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Daniel Brockington - CV ORCID ID: 0000-0001-5692-0154; [email protected]; @danbrockington Education and Qualifications 1993-98 PhD, Department of Anthropology, UCL. 1993-94 Certificate in Swahili, Class I, School of Oriental and African Studies. 1992-93 Post-Graduate Certificate of Education, University of Oxford. 1989-92 BA (Hons) Geography, Class I, University of Oxford. Current Employment 2015+ Director, Sheffield Institute for International Development, University of Sheffield. Previous Employment 2005-15 Institute for Development Policy and Management, University of Manchester. Lect. 2005; Sen. Lect. 2007; Reader 2010; Prof. of Conservation and Development 2012. 2002-5 Departmental Lecturer at the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford. Lecturer at St Hugh’s College. 2001-2 Research Associate at the Department of Geography, University of Cambridge. Research Fellow, Director of Studies in Geography and Dean at New Hall. 1998-01 British Academy Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Department of Geography, University of Cambridge. Research Fellow at New Hall. 1994-97 Research Assistant at the Department of Anthropology, UCL. University Visits, Visiting Fellowships, Adjunct Roles 2019-22 Adj. Prof, Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science & Technology, Arusha, Tanzania 2019 Maria de Maeztu visiting Professor, ICTA, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (Jun, Sept 2019) 2013 University of Dodoma, Tanzania (March 2013) 2012 University of Roskilde, Denmark (May 2012). 2008 Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecol. and the Environment, Bangalore, India (Jan-Apr ’08). 2007 Dep’t of Geog, Univ of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand. (Jan-May ’07). 2006 Resource Management in Asia Pacific, ANU, Canberra, Australia. (Oct ’06-Jan ’07).

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Page 1: Daniel Brockington  · Web viewDaniel Brockington - CV. ORCID ID: 0000-0001-5692-0154; d.brockington@sheffield.ac.uk; @danbrockington. Education and Qualifications. 1993-98PhD, Department

Daniel Brockington - CV

ORCID ID: 0000-0001-5692-0154; [email protected]; @danbrockington

Education and Qualifications 1993-98 PhD, Department of Anthropology, UCL.1993-94 Certificate in Swahili, Class I, School of Oriental and African Studies.1992-93 Post-Graduate Certificate of Education, University of Oxford.1989-92 BA (Hons) Geography, Class I, University of Oxford.

Current Employment 2015+ Director, Sheffield Institute for International Development, University of Sheffield.

Previous Employment 2005-15 Institute for Development Policy and Management, University of Manchester. Lect.

2005; Sen. Lect. 2007; Reader 2010; Prof. of Conservation and Development 2012.2002-5 Departmental Lecturer at the School of Geography and the Environment, University of

Oxford. Lecturer at St Hugh’s College.2001-2 Research Associate at the Department of Geography, University of Cambridge.

Research Fellow, Director of Studies in Geography and Dean at New Hall. 1998-01 British Academy Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Department of Geography,

University of Cambridge. Research Fellow at New Hall. 1994-97 Research Assistant at the Department of Anthropology, UCL.

University Visits, Visiting Fellowships, Adjunct Roles 2019-22 Adj. Prof, Nelson Mandela African Institute of Science & Technology, Arusha, Tanzania 2019 Maria de Maeztu visiting Professor, ICTA, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (Jun,

Sept 2019)2013 University of Dodoma, Tanzania (March 2013)2012 University of Roskilde, Denmark (May 2012).2008 Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecol. and the Environment, Bangalore, India (Jan-Apr ’08).2007 Dep’t of Geog, Univ of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand. (Jan-May ’07).2006 Resource Management in Asia Pacific, ANU, Canberra, Australia. (Oct ’06-Jan ’07).2005 Env. Science Prog., Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa. (Jan-Apr ’05).

Membership of Academic and Professional Bodies Royal African SocietyDevelopment Studies Association

Invited Service for International Bodies and NGOs Board Member for MICAIA, which works on agricultural development, natural products and conservation in Mozambique.Advisory board of CREE (promoting conservation and rural development globally and is US-based), and Dakshin (an environment and development NGO based in India).Treasurer Development Studies Association 2017+

WebsitesNumerous research sites can be accessed through www.danbrockington.com.

Languages

Swahili: fluent listening, spoken, reading, competent writingFrench: rusty (once fluent); Spanish, Kaungiraqw: incipient

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ResearchPublications

H-index: Google Scholar - 46; Web of Science – 27; Scopus – 31.

BOOKS

Larsen, P.B. & Brockington, D. (eds) 2017. The Anthropology of Conservation NGOs. Palgrave, London.

Ponte, S. & Brockington, D. (eds) 2016. The Green Economy in the Global South. London, Routledge.

Brockington, D. 2014. Celebrity Advocacy and International Development. Routledge, London.Brockington, D and Duffy, R. (eds) 2011. Conservation and Capitalism. Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford. Brockington, D. 2009. Celebrity and the Environment. Fame, Wealth and Power in Conservation.

