ICTA-UAB is seeking a Postdoctoral Researcher.
We are seeking to appoint a Postdoctoral researcher to work on the ERC Synergy “Land and life in the Anthropocene: Landscape reform (LAND) – EA621838”. The aim of the project is to elaborate new approaches to ‘more-than-human landscape reform’ to meet Anthropocene challenges focusing on climate, biodiversity, food and infrastructure, and their interconnections, making use of the 4Ps framework outlined in the project summary below.
Project summary
How can we learn to live on earth in new ways? This is the challenge of the Anthropocene. We propose a novel 4Ps framework to investigate land–life dynamics, which, for the first time, will connect perspectives on human–nonhuman relations (Partners), property-making (Property), land regimes (Profit) and land–climate systems (Planet). We will draw on critical perspectives from both environmental humanities and agrarian studies, bringing together diverse traditions from human–nonhuman anthropology, geography, political ecology and economy, ecological economics and complex systems thinking in a unique interdisciplinary synthesis. Connecting land and life, this project will address four Anthropocene challenges – climate, biodiversity, food and infrastructure/investment – through four exemplar landscape cases in the Colombian Amazon, southern African savannas, Spanish Mediterranean plains and coastal Southeast Asia. The core team (Jun Borras, Esteve Corbera, Ian Scoones and Anna Tsing) bring a range of expertise and experience that, together with seven postdoctoral and eight PhD researchers, can form the foundation for radically rethinking how we conceptualise land–life relations in the Anthropocene. We have designed a collaborative project organization and process for working together that will promote synergistic conceptual and methodological breakthroughs, while building the capacity of researchers to engage with Anthropocene challenges through a novel framework. Engaging with policymakers, social movements and local communities, our public action work will in turn lead to practical approaches to ‘landscape reform’, where new ways of living in the Anthropocene are imagined and elaborated.
We are looking for a collegial and creative Postdoctoral researcher with a multidisciplinary background and expertise in land-use telecoupled systems, willing to explore complex relationships within and across the four landscape cases of the LAND project, using both quantitative and qualitative research approaches.