2012-06-11 13:41:54

Ms Giulia Wegner

Kaplan Scholar

A fascination with the complex relationships that exist between people and the natural environment led me to a career at the interface between the natural and the social sciences. In 2004 I gained a first class joint BSc in Environmental Sciences & Development Studies from the University of East London, UK.

This led to a series of positions with local and international development and conservation organisations, mainly in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2001-3 I coordinated a project for the sustainable harvesting and preservation of edible forest products for increased food security in rural Zambia. In 2005-6 I was responsible for Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund (CEPF)-funded biodiversity surveys in the Eastern Arc and Coastal Forest biodiversity hotspot of Tanzania. I also co-developed a Commonwealth Development Corporation (CDC) - funded plan for sustainable timber-planting among indigenous forests and elephant routes. In 2007 I returned to Italy, my home country, where I co-designed an EU-funded multi-country project on improved management of low-input farming systems. I also became a consultant for Bioversity International, for which I revised a project on neglected agricultural species in Yemen, and developed a database on traditional crops and edible wild plants of Italy.

I returned to full-time education in 2008 and gained a first class MPhil in Land Economy from the University of Cambridge, UK.  Here I deepened my interest in the social and institutional aspects of natural resource management.  My thesis focused on the application of the ecosystem service framework to environmental policy-making and sustainability markets.

In October 2009 I joined WildCRU to read for a DPhil on the effectiveness of Community-Based Natural Resources Management (CB-NRM) for wildlife conservation, poverty alleviation and social justice.  One focus of this research is on the conservation of large felids in sub-Saharan Africa.

If all livelihoods were secure and all nature was intact, I would happily dedicate my days to contemporary and afro dance and choreographing. In Zambia I established a performing company for HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention. Based on the work of this group, I edited the documentary-film The Cemetery of Flowers, which in 2007 won the Creative Media Competition of the EU Virus Free Generation campaign.  I have also performed as a dancer for Oxford's Ballet in Small Places.

Two fantastic adopted children from Zambia occupy most of my free time.

Publications


Wegner, G. 2011. Democratic Representation and Deliberative Participation in Community-Based Natural REsource Management (CB-NRM): do they lead to improved conservation and development outcomes?  Cross-national comparative analyses and field experiments from Tanzania. Doctoral Thesis Research Plan.

Wegner, G., Pascual, U. 2011. Cost-benefit analysis in the context of ecosystem services for human well-being: A multidisciplinary critique. Global Environmental Change 21: 492-504.

Wegner, G., Howell, K.M., Davenport, T., and Burgess, N. 2009. The forgotten 'Coastal Forests' of Mtwara, Tanzania - A biologically impoverished and yet important ecosystem. Journal of Eastern Africa Natural History 98(2): 167-209.


Research Interests

Rural development; deliberative democracy; political ecology; ecological and institutional economics; sustainable agriculture; markets for ecosystem services; climate change mitigation.


Publications

Cost-benefit analysis in the context of ecosystem services for human well-being: A multidisciplinary critique

The Forgotten "Coastal Forests" of Mtwara, Tanzania: A Biologically Impoverished and Yet Important Ecosystem

















Giulia