ZED books, London. Brockington, D., Duffy, R. and Igoe, J. 2008. Nature Unbound. Conservation, Capitalism and the

Future of Protected Areas. Earthscan, London. Brockington, D. 2002. Fortress Conservation. The preservation of the Mkomazi Game Reserve. James

Currey, African Issues series, Oxford and Indiana University Press, Indiana.

SPECIAL ISSUES IN JOURNALS

Ponte, S. and Brockington, D. 2015. ‘The Green Economy in the South.’ Special Issue in Third World Quarterly

Brockington, D. 2015. ‘Celebrity Advocacy: International and Comparative Perspectives.’ Special Issue in Celebrity Studies.

Brockington, D. with Spencer, H., Scott, M. and Markham, T. 2015. Special Section on Celebrity Advocacy. International Journal of Cultural Studies.

Duffy, R. and Brockington, D. 2010. ‘Conservation and Capitalism.’ Special Issue with Antipode. Igoe, J and Brockington, D. 2007. ‘Engaging Neoliberal Conservation.’ Special Issue with Conservation

and Society.

PAPERS IN ACADEMIC JOURNALS

Brockington, D. 2019. Persistent Peasant Poverty and Assets. Exploring dynamics of new forms of wealth and poverty in Tanzania 1999-2018. Journal of Peasant Studies. doi: 10.1080/ 03066150.2019.1658081

Howland, O., Brockington, D. and Noe, C. 2019. The Multiple Meanings of Prosperity and Poverty. A cross-site comparison from Tanzania. Journal of Peasant Studies. doi: 10.1080/ 03066150.2019.1658080

Brockington, D., Coast, E., Howland, O., Mdee, A. and Randall, S. 2019. Assets and Domestic Units: Methodological Challenges for Longitudinal Studies of Poverty Dynamics. Journal of Peasant Studies. doi: 10.1080/03066150.2019.1658079

Richey, L.A and Brockington, D. 2019. Celebrity Humanitarianism: Using Tropes of Engagement to Understand North/ South Relations. Perspectives on Politics doi:10.1017/S1537592719002627

Snyder, K.A., Sulle, E., Massay, D.A., Petro, A., Qamara, P and Brockington, D. 2019 “Modern” farming and the transformation of livelihoods in rural Tanzania. Agriculture and Human Values. doi: 10.1007/s10460-019-09967-6

Pritchard, R. and Brockington, D. 2019. Forests: regrow with locals’ participation. Nature 569: 630. Nature correspondence has a restricted number of signatories. This derived from a process involving 14 co-authors: Adams, B., Agarwal, B., Agrawal, A., Corbera, E., Duffy, R.V., Oldekop, J., Symons, K., Asiyanbi, A., Collins, Y.A., Krauss, J., Bukhi, M.M., Fletcher, R., Büscher, B. Chhatre, A.

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Oommen, M.A., Cooney, R., Ramesh, M., Archer, M., Brockington, D., Büscher, B., Fletcher, R., Natusch, D.J.D., Vanak, A.T., Webb, G. and Shanker, K. 2019. The Fatal Flaws of Compassionate Conservation. Conservation Biology. https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13329

Veldwisch, G.J., Venot, J-P., Woodhouse, P., Komakech, H. and Brockington, D. 2019. Re-introducing politics in African farmer-led irrigation development: Introduction to a Special Issue. Water Alternatives 12(1): 1-12   

Zafra-Calvo, N., Garmendia, E., Pascual, U., Palomo, I., Gross-Camp, N., Brockington, D., Cortes-Vazquez, J-A., Coolsaet, B. and Burgess, N. 2019. Progress toward Equitably Managed Protected Areas in Aichi Target 11: A Global Survey. Bioscience 69 (3): 191-197.

Banks, N., Brockington, D. Maitrot, M. and Hulme, D. 2019. Interrogating Microfinance Performance beyond Products, Clients and the Environment. Insights from the work of BRAC in Tanzania. European Journal of Development Research 31(3): 339-363

Brockington, D., Adams, W.M., Agarwal, B., Agrawal, A., Büscher, B., Chhatre, A., Duffy, R., Fletcher, R., and Oldekop, J.O. 2018. Working Governance for Working Lands. Science 362 (6420): 1257

Howe, C., Corbera, E., Brockington, D. and Adams, W.M. 2018. Distinct positions underpin ecosystem services for poverty alleviation. Oryx doi:10.1017/S0030605318000261

Östberg, W., Howland, O., Mduma, J. and Brockington, D. 2018. Tracing Improving Livelihoods in Rural Africa Using Local Measures of Wealth: A Case Study from Central Tanzania, 1991–2016. Land 7 (44): 1-26

Brockington, D., O. Howland, V.-M. Loiske, M. Mnzava and C. Noe 2018. Economic Growth, Rural Assets and Prosperity. Exploring the implications of a twenty year record of asset growth in Tanzania. Journal of Modern African Studies 56 (2): 217-243

Jacob. T and Brockington, D. 2018. Learning from the other: Benefit sharing lessons for REDD+ implementation based on CBFM experience in Northern Tanzania. Land Use Policy Accepted available online.

Horton, P., Banwart, S.A., Brockington, D., Brown, G.W., Bruce, R., Cameron, D., Holdsworth, M., Koh, L. S. C., Ton, J. and Peter Jackson. 2017. An agenda for integrated system-wide interdisciplinary agri-food research. Food Security 9:195–210

Zafra-Calvo, N., Pascual, U., Brockington, D., Coolsaet, B., Cortes-Vazquez, J.A., Gross-Camp, N., Palomo, I. and Burgess, N.D. 2017 Towards an indicator system to assess equitable management in protected areas. Biological Conservation 211: 134–141

Woodhouse, P., Veldwisch, G-J., Venot, J-P., Brockington, D., Komakech, H. and Manjichi, A. 2017. African farmer-led irrigation development: reframing agricultural policy and investment? Journal of Peasant Studies 44 (1): 213-133.

Büscher, B., Fletcher, R., Brockington, D., Sandbrook, C.S., Adams, W.M., Campbell, L., Corson, C., Dressler, W., Duffy, R., Gray, N., Holmes, G., Kelly, A., Lunstrum, E., Ramutsindela, M. and Shanker, K. 2017. Half-Earth or Whole Earth? Radical ideas for conservation, and their implications. Oryx 51 (3): 407-410.

Goodman, M.K., Littler, J., Brockington, D., and Boykoff, M. 2016. Spectacular environmentalisms: media, knowledge and the framing of ecological politics. Environmental Communication 10 (6): 677-688

St John, F., Brockington D., Bunnefeld N., Duffy R., Homewood K., Jones J.P.G., Keane A.M., Milner-Gulland E.J., Nuno A., and Razafimanahaka J.H. 2016. Research ethics: Assuring anonymity at the individual level may not be sufficient to protect research participants from harm. Biological Conservation 196: 208-209.

Duffy, R., St John, F., Büscher, B. and Brockington, D. 2015. ‘Toward a new understanding of the links between poverty and illegal wildlife hunting.’ Conservation Biology 30 (1): 14-22.

Brockington, D. and Ponte, S. 2015. The Green Economy in the global South: experiences, redistributions and resistance. Third World Quarterly 36 (12): 2197-2206.

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Duffy, R., St John, F., Büscher, B. and Brockington, D. 2015. The militarization of anti-poaching: Undermining long term goals? Environmental Conservation 42 (4): 345-348.

Brockington, D and Wilkie, D. 2015. Protected areas and poverty. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 370: 20140271. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2014.0271

Brockington, D. 2015. Towards an International Understanding of the Power of Celebrity Persuasions. A Review and a Research Agenda. Celebrity Studies 6 (4): 486-504.

Brockington, D. 2015. Celebrity advocacy: international and comparative perspectives. Celebrity Studies 6 (4): 393-398.

Brockington, D. 2015. El poder perdurable de la Conservación Fortaleza en África. Nova Africa 32 (Enero 2015).

Brockington, D. and Henson, S. 2015. ‘Signifying the Public: Celebrity Advocacy and post-democratic politics’ International Journal of Cultural Studies 18 (4): 431-448.

Castree, N., Adams, W.M., Barry, J., Brockington, D., Büscher, B., Corbera, E., Demeritt, D., Duffy, R., Neves, K., Newell, P., Pellizzoni, L., Rigby, K., Robbins, P., Robin, L., Rose, D.B., Ross, A., Schlosberg, D., Sörlin, S., West, P., Whitehead, M. and Wynne, B. 2014. ‘Changing the Intellectual Climate.’ Nature Climate Change 4 (9): 763-8.

Brockington, D. 2014. ‘The Production and Performance of celebrity advocacy in international development.’ Third World Quarterly 35 (1): 88-108.

Brockington, D. 2012. ‘Celebrities Interventions’. Contribution to Forum / Debate ‘Brand Africa: Multiple Transitions in Global Capitalism’ Ponte, S. and Richey, L. Review of African Political Economy 39 (131): 135-50.

Homewood, K., Chenevix Trench, P. and Brockington, D. 2012. ‘Pastoral livelihoods and wildlife revenues’ Pastoralism Journal 2: 19

Holmes, G., Scholfield, K. and Brockington, D. 2012. ‘A Comparison of Global Conservation Prioritization Models with Spatial Spending Patterns of Conservation Nongovernmental Organizations’ Conservation Biology 26 (4): 602-609.

Büscher, B., Sullivan, S., Neves, K., Igoe, J. and Brockington, D. 2012. Towards a consolidated critique of Neoliberal Biodiversity Conservation. Capitalism, Nature, Socialism 23 (2): 4-30.

Brockington, D. 2012. ‘A Radically Conservative Vision? The Challenge of UNEP’s Towards a Green Economy.’ Development and Change 43 (1): 409-422.

Brockington, D. 2011. ‘Ecosystem Services and Fictitious Commodities.’ Environmental Conservation 38 (4): 367-9.

Oldekop, J.A., Bebbington, A.J., Brockington, D., and Preziosi, R.F. 2010. ‘Understanding the lessons and limitations of Conservation and Development.’ Conservation Biology 24 (2): 461-9

Homewood, K., Brockington, D. and Sullivan, S. 2010. ‘Alternative view of Serengeti Road.’ Nature 467: 788-9.

Dressler, W., Büscher, B., Schoon, M., Brockington, D., Hayes, T., Kull, C., McCarthy, J., and Streshta, K. 2010. From Hope to Crisis and Back Again? A Critical History of the Global CBNRM Narrative. Environmental Conservation 37 (1): 5-15.

Brockington, D and Duffy, R. 2010. ‘Conservation and Capitalism: The Production and Reproduction of Biodiversity Conservation.’ Antipode 42 (3): 469-484.

Brockington, D. and Scholfield, K. 2010. ‘Conservation NGOs and the Conservationist Mode of Production in sub-Saharan Africa.’ Antipode 42 (3): 551-575.

Igoe, J., Neves-Graca, K. and Brockington, D. 2010. ‘A Spectacular Eco-Tour Around the Historic Bloc: Theorizing the Convergence of Biodiversity Conservation and Capitalist Expansion. Antipode 42 (3): 486-512.

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Lele, S., Wilshusen, P., Brockington, D., Seidler, R. and Bawa, K. 2010. ‘Beyond exclusion: alternative approaches to biodiversity conservation in the developing tropics.’ Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 2: 1-7.

Brockington, D. and Scholfield, K. 2010. ‘Expenditure by Conservation Non-Governmental Organisations in Sub-Saharan Africa.’ Conservation Letters 3 (2): 106-113.

Brockington, D. and Scholfield, K. 2010. ‘The work of conservation organisations in sub-Saharan Africa.’ Journal of Modern African Studies 48 (1): 1-33.

Brockington, D., Sachedina, H., and Scholfield, K. 2009. ‘Preserving the New Tanzania: Conservation as a Driving Force in Land Use Change.’ International Journal of African Historical Studies 41 (3): 1-24.

Igoe, J., Brockington, D., Randall, S. and Scholfield, K. 2008. ‘Lessons to be learned about migration around protected areas.’ Science (E-Letter, 11 December 2008).

Brockington, D. 2008. ‘Corruption, Taxation, Democracy and Natural Resource Management in Tanzania.’ Journal of Development Studies 44 (1): 103-126.

Brockington D. 2008. ‘Powerful Environmentalisms. Conservation, Celebrity and Capitalism.’ Media, Culture and Society 30 (4): 551-568.

Upton, C., Ladle, R., Hulme, D., Jiang, T., Brockington, D. and Adams, W.M. 2008. ‘Are poverty and protected area establishment linked at a national scale? Oryx 42 (1): 19-25.

Brockington D. 2008. Celebrity Conservation. Interpreting the Irwins. Media International Australia. 127: 96-108.

Igoe, J. and Brockington, D. 2007. ‘Neoliberal conservation. A brief introduction.’ Conservation and Society 5 (4): 432-449.

Schmidt-Soltau, K., and Brockington, D. 2007 ‘Protected Areas and Resettlement: what scope for voluntary relocation?’ World Development 35 (12): 2182-2202.

Brockington, D. 2007. ‘Devolution, Community Conservation and Forests. On local government per-formance and Village Forest Reserves in Tanzania.’ Society and Natural Resources 20: 835-48.

Brockington, D. and Igoe, J. 2006. ‘Eviction for Conservation. A Global Overview.’ Conservation and Society 4 (3): 424-70. Reprinted: (in Portugeuse), in A ecologia politica das grandes ONGs transnacionais conservacionistas. Organizador Antonio Carlos Diegues. NUPAUB-USB, Sao Paulo, and in Development Induced Displacement: Contexts and Consequences, IFCAI, Calcutta.

West, P., Igoe, J. and Brockington, D. 2006. ‘Parks and Peoples: The Social Impact of Protected Areas.’ Annual Review of Anthropology 35: 251-77.

West, P. and Brockington, D. 2006. ‘An Anthropological Perspective on Some Unexpected Consequences of Protected Areas.’ Conservation Biology 20 (3): 609-616.

Brockington, D. 2006. ‘The politics and ethnography of environmentalisms in Tanzania.’ African Affairs 105 (418): 97-116.

Brockington, D., Igoe, J. and K. Schmidt-Soltau, K. 2006. Conservation, Human Rights, and Poverty Reduction. Conservation Biology 20 (1): 250-2.

Adams, W.M., Aveling, R., Brockington, D., Dickson, B., Elliott, J., Hutton, J., Roe, R., Vira, B., and Wolmer, W. 2004. ‘Conservation and Poverty: A Framework for Analysis’ Science 306: 1146-9.

Brockington, D. and Schmidt-Soltau, K. 2004. ‘The social and environmental impacts of wilderness and development.’ Oryx 38: 1-3.

Brockington, D. 2004. ‘Community conservation, Inequality and Injustice. Myths of Power in Protected Area Management.’ Conservation and Society 2 (2): 411-432.

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Adams, W.A., Brockington, D. Dyson, J. and Vira, B. 2003 ‘Managing tragedies. Understanding Con-flict over Common Pool Resources.’ Science 302: 1915-6. Reprinted in pages 149-153 of D.Kennedy (ed) Science Magazine’s State of the Planet 2006-7. Island Press, Washington.

Brockington, D. 2003. ‘Myths of Sceptical Environmentalism.’ Environmental Science and Policy 6: 543-546.

Gillson, L., Sheridan, M. & Brockington, D. 2003. ‘Representing environments in flux: case studies from East Africa.’ Area 35: 371-389.

Brockington, D. 2001. ‘Women’s Income and Livelihood Strategies of Dispossessed Pastoralists.’ Human Ecology 29: 307-338.

Brockington, D. and Homewood, K. 2001. ‘Degradation debates and data deficiencies. The case of the Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania.’ Africa 71: 449-480.

Brockington, D. 2001. ‘Communal Property and Degradation Narratives. Debating the Sukuma immigration into Rukwa Region, Tanzania.’ Cahiers d’Afrique.20: 1-22.

Brockington, D. 2000. ‘Pastoralism on the margins. The decline and dispersal of herding on the Umba Nyika from 1800 to 1919.’ Azania 35: 1-19.

Homewood, K. and Brockington, D. 1999. ‘Biodiversity, conservation and development in Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania.’ Global Ecology and Biogeography 8: 301-313.

Brockington, D. 1999. ‘Conservation, Displacement and Livelihoods. The consequences of the eviction for pastoralists moved from the Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania.’ Nomadic Peoples 3: 74-96.

Igoe, J. and Brockington, D. 1999. Pastoral Land Tenure and Community Conservation: a case study from North-East Tanzania. Pastoral Land Tenure Series No 11. IIED, London.

BOOK CHAPTERS

Brockington, D. Forthcoming. ‘Celebrity Advocacy’. In Handbook of Humanitarian Communication. Edited by Anne Vestergaard and Lilie Chouliaraki.

Brockington, D., Olivia Howland, Vesa-Mati Loiske, Moses Mnzava and Christine Noe. 2019. ‘Assets and Poverty Dynamics: The Methodological Challenges of Constructing Longitudinal Surveys in Tanzania.’ In Tanzanian Development: A comparative perspective. Edited by D. Potts, Boydell and Brewer, Witney.

Brockington, D. 2017. ‘Environment and Celebrity’ and ‘Conservation and Capitalism’. Chapters in The International Encyclopedia of Geography. Edited by Douglas Richardson, Noel Castree, Michael F. Goodchild, Audrey Kobayashi, Weidong Liu, and Richard A. Marston. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Brockington, D. 2016. ‘Epilogue: the politics of celebrity humanitarianism.’ Chapter in Celebrity Humanitarianism and North-South Relations. Ed by Richey, L.-A. Routledge, Abingdon.

Brockington, D. 2014. ‘Celebrity Spectacle, Post-Democratic Politics and Nature Incorporated.’ Chapter in Nature Inc: New Frontiers of Environmental Conservation in the Neoliberal Age. Ed by Büscher, B., Dressler, W. and Fletcher R. University of Arizona Press, Tuscon.

Brockington, D. 2013. ‘Foreword.’ Invited contribution in Huggan, G. Nature’s Saviours Earthscan-Wiley.

Brockington, D. 2013. ‘Celebrity, Environmentalism and Conservation.’ In E.A. Lester and B. Hutchins, (eds) Environmental Conflict and the Media, Peter Lang, New York.

Holmes, G., Ferguson, B. and Brockington, D. 2012. ‘Protected areas – what people say about well being.’ Chapter in D. Roe, J.Elliot and Matt Walpole (ed) Linking Biodiversity Conservation and Poverty Reduction. Wiley Earthscan, Oxford

Homewood, K., Chenevix Trench, P. and Brockington, D. 2012. ‘Pastoralism and conservation – who benefits?’ Chapter in D. Roe, J.Elliot and Matt Walpole (ed) Linking Biodiversity Conservation and Poverty Reduction. Wiley Earthscan, Oxford

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Brockington, D. 2011 Untitled Section in ‘Views from the Industry’ in Wildlife Film-making. Looking to the Future. Edited by Piers Warren. Wildeye, UK.

Brockington, D. and Scholfield, K. 2009. Celebrity Conservation. In Celebrity Colonialism: Fame, Representation, and Power in Colonial and Post-Colonial Cultures edited by Robert Clarke. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Newcastle upon Tyne.

Brockington, D. 2006. Entries on ‘Maasai’, ‘Samburu’, ‘Agriculture – Intensive’, ‘Agriculture – Slash and Burn’, ‘Ik’ and ‘Nomads’, in H. James Birx (ed) Encyclopedia of Anthropology. Sage, London.

Brockington, D. 2005. ‘The Contingency of Community Conservation.’ In K. Homewood (ed) Rural resources and local livelihoods in Africa. James Currey, Oxford.

Brockington, D. and Sullivan, S. 2003. ‘Meaning and fieldwork – lessons from qualitative research methodologies.’ In R. Schevyns (ed) Field work and Development Studies. A Rough Guide. Sage, London.

Rogers, P.J., Brockington, D., Kiwasila, H. and Homewood, K. 1999. ‘Environmental Awareness and Conflict Genesis: People versus Parks in Mkomazi Game Reserve.’ In T. Granfelt (ed) Managing the Globalised Environment. Intermediate Technology Publications, London.

Brockington, D. and Homewood, K. 1999. ‘Pastoralism around Mkomazi Game Reserve: the interaction of Conservation and Development.’ In M. Coe, N. McWilliam, G. Stone and M. Packer (eds) Mkomazi: the ecology, biodiversity and conservation of a Tanzanian savanna. Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers), London.

Brockington, D. and Homewood, K. 1996. ‘Wildlife, Pastoralists and Science. Debates concerning Mkomazi Game Reserve, Tanzania.’ In M. Leach and R. Mearns (eds) The Lie of the Land. Challenging Received Wisdom on the African Environment. International African Institute, James Currey, Oxford.

PROFESSIONAL AND POPULAR PAPERS

Brockington, D. 2011. Celebrity, Charisma and the Environmental Movement. Current Conservation 5 (4): 20-21.

Brockington, D. 2011. A Brief Guide to (Conservation) NGOs. Current Conservation 5 (1): 30-31.Brockington, D. 2011. ‘Doing it for charity. How can charities get more from their relationships with

celebrities?’ Chapter in Britain in 2012 (Annual ESRC Publication). Brockington, D. 2011. ‘Charities need to rethink celebrity’ Third Sector 8/11/11.

http://www.thirdsector.co.uk/news/1102612/?DCMP=ILC-SEARCHSachedina, H., Igoe, J. and Brockington, D. 2010. ‘The Spectacular Growth of the African Wildlife

Foundation and the Paradoxes of Neoliberal Conservation. Current Conservation 3 (3): 24-27. Igoe, J. Sullivan, S. and Brockington, D. 2010. ‘Problematising Neoliberal Biodiversity

Conservation” Displaced and Disobedient Knowledge.’ Current Conservation 3 (3): 4-7.Brockington, D. 2009. ‘Getting Development into the News. The Role of Celebrity in Development’

Development@Manchester Issue 3.Brockington, D. and Igoe, J. 2008. ‘Eviction for Conservation. A Global Overview.’ Current

Conservation 2 (3): 7-8.Winer, N., Turton, D. and Brockington, D. 2007. ‘Conservation, Protected Areas and Humanitarian

Practice.’ Policy Matters 15: 232-40. Brockington, D. 2007. ‘Community Conservation.’ Current Conservation 1 (1): 7.Borrini-Feyerabend, G. and Brockington, D. (with Diaw, C., Farvar, T., Rahmanian, M.,

Rahimzadeh, A., Shamimi, L., Roe, D., Scherl, L. and Williams, A.A.) 2006. ‘Poverty and wealth, security and respect, policies and rights – seeking the conditions for synergy between livelihoods and conservation.’ Policy Matters 14: 5-8.

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Bhomia, R.K. and Brockington, D. 2006. ‘Conservation: pride or prejudice? An analysis of the Protected Areas of India.’ Policy Matters 14: 142-154.

Sullivan, S. and Brockington, D. 2004 Qualitative methods in globalisation studies: or, saying some-thing about the world without counting or inventing it, CSGR Working Paper no. 139/04

Brockington, D. 2003. ‘Injustice and conservation – Is “local support” necessary for sustainable protected areas?’ Policy Matters 12: 22-30.

Brockington, D. 2000. ‘Some consequences of the pastoral migration to Southern Tanzania. A research report from Rukwa region.’ Tanzanian Society of Animal Production. Ministry of Water and Livestock, Tanzania.

Kiwasila, H. and Brockington, D. 1996. ‘Combining Conservation with Community development around Mkomazi Game Reserve.’ Miombo Technical Supplement. Division of Wildlife, Tanzania.

REPORTS

Brockington, D. and Banks, N. 2014. Exploring the Success of BRAC Tanzania’s Microfinance Programme. Brooks World Poverty Institute Working Paper 202.

Scholfield, K. and Brockington, D. 2008. Non-Governmental Organisations and African Wildlife Conservation: A Preliminary Analysis. The University of Manchester. Also printed as a paper for the Brooks World Poverty Institute http://www.sed.manchester.ac.uk/idpm/research/africanwildlife/.

Brockington, D., Millea, N., Mortimore, M., Pinfold, J. and Popham, M. 2005. The Commonwealth and African Aerial Photograph Archive. Report to the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Adams, W.A., Brockington, D. Dyson, J. and Vira, B. 2002. ‘Analytical framework for dialogue on CPR management.’ Report to the Department for International Development, UK.

Adams, W.A., Brockington, D. Dyson, J. and Vira, B. 2002. ‘Common Choices: Policy Options for Common Pool Resources’. Report to the Department for International Development, UK.

Homewood, K., Kiwasila, H. and Brockington, D. 1997. ‘Conservation with Development?’ The case of Mkomazi’. Report to the Department for International Development, UK.

Research Grants 2019-21 'UKRI GCRF Data, Accountability and Commercialisation. Working with NGO data to

enhance downwards accountability in contexts of livelihood change.’ I am PI, Value £200k.

2019-21 Royal Society and British Academy Apex Award. ‘Evidence-based Development Policy in an era of enhanced Remote-Sensing and the SDGs’, I am PI, Value £99k.

2019-21 British Academy. ‘Dignity, Heritage, and Desirable Development: Grounding the Sustainable Development Goals with Pastoralist Communities in Tanzania.’ I am co-I, Value £299k.

2018-21 Belmont-Norface, Transformations to Sustainability programme. ‘Convivial Conservation’. I am co-I, Value £1.2m.

2017-21 ERC Africultures project on data and agriculture in Africa. I am co-I. Value £8m2016-20 Norwegian Research Council: ‘Greenmentality: a Political Ecology of the Green

Economy in the global south.’ I am a co-I. Value £2.2m2016-19 ESRC DTC ‘Innovative approaches to understanding new forms of conservation

governance for social and environmental benefits’. Covers 3 studentships, I am co-I.2016-20 ‘New Partnerships for Sustainability’ bid to DANIDA, I am a co-I. Value £1 million.2015-6 ‘Ecosystem Services and Poverty Alleviation’ NERC, I was the PI. Value £150k.

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2015-8 ‘Using longitudinal qualitative data to understand the generation and distribution of rural prosperity.’ ESRC-DfID, I was the PI. Value £490k.

2015-8 ‘Irrigation and small-scale farming in Africa’ ESRC-DfID, I was a co-I. Value £432k.2014-6 The Political and Institutional Conditions of Rural Economic Growth: The Case of

Agricultural Growth Corridors in East and Southern Africa. Supported by Faculty of Humanities, University of Manchester. Value £13k. I was the PI.

2014 Funding for the ‘Green Economy in the South’ conference in Dodoma, Tanzania. Supported by UNEP. I was a co-applicant. Value $11k.

2014 Funding for a writing workshop in Dodoma, Tanzania to work with junior African scholars. Supported by the African Studies Association. I was the PI. Value £7k.

2014 Marie Curie IEF Fellowship to pay for a post-doctoral researcher to work at Manchester for two years on conservation policy and economic change in Europe. Value £183k.

2012 Visiting Leverhulme Professorship for Prof Jim Igoe to visit Manchester from Dartmouth. Value £20k. (declined).

2011 Hallsworth Visiting Professorship (with Arun Agrawal). Value £4k.2010-2 A 24 month ESRC mid-career fellowship called ‘Celebrity and Development.’ I was the

PI. Value £250k.2010 An MRC, NERC, ESRC, BBSRC start- up project exploring the risks of viral zoonoses

emerging in East Africa. I was a co-I. Value £50k.2010 An AHRC network to look at the work of celebrity, the media and environmentalisms. I

was a co-I. Value £30k.2005-8 ESRC Research Fellowship for work on the Social Impact of Protected Areas Oct 2005 –

Sept 2008. I was the PI. Value £160k.2005-7 AHRC funded research project ‘Land degradation in Central Tanzania’. This is an

experimental project comparing recent palynological data, analysed with Pb210, with oral histories and archival research. I was a co-I. Value £30k.

2004 Oppenheimer Fund award for work in South Africa on adaptive co-management of protected areas Jan 2005 – April 2005. I was the PI. Value £5k.

2004 Mellon Foundation support for conservation of 1.5 million aerial photographs of Africa taken in 1940s, 50s and 60s, and for the relocation of these photographs to Oxford University. I was the PI. Value $39k.

2004 Interdisciplinary conference on environmental change: ‘Trees, Rain and Politics in Africa’ British Council, BIEA, British Academy and St Antony’s College. I was a co-I. Value £12k.

2004 Research Development Fund (Oxford University) support for an interdisciplinary African Environments Programme supporting research in natural and social science. I was a co-I. Value £30k.

2003 ‘Land Degradation in East Africa’ seed money awarded by the Environmental Change Institute of Oxford University. I was PI. Value £10k.

2001 ‘Common Pool Resources in India, Zimbabwe and Tanzania.’ DfID. I was a co-I. Value £100k.

1999 ‘Dynamics of Communal Resource Management.’ British Academy. I was PI. Value £5k.

1994 Conservation and Development on East African Rangelands, DfID. I was a named researcher on the bid. Value £150k.

Present and Past PhD Students

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Hannah McCarrick. Famers, Soil and ICT. Grantham funded. Began 2017John Nko. Green Eonomy and Pastoralism in Tanzania. Grantham funded. Began 2017Laure Joanny. Surveillance and Biosecurity. ERC funded. Began 2016Hannah Dickinson. Biosecurity and poaching. ERC funded. Began 2016Will Mitchell. Networks and conservation effectiveness. ESRC funded Began 2017Alex Dorgan. Forestry and Investment in Tanzania. Self-funded. Began 2014.Chris Flower. ILC and Ethiopian pastoralism. Grantham funded. Began 2014Ruth John. Based at the University of Dar es Salaam working on partnerships in Sustainable Wildlife

Management. DANIDA funded. Began 2016Mathew Bukhi Mabele. The political ecology of forestry policy in Tanzania. Based at University of

Zurich where he has a full scholarship. Began Sept 2014.Rachel Bathurst. 2019. A Theological Critique of Sustainability. (Manchester)Edward Ademolu. 2018. ‘The African Diaspora and Representations of Africa.’ (Manchester)Jonas Bruun. 2017. The Implications for Development of Climate Finance Governance.’

(Manchester)Robert Watt. 2016 ‘The Moral Economy of Offsets.’ (Manchester)Paul James. 2016. ‘Smallholder Sugar Farming in South Africa.’ (Manchester)Judith Krauss. 2015. ‘Certified Cocoa, Carbon and Climate Change’ (Manchester)Jessica Hope. 2015. 'The Road to Where? A Political ecology of Post-Neoliberalism: Negotiations of

Extractive-Led Development, Indigeneity and Conservation in the Isiboro Secure Indigenous Territory and National Park, Bolivia.' (Manchester)

Antonio Allegretti. 2015. ‘Money, markets and power. Maasai pastoralists and the cash economy, Tanzania.’ (Manchester)

Melanie Stroebel. 2014. ‘Protecting holidays forever: Tourism, climate change and global governance. (Manchester)

Andreas Scheba. 2014. ‘Commodifying forest carbon: How local power, politics and livelihood practices shape REDD+ in Lindi Region, Tanzania’ (Manchester)

Mathilde Maitrot. 2014. ‘The Social Performance of Micofinance Institutions in Rural Bangladesh’. (Manchester)

Ashish Aggarwal. 2014. ‘The Promise and Performance of Carbon Forestry: Analyzing Carbon, Biodiversity and Livelihoods in Two Projects in India.’ (Manchester)

Carlos Ferreira. 2013. ‘Biodiversity offsets: market emergence, intermediation and the construction of marketable nature(s).’ (Manchester)

Katherine Scholfield. 2013. ‘Transnational (Dis)connections: Mountain Gorilla Conservation in Rwanda and the DRC.’ (Manchester)

Sumana Datta. 2012. ‘Climate change policies and local forest management in India.’ (Manchester)Lucy Scott. 2010. ‘Giving Assets: An Effective Approach for Reducing Vulnerability and Building

Livelihoods? The Case of the Chars Livelihoods Programme.’ (Manchester). Hilary Gilbert. 2010. ‘Everything has its price’. Conservation, Development and Bedu in St Katherine

Protectorate, South Sinai.’ (Manchester). George Holmes. 2009. ‘The power of international conservation, and local resistance to it: A case

study from the Dominican Republic.’ (Manchester). Emmanuel Nuesiri. 2009. ‘Community-based conservation, and the politics of decentralised forest

management in Cameroon.’ (Oxford). Hassan Sachedina. 2008. ‘Wildlife are our Oil. Conservation, Pastoralism and NGOs in the Tarangire

Ecosystem, Tanzania.’ (Oxford). Hassan’s thesis was awarded the Harold K. Schneider Student Prize in Economic Anthropology and the Audrey Richards Prize for best Africanist thesis in the UK 2008-9.

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Anna Larsen. 2006. ‘Mountain farmers in the Upper Selška Valley: Negotiating agri-environmental production options in Slovenia.’ (Oxford).

Lauren Rickards. 2006. ‘Capable, enlightened and masculine. Constructing English agriculturalist ideals in formal agricultural education 1845-2003.’ (Oxford).

Past and Present Post-Doctoral Researchers

Present: Andrea Jiminez; Rose Pritchard; Judith Krauss; Nabeela Ahmed; Elaine HsaioPast: Olivia Howland; Sammia Poveda; Jose Cortez; Caroline Howe; Esther Marinjen; Sylvia Meichsler;

Invited Lectures and Conference Activity

Since 2004 I have been invited to present my research over 50 times, in over 15 countries across 6 continents. I have presented almost always in English, but in French once.

International Conferences Organised

July 14 Co-convenor of international conference ‘The Green Economy in the South’, University of Dodoma Tanzania with circa 90 delegates.

Jun 12 Convenor of an international Symposium at Manchester on Capitalism, Democracy and Celebrity Advocacy. 25 speakers and discussants from Europe, North and Latin America and Africa.

June 11 Co-convenor of Nature Inc! in the ISS at the Hague, attended by nearly 200 people.

Sept 08 Co-convenor of an international Symposium at Manchester on Conservation and Capitalism. 25 speakers from diverse African and European countries as well as India and the US.

Jun 04 Co-convenor of an interdisciplinary conference called ‘Trees, Rain and Politics in Africa’ examining issues of environmental change and environmental politics. by more than 100 people, with more than 30 speakers from overseas.

Long Term Research Visits

Much of my work on rural livelihoods, development, conservation and governance hinges on long term and in depth studies, participant observation and interviews. That record comprises.

Jul 12 – Sabbatical research in Hanang, Tanzania. I undