Contributing Authors

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Contributing Authors | 429 CONTRIBUTING AUTHORS Marc Antrop ([email protected]) is professor in landscape science at the department of Geography of Ghent University, Belgium, and vice-president of the Royal Commission for the protection of landscapes in Flanders. Olivier Aznar is a researcher in economics at Cemagref, Metafort research unit in Clermont-Ferrand, France. He is specialised in economic analysis of environmental services in rural areas. Paolo Baldeschi ([email protected]) is professor at the Department of Town and Territory Planning of the University of Florence, Italy. He was in charge of the “Chianti Landscape Programme”, which in 2001 was awarded the “Mediterranean Landscape Prize”. Filipe Barroso has a degree in Biology at Aveiro University and a Msc in Conservation Biology at Évora University, Portugal. Olaf Bastian ([email protected]) is a landscape ecologist at the Saxon Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Leipzig, Germany. He is engaged in landscape analysis and planning, nature conservation, biotope mapping and agri-environmental measures. Freda Bunce, a graduate scientist, writer, linguist, and published poet, is much involved in landscape ecol- ogy and has edited environmental/ecological texts for over thirty years. Tom Bloemers ([email protected]) is emeritus professor of archaeological heritage management at the Amsterdam Archaeological Centre at the University of Amsterdam. Geert de Blust ([email protected]) is a scientific staff member in the department Ecosystems of the Research Institute for Nature and Forest. He specialized in landscape and heathland ecology, biodiversity of the wider countryside and nature management. Jesper Brandt is professor in Geography at Roskilde University, Denmark. His academic career includes research in landscape ecology, in later years focusing on landscape multifunctionality. Milena Dneboska studied landscape architecture in the Lednice rural area (Czech Republic) and has a Msc on preservation of landscape heritage at Évora University, Portugal. Piotr Dziamski is a Msc student at the University of Agriculture and Life Sciences in Bydgoszcz, Poland and currently works as a trainee at Alterra, The Netherlands. Anne van Doorn ([email protected]) worked in Portugal on her PhD about Mediterranean landscape changes and is currently researcher at Alterra, the Netherlands. David Eagar ([email protected]) initiated the English landscape study that in 1991 recommend- ed landscape character assessment. He devised the Welsh landscape information system and set up the Cardiff European Landscape Conference in 2005. Veerle van Eetvelde is senior research assistant specialised in landscape mapping and characterisation at the department of Geography of the Ghent University in Belgium. Ramon Elena-Rosselló, formerly research scientist at INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Agrarias), is currently professor in Forest Ecology at Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. Fabien Guerreiro, Msc geography, is cartographer at the Metafort research unit, ENITA Clermont Ferrand, France. He analysis the location of Saint-Nectaire cheese production. Ybele Hoogeveen is animal ecologist and is employed by the European Environment Agency as project manager nature protection and biodiversity Zita Izakovičová ([email protected]) is a senior scientist at the Institute of Landscape Ecology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava. Her scientific work includes integrated landscape manage- ment and cultural landscapes. Thanasis Kizos ([email protected]) is a Lecturer of Rural Geography in the Department of Geography of the University of the Aegean, Greece. He works on landscape change, ‘traditional’ Aegean landscapes, rural development, insularity and rural tourism. Marju Kõivupuu has a PhD in ethnology from Tallinn University, Estonia, and works there as a researcher in the Centre for Landscape and Culture. 430 | Éva Konkoly-Gyuró ([email protected]) graduated in landscape architecture has a PhD in landscape history. She is an associate professor in environmental and landscape history, policy and management at the University of West Hungary since 1995. Marge Konsa is currently working on her Msc in archaeology at University of Tartu, Estonia, her research focuses on social archaeology, cultural analysis and burial customs of Iron Age. Maria Koulouri has a PhD in agro-ecosystems management from the University of the Aegean and works at the Natural History Museum on Lesvos Island, Greece. Valter Lang has a PhD in archaeology and works at the University of Tartu, Estonia as a professor of archae- ology. He works on landscape archaeology and the history of agriculture Paolo Lassini ([email protected]) is an agronomist and forestry scientist. His is engaged in the coordination of agro-forestry and environmental works as head of the the landscape and rural area sector of the Regione Lombardia, Italy. Lydie Menadier is a MSc geography student in Clermont Ferrand, France. Her research is centred on land- scape analysis linked with region-specific products. Johan Meeus ([email protected]) studied landscape architecture at Wageningen University, The Neth- erlands and runs a studio, specialised in landscape research and design. The Council of Europe used his work to formulate policy options of the Landscape Convention. Yves Michelin ([email protected]), geographer, is professor at ENITA (agronomic institute), Clermont Fer- rand, France. He focuses on the relationships between landscape features and agricultural practices. David Miller is professor in Integrated Land Use Systems at the Macaulay Institute, Aberdeen (Scotland). He is specialised in spatial modelling and visualisation techniques for research into public preferences for landscapes. Francesco Monzani is land-surveyor. He works at the agricultural and forest department of the Lombardy region, where he focuses on agro-forestry policy and planning. Jane Morrice, Macaulay Institute, Aberdeen, Scotland, has 30 years experience in remote sensing, image analysis and GIS for the development of tools to assist landscape planners. Albert Nijnik is a forest engineer and works as a socio-economist at a multi-disciplinary European research and development Consultancy for Sustainable Development in Scotland. Maria Nijnik ([email protected]) is an environmental economist at the Macaulay Institute, Aber- deen, Scotland, and works on integrated land use and sustainable resource management, natural resource economics, and human dimensions of global change. Ann Norderhaug ([email protected]) is a biologist and Head of the Department for the Cultural Landscape at the Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research, where she works on cultural landscape research and rural development. Sander Mücher (sander.mü[email protected]) graduated in 1992 in Tropical Crop Science. He is involved in many European projects with a strong accent on landscape, habitat and land cover mapping and monitoring. Trees Ongena is a research fellow experienced in regional landscape studies and historical geography at the department of Geography of Ghent University, Belgium. Terry O’Regan ([email protected]) is a landscape environmental/design/management consultant, environmen- tal activist, writer and lecturer, founder and coordinator of Landscape Alliance Ireland. Július Oszlányi, landscape and forest ecologist , is director of the Institute of Landscape Ecology in Bratis- lava, working cultural landscape biodiversity and land use and land cover changes. Hannes Palang ([email protected]) has a PhD in physical geography from University of Tartu and is currently head of the Centre for Landscape and Culture at the Estonian Institute of Humanities in Tallinn, working on rural landscapes, their meanings, patterns and practices. Maria Luisa Paracchini ([email protected]) has a long experience in GIS and remote sensing data analysis and works at the JRC Action AGRI-ENV on the assessment of the impact of the Common Agri- cultural Policy on biodiversity, and the analysis of the rural landscape. Bas Pedroli ([email protected]) is a landscape researcher at Alterra Wageningen UR, The Netherlands, and secretary general of LANDSCAPE EUROPE. His research focuses on the care for Europe’s cultural landscapes and the backgrounds of the European Landscape Convention. Heinrich Pegel ([email protected]), agricultural engineer at the Lower Saxony Water Management, Coastal Defence and Nature Conservation Agency, Germany. He works at the nature .
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