaker, 12th Uddevalla Symposium, “Network Analysis and Business Networks” June 14, 2012, Faro, Portugal. “Cool Tools and Network Analysis” workshop, Aberystwyth University of Wales, School of Management and Business, March 12, 2012, Aberystwyth, U.K. “Rural Homeownership and Labour Mobility in the U.S.,” seminar, Aberystwyth University of Wales, School of Management and Business, March 23, 2011, Aberystwyth, U.K. “Rural Roads versus African Famines,” seminar, Aberystwyth University of Wales, School of Management and Business, May 14, 2010, Aberystwyth, U.K. “A Century of Research on Rural Development and Regional Issues” Public Lecture, Aberystwyth University of Wales, School of Management and Business, May 12, 2010, Aberystwyth, U.K. “The Gains from Region-wide Investment in Transport” with Marie-Francoise Calmette, The World Bank International Conference on Infrastructure Economics and Development, Toulouse, France; January 14-15, 2010. Expert Consultation, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) “Experimentalist, Structural, and Reduced-form Approaches to Rural Development Policy Evaluation” at the Workshop “Aiding the Process of Agricultural Policy Reform: Evaluation of Public Policies for Rural Development” June 15-16, 2009; Paris, France. Keynote speaker, Uddevalla Symposium “Heteromorphous Community Networks,” May 15-17, 2008; Kyoto. Japan. Keynote Lecture, TERA (Territorial Aspects of Enterprise Development in Remote Rural Areas; European Union 6th Framework Programme) Conference “Rural Development Policy: A Coordination Challenge,” October 18-19, 2007; Ferrara, Italy. Keynote Address, OECD Workshop: “The Coherence of Agricultural and Rural Development Policies,” entitled “The Relationship between the Agro-food Sector and the Rural Economy in OECD Countries,” Bratislava, Slovakia; October 24-26, 2005. Open City Certification (OCC) Project with John Bryden, Sandra de Carlo, Priscilla Salant, and Nonita Yapp Fondazione Oasi Citta Aperta, Troina, Sicily; June, 2004. Agricultural Economics Society Annual Conference; London, England; April 2, 2004 Plenary Address: “Geography, Agriculture, and Rural Development.” Université of Paris I (Sorbonne) for the Commissariat General du Plan (Planning Commission of France) workshop: Barriers to Trade, Agriculture, and Public Procurement: Three Sensitive Issues Moliets, France, June 7-10, 2001. Paper: “Quality versus Quantity: Idle Resources and Scale Effects.” The Arkleton Centre, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, May 24, 2001, visiting scholar lectures: 3 October 2012 “Quality versus Quantity: Idle Resources and Scale Effects;” May 31, 2001: “Rural-Urban Labor Force and Welfare Program Participation.” The Macaulay Land Use Institute, Aberdeen Scotland, May 28, 2001: “Keystone Sector Identification.” The Tinbergen Institute (Free University of Amsterdam), Amsterdam, The Netherlands, May 22-23, 2000; Workshop: Entrepreneurship, ICT, and Local Policy Initiatives: Comparative Analyses and Lessons, invited paper: “Community Networks for Industrial Recruiting.” National Science Foundation Symposium on Analytic Economic Geography, U. Connecticut, Storrs, CN; March 1998 “Economic Geography for Low Density Places.” Agrarian Institute, Moscow , Russia, May 26, 1997”Agricultural Trade Policy Analysis.” Moscow State University, Dept. of Economics, Moscow, Russia , May 27, 1997.”U.S. Farmers and Price Instability.” Institute for USA and Canada, Moscow, Russia; May 28, 1997,”US Agricultural Price Stabilization Policy.” Universite de Toulouse, (France) Faculte des Sciences Sociales, April 1997; “Horizontally Diversified Fiscal Policies vs Firm Relocation Threats,” “Experimental Market: Permits for Spatial Externalities.” Katholike Universitat, Leuven, (Belgium) Dept. of Agricultural Economics, March 1997; “Three Stinky Problems and a Tradable Permits Solution” Faculté des Sciences Sociales, Université de Toulouse April 1, 1996; “Firm Relocation Threats and Copy Cat Costs.” International Association of Agricultural Economists (IAAE) Interconference Symposium Agricultural Economics Educational and Research Agenda for Nations in Transition Oct. 11-16, 1993 Kiev, Ukraine; “Teaching Market Capitalism Without Selfishness.” European Association of Agricultural Economists (EAAE) 31st annual meeting, Dec. 7-9, 1992; Goethe Institute, Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Plenary session invited paper: “Agricultural Liberalization in Segmented or Integrated Markets in the Presence of Scale Economies” Ministry of Finance, Republic of Indonesia, Jakarta, May 14, 1992; Panel presentation: “On Indonesia's Recent Trade Policies.” Major Contract Research since 2003 “Enhancing Rural Development Technology Assessment and Adoption through Land Grant Partnerships” North Central Regional Center for Rural Development, Michigan State University; May October, 2011; Sole Principal Investigator, $60,000. “Calf Timing in the Great Basin” Nevada Arid Rangeland Initiative, 7//2010 – 2011; Project Director/Principal Investigator, $62,566. “Policies to Enhance Rural Incomes and the Quality of Life” American Enterprise Institute, Washington, D.C. 6/06-6/07, Sole Principal Investigator, $10,000. “Network Analysis for Communities,” U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, National Research Initiative 12/0212/05. Project Director, $111,000. “Geography of Rural Financial Intermediation,” U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, National Research Initiative 10/99-10/04, sole principal investigator; $165,000. “Value-added Agriculture as a Rural Development Strategy,” U.S. Dept. of Agriculture/Economic Research Service Co-operative Agreement 10/98-10/03; sole principal investigator. $60,000. “Welfare and Food Assistance at the State level: Methods and Iowa Estimates” U.S. Dept. of Agriculture/Economic Research Service Co-operative Agreement 12/98-12/03. co-principal investigator with Helen Jensen and Steve Garasky, $233,170. 4 Prof David Miller Prof David Miller Qualifications BSc (Hons) Topographic Science (1984), PhD Mathematics (1993) Employment history 2011-present 2008-2011 2003-2008 1984-2003 Grade G, Research Theme Leader Grade F, Science Group Leader, MLURI Band 4, Senior Researcher, MLURI SO, HSO and SSO, Researcher, MLURI Role Research Theme Leader, Realising Land’s Potential Coordinator of Scottish Government Strategic Land Use Theme Coordinator of external contracts Convenor of Scottish Government Renewable Energy Topic and Consultative Group Responsibilities Lead and shape the direction and content of Institute Theme: Realising Land’s Potential Contribute to the direction and management of the James Hutton Institute Engage with stakeholders in policy, business and practice through convenorships of Scottish Government groups and public service bodies Develop and coordinate project proposals from European, national and private sector bodies Design and implement knowledge exchange activities to institute and theme target audiences Synopsis of current research, achievements and future direction I am responsible for co-ordination of research and commercial projects within the remit of the Realising Land’s Potential (RLP) research theme. The Theme seeks to understand the delivery of ecosystem services through multifunctional uses of rural and urban land, and providing methods for future-proofing decisions by strategic and local planners, land managers and businesses, internationally, regionally and locally. My external responsibilities include chairing public forums on land use and planning for local authorities, reflecting institutional relevance and independence, and since 2012 an advisor to the Scottish Government Land Reform Review Group. Undertaking these responsibilities also reflects the increasing importance to the principal funders (Scottish Government) of closer engagement and codevelopment of products with stakeholders with responsibilities for policy and practice. My institutional role in delivering policy impact is as convenor of the consultative groups on Land Use and Renewable Energy, comprising representatives from Scottish Government, its agencies and business. Such fora provide contexts for development of our research in land use and renewable energy, and settings for the research questions in the research programme. My research background has included the development of methods for handling and analysing geographic information, using them to map, monitor and model change in urban and rural land use and landscapes, mapping peat deposits in Scotland, the creation of natural resource databases (e.g. land cover), and visual impacts of land use change. My current interests are on understanding the landscape preferences of different types of stakeholder with respect to characteristics of cultural landscapes, the implications for multifunctional land uses, and their incorporation into planning. This work takes account of the context of past and present land uses, and 1 Prof David Miller scenarios of future landscapes in the testing of public preferences with a view to understanding the significance of individual drivers of change on characteristics of landscapes. Such These studies make extensive use of spatial analysis of landscape characteristics and visualisation tools, both stand alone and our mobile virtual reality theatre, with particular interest in enabling the development of visions of future land uses, rural and urban by stakeholders and the public. The development of these tools increasingly involves the combination of spatial modelling outputs with virtual reality, to provide augmented reality tools for both research and knowledge exchange. Research applications include renewable energy, and rural and urban spatial land use planning. The direction of this research is to explore spatial and temporal pathways of change, and public perspectives on the evolution of land uses and landscapes into the future. Most projects in which I participate are multior interdisciplinary in nature, with collaborations across a range of disciplines, internal and external to the institute. In particular my research involves close working in teams comprising the social and natural sciences, which is also reflected in most of my research proposals, RESAS research activities, and papers. Examples of such studies are the recent study of the Effects of Greenspace on Human Health and Well-being (Scottish Government, GreenHealth), and Visualization Tools for Public Participation in the Management of Landscape Change (EU, VisuLands). Projects starting in 2013 on the impacts of rural development programmes on public goods, spatial databases in relation to security and investigations, and popularising European landscape policy provide complementary opportunities to further scientific challenges in the measurement, monitoring and communication of characteristics of land use and landscape change in different international contexts. Measures of esteem Advisor to Scottish Government Land Reform Review Group (2012-present) Convenor, Aberdeen City Council Community Planning Partnership Land Use Forum (2004-2011) and Greener Theme (2011-present) Keynote speaker, International Congress on Environmental Modelling and Software, Leipzig, Germany (2012) Member, Scottish Government Agri-renewables Strategy Consultative Group (2011-present) Selected competitive funding (1 July 2007 to August 2013) 2013-2015: Development and application of new methodological framework for the evaluation of environmental impacts of rural development programmes in the EU (ENVIEVAL). European Union, FP7-KBBE-2012-6. Miller (D), Aalders, Munoz Rojas, Morrice, Horne. 2013-2014: Making European Policy Popular through Challenge, Learning, Innovation, Cooperation: An experiment on the Landscape Convention. (E-CLIC). European Union, KA3ICT MP_EE_EUPO_EUPOL. Miller (D), Aalders, Munoz Rojas, Morrice, Horne, Wang, DonaldsonSelby. 2013-2015: The Development and Validation of Microbial Soil Community Analyses for Forensics Purposes (MiSafe). European Union, SEC-2012.7.2-1. Dawson, Miller (D), Morrice, Freitag, Ross. 2013-2015: Enhancing the resilience capacity of sensitive mountain forest ecosystems under environmental change, COST ACTION, European Union. 2011-2013: Establishment and management of a Scottish soils database (SSDW). Scottish Government. Miller (D), Bell, Black, Coull, Donnelly, Hudson, Lilly, Nolan, Towers. 2009-2010: Scotland & Northern Ireland Forum for Environmental Research. Impacts of biomass and bioenergy crops. Scottish and Northern Ireland Forum for Environmental Research. 2 Prof David Miller Booth, Brown, Miller (D), Pajot, Towers. 2009: Social science-climate change-forestry. Forestry Commission. Nijnik, Craig, Dunglinson, Miller (D), Pajot, Slee, Xu. Total value £25,000; Hutton value £25,000 2009: Rural land use study: Project 1. Scottish Government. Scottish Government. Miller (D), Blackstock, Buchan, Donnelly, Matthews (K), McCrum, Miller, Sutherland. 2008-2013: The contribution of green and open space in public health and well-being (The effect of the environment on human health (EHH) initiative). Scottish Government. Miller (D), Brown, Cummins, Dilley, Dinnie, Donaldson-Selby, Donnelly, Gilbert, Hester, Horne, Marshall (K), McKeen, Messager, Miller, Morrice, Morris, Wang. 2008-2011: Model ecosystem framework project - Phase 1. Scottish Government. Aspinall, Black, Blackstock, Brown, Carnegie, Cooksley, Ferrier, Gimona, Glenk, Emily Hastings, Hester, Langan, Matthews (K), Miller (D), Milne, Pakeman. 2008-2009: Landscape sensitivity - wind turbines. The Highland Council. Miller (D), Horne, McKeen, Morrice. 2008: An implementation test on Forest species discrimination, disease indication and canopy closure. British National Space Centre. Miller (D), Donnelly, Hooper, Messager, Miller, Morrice. 2003-2007: Visualisation tools for public participation in managing landscape change. European Union. Miller (D), Ball, Horne, Law, McKeen, Messager, Morrice, Schwarz. Postgraduate student supervision Supervised PhD: 10 completed Examined PhD: 15 Selected publications (2007 – 2013) 1. Roe, J.J., Ward Thompson, C., Aspinall, P.A., Brewer, M.J., Duff, E.I., Miller, D., Mitchell, R. & Clow, A. 2013. Green Space and Stress: Evidence from Cortisol Measures in Deprived Urban Communities. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 10(9), 40864103. 2. Nijnik, M., Miller, D. & Nijnik, A. 2013. Linking Multi-Functional Forestry Goals with Sustainable Development Objectives: A Multi-National Q-Study. Journal of Settlements and Spatial Planning. 185-190. 3. Ward Thompson, C., Roe, J., Aspinall, P., Mitchell, R., Clow, A. & Miller, D.R. 2012. More green space is linked to less stress in deprived communities: evidence from salivary cortisol patterns. Landscape and Urban Planning 105, 221-229. 4. Nijnik, M., Miller, D.R., Nijnik, A., Fiorini, S., Vogt, N., Brondizio, E. & Morrice, J.G. 2011. Public participation for planning the sustainable use of natural resources and landscape changes. International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences 5, 303-320. 5. Ode, A. & Miller, D.R. 2011. Analysing the relationship between indicators of landscape complexity and preference. Environment and Planning B 38, 24-40. 6. Kerlin, D., Thirgood, S., Miller, D.R., Aebischer, N., Smith, A. & Haydon, D. 2010. State dependent dynamics of cycles in red grouse abundance. Ecography 33, 896-905. 7. Nayak, D.R., Miller, D.R., Nolan, A.J., Smith, P. & Smith, J.U. 2010. Calculating carbon budgets of wind farms on Scottish peatlands. Mires and Peat 4, 1-23. 8. Barclay, A.D., Dawson, L.A., Donnelly, L.J., Miller, D.R., Ritz, K. 2009. Soils in forensic science: underground meets underworld. In: Ritz, K., Dawson, L.A. & Miller, D.R. (eds.). Criminal and Environmental Forensics. Springer, Dordrecht, Chapter 32, 501-514. 9. Coleby, A.M., Miller, D.R. & Aspinall, P.A. 2009. Public attitudes and community participation in windfarm development: strategic environmental assessment of renewable energy in Scotland. VDM Verlag, 424pp. 3 Prof David Miller 10. Coleby, A.M., Miller, D.R. & Aspinall, P.A. 2009. Public attitudes and participation in wind turbine development. Journal of Environmental Assessment Policy and Management 11, 69-95. 11. Laing, R., Davies, A.M., Miller, D.R., Conniff, A., Scott, S. & Morrice, J.G. 2009. The application of visual environmental economics in the study of public preference and urban greenspace. Environment and Planning B 36, 355-375. 12. Miller, D.R., Vogt, N., Nijnik, M., Brondizio, E. & Fiorini, S. 2009. Integrating analytical and participatory techniques for planning the sustainable use of land resources and landscapes. In: Geertman, S.C.M. & Stillwell, J. (eds.). Planning Support Systems: New Methods and Best Practice. Advances in Spatial Science, Springer, New York, 317-345. 13. Ode, A., Fry, G., Tveit, M., Messager, P. & Miller, D.R. 2009. Indicators of perceived naturalness as drivers of landscape preference. Journal of Environmental Management 90, 375-383. 14. Ritz, K., Dawson, L.A., Miller, D.R. (eds.) 2009. Criminal and Environmental Soil Forensics. Springer, Dordrecht, 519pp. 15. Hetherington, D.A., Miller, D.R., Macleod, C.D. & Gorman, M.L. 2008. A potential habitat network for the Eurasian lynx in Scotland. Mammal Review 38, 285-303. 16. Oom, S.P., Sibbald, A.M., Hester, A.J., Miller, D.R. & Legg, C.J. 2008. Impacts of sheep grazing a complex vegetation mosaic: relating behaviour to vegetation change. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 124, 219-228. 17. Sang, N., Ode, A., Miller, D.R. 2008. Landscape metrics and visual topology in the analysis of landscape preference. Environment and Planning B 35, 504-520. 18. Aitkenhead, M.J., Lumsdon, P. & Miller, D.R. 2007. Remote sensing-based neural network mapping of tsunami damage in Aceh, Indonesia. Disasters 31, 217-226. 19. Miller, D.R., Morrice, J.G., Coleby, A. & Messager, P. 2007. Visualization techniques to support planning of renewable energy developments. In: Lovett, A. & Appleton, K. (eds.). GIS for Environmental Decision Making. Innovations in GIS Series, CRC Press, London, 227-239. 20. Nijnik, M., Miller, D.R., Nijnik, A. & Morrice, J.G. 2007. Multi-functional landscapes in Scotland. In: Pedroli, B., van Doorn, A. & de Blust, G. (eds.). Europe's Living Landscapes: Essays Exploring our Identity in the Countryside. KNNV Publications, 105-123. 21. Kerlin, D.H., Haydon, D.T., Miller, D.R., Aebischer, N.J., Smith, A.A. & Thirgood, S.J. 2007. Spatial synchrony in red grouse population dynamics, Oikos. 116, 2007-2016. 4 Suggested referees for AGRISPACE Assoc.Prof. Ika Darnhofer Institute of Agricultural and Forestry Economics Department of Economic and Social Sciences BOKU - Univ. of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences Feistmantelstr. 4 A-1180 Vienna, Austria Tel: + 43 1 47654-3587 ika.darnhofer@boku.ac.at Professor Mark Shucksmith Director, Newcastle Institute for Social Renewal Newcastle Institute for Social Renewal Claremont Tower Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU Telephone: 0191 222 6942 mark.shucksmith@ncl.ac.uk Associate professor Anne Gravsholt Busck Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management, Section of Geography Øster voldgade 10 1350 København K Office: 6.0.637 Phone: +45 353-22564 E-mail: agb@geo.ku.dk Department ofSociology Universitätsst rasse 15 A-6020 Inn sbruek Te l: 0512/507-5690 Fax: 507-2841 e-mail: rnarkll s.schermer@ llibk.ac.at ao. Univ. Prof. Oe Marklls Schellner To whom it may concern Innsbruck J .9.20 13 This is to con firm thaI, Prof. Markus Schenne r from the Departt)lent cf Sociology at the University of Innsbruck will be aetl ve Jy engaged in the proposed re search project submitted to the Research Council of Norwa y by the Centre for Rural ReseClrch (CRR) entitled " Space, land and society: cha llenge s and opportu nilies for producti on and innova tion in agriculture based value ehai ns (AGRISPACE), " Prof Schermer will provi<.le expert knowledge in relation sludy in WP4 wilh expericnces and research in Austria. 10 lhe compari so n o f Norwegian He amI hi s research group o n "R ural Changes" will participate in collective workshops with the Norwegian team and pro vidc delta for parallel in vestigations 10 Norwegian cases in Allstri a. FlIrt hermore the working group ··Rural Changes" is prepared to exchange personnel and aClively engage in resean.:h processes in Norway. bringing into the discussion s relevant background from the Austrian situatio n Prof. Schermer and members of his group "viII also participate (nost acti ve ly in terms of wriling arlicles for inlel11alional publicalio n as we il as pal1icipate in worksho ps and o ther eve nts sponsored by AG RI SPACE. Sincere l)'. Markus S,.,">"ner RE P O T I (R YI S E A R ( H EuroCAREGmbHI Buntspechtweg22 | D-53123Bonn Hilde Bjorkhaug Bygdeforskning Dragvoll Universitetssenteret Trondheirn N0-7491 Norwav Regional EuropeanCentrefor Agricultural, PolicyResearch and Environmental GmbH EuToCARE Buntspechtweg22 D - 5 3 1 2 3B o n n f el.: +49-228-732 916 Fax: +49-228-982 29-23 peter.witzke@eu rocare-bonn.de Bonn,28.August2013 Letter of confirmation land and society: Hereby, we confinn our interestto participate in the project <,,Space, challengesand opportunitiesfor production and innovation in agriculture basedvalue chains (AGRISPACE)Dsubmitted to the ResearchCouncil of Norway by the Centre for Rural Research. According to the project proposal, our contribution will be related to WP 4.3 Value chains. We will provide expert knowledge on the developmentof methodsto calibrate the supply side of the agricultural sectorrnodel Jordrnodand participate actively in writing articles for internationalpublication. We will also host a PhD candidatefor up to one year as part of the project. Our contribution is estimatedto be around NKR 400.000 for the project period . 1.1.20r4-3r.r2.20r7 International cooperationis a strategicobjective for our team. We regard the abovementionedactivity as an important opportunity to continue and expand our successful cooperationwith the Centre for Rural Researchin the areaof agricultural policy analysis. Yours 1 2 3B o n n (ProfJDr.+Fld0|WHteRe{G D GeschäftsführerDr- Heinz Peter Witzke Dr. MarcelAdenäuer.Prof.Dr. ThomasHeckelei HRB 8733 AmtsgerichtBonn UmsatzsteuerlD Nr. DE 207117277 Deutsche BankBonn,BLZ38070059 Konto0310292 |BANDE76380700590031029200 SWIFTDEUTDEDK3SO To: Dr. Hilde Bjørkhaug Centre for Rural Research (CRR), Trondheim, NORWAY. From: Professor Hugh Campbell, HOD, Sociology, Gender and Social Work, University of Otago. 2 September To whom it may concern, In my capacity as Head of Department of Sociology, Gender and Social Work, I am writing to confirm that the potential for collaboration in the AGRISPACE project is exciting and has my full support. I am happy offer myself as a collaborator in the proposed research project submitted to the Research Council of Norway by the Centre for Rural Research (CRR) entitled: “Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE)”. I am happy to provide expert knowledge in relation to discussions taking place in the project and participate in workshops and other events sponsored by AGRISPACE. I look forward to future discussions about specific tasks relating to my involvement once the project has been funded. In return, I am very happy to host visiting scholars or postgraduates working in the AGRISPACE project to visit my Department and also visit the Centre for Sustainability: Agriculture, Food, Energy, Environment (CSAFE) at the University of Otago. Sincerely, Prof Hugh Campbell, Head of Department, Sociology, Gender and Social Work, University of Otago, NEW ZEALAND. National Center for Food and Agricultural Policy 1616 P St NW Suite 100 Washington, DC 20036 +1 (202) 328-5048 To: Centre for Rural Research post@rural.no N-7491 Trondheim University Centre Dragvoll, Dragvoll Idrettssenter, Loholt allé 81, Dragvoll, NORWAY + 47 73 59 17 29 September 1, 2013 To whom it may concern, This is to confirm that I, Maureen Kilkenny, will be actively engaged in the proposed research project submitted to the Research Council of Norway by the Centre for Rural Research (CRR) entitled “Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE).” I will provide expert knowledge in relation to the study in WP3 and WP4. For WP3 I will contribute spatial general equilibrium models for spatial analysis for WP4 regarding the four thematic areas. A relatively unique effort will entail linking within-period economic spatial equilibrium with the Bayesian forecasting and dynamic state-space formalizations prepared by lead researchers in this project. We will explore the dynamic interactions and correlations between indicators within the different regions studied. The collaboration should reveal the likely effects of regionally differentiated policies and inform how to tailor those policies to better achieve the country’s goals. I will contribute my expertise as a highly-cited general equilibrium modeller of the economic linkages and processes between and within multiple heterogeneous sub national regions of open economies. I am adept at writing both heuristic models and simulation models calibrated to detailed data for policy analysis. Another unique aspect of my expertise is the ability to model the sources or reasons for market failures--resource immobility, externalities, fixed costs and other barriers to entry, market power, and other indivisibilities – that lead citizens to seek nonmarket (policy) solutions in the first place (see the journal articles in my CV, for example, Daniel & Kilkenny JAE). I will participate actively by collaborating on model construction, writing articles for international publications, as well as participating in workshops and other events sponsored by AGRISPACE. Sincerely, Maureen Kilkenny NCFAP Senior Fellow maureenkilkenny@gmail.com landline: +1 775 322 8602, cell: +1 515 450 8991 3rd September 2013 To whom it may concern Letter of Support: Skogoglandskap This is to confirm that I, Professor David Miller of the James Hutton Institute in Aberdeen, will be actively engaged in the proposed research project submitted to the Research Council of Norway by the Centre for Rural Research (CRR) entitled “Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains (AGRISPACE).” As Research theme Leader for Realising Land's Potential at the James Hutton Institute I see promising links for elaborating area of joint interest as part of this collaboration. Having worked on a range of topics relating to landscape change, including extensive work in stakeholder engagement, I anticipate being able to share the experiences of my research team with the Norwegian team. Having previously collaborated in joint research activities with the NFLI team I look forward to this opportunity to further develop the link between our two institutes. Primarily, the planned collaboration between the project team and I will be organized through joint workshops. Key issues for the collaboration are in deciding on data capture and analyses related to WP 4.1 on land resources and, if relevant, participating as a coauthor on publications which are derived from this work. Yours sincerely, Professor David Miller Research Theme Leader Realising Land’s Potential AGRISPACE prosjektsammendrag Samfunn, areal og sted: Utfordringer og muligheter for produksjon og innovasjon i landbruksbaserte verdikjeder (Space, land and society: challenges and opportunities for production and innovation in agriculture based value chains: AGRISPACE) Å øke norsk matproduksjon i takt med en forventet befolkningsøkning på 20 prosent de neste 20 årene er både et samfunnsmessig og politisk mål. Innovasjon og integrasjon innenfor alle sektorer av bioøkonomien, og i alle regioner i Norge, er nødvendig for å nå dette målet (LMD 2011). Disse målene kan imidlertid være motstridende. Bak målet om produksjonsvekst ligger et sett av samfunnsmessige utfordringer, der den nasjonale matutryggheten kan forsterkes av en kombinasjon av global befolkningsvekst, miljøødeleggelser, klimaendringer og endringer i markeds- og eierinteresser i landbrukets verdikjeder. Effektene av disse utfordringene for norsk bioproduksjon vil etter all sannsynlighet være betydelig, men konsekvensene for Norge vil variere i ulike områder (BIONÆR 2012-20120). Det overordnede målet i AGRISPACE er å fremskaffe kunnskap om utfordringer og muligheter for bærekraftig vekst i produksjon og innovasjon i landbaserte verdikjeder i ulike regioner av Norge. Gjennom tverrfaglig forskning og innovative og ambisiøse metoder for stedlig analyse vil AGRISPACE utforske fire gjensidig avhengige tematiske områder: 1. Stedlig variasjon og betydningen av denne for jordbruksproduksjon og utnytting av arealressursene 2. Stedlig variasjon og betydningen av denne for ulike typer produksjoner 3. Faktorer og forhold som kan fremme eller begrense verdiskaping i landbruksbaserte verdikjeder i ulike regioner 4. Mål og målkonflikter i landbrukspolitikken og de politiske virkemidlene, inkludert en diskusjon av ulike utviklingsbaner eller scenarier for norsk landbruk. For å styrke det bioøkonomiske fundamentet i landbruksbaserte produksjoner vil AGRISPACE evaluere effektene av disse fire områdene. Et tverrfaglig og internasjonalt forskerteam vil arbeide i AGRISPACE. Prosjektet vil søke å frembringe ny og nødvendig kunnskap om hva som stimulerer til vekst i landbruksbaserte næringer, og gi etterspurt fersk kunnskap for politiske myndigheter om regulering og effektiv bruk av virkemidler tilpasset landbruksproduksjon i ulike deler av Norge. Prosjektet er et samarbeid mellom Norsk senter for bygdeforskning (søker), NILF, Norsk institutt for skog og landskap, Bioforsk, Veterinærinstituttet og Institutt for sosiologi og statsvitenskap ved NTNU. Prosjektet vil også dra stor nytte av samarbeid med anerkjente forskere og forskningsmiljø i Tyskland, Østerrike, Skottland, USA og New Zealand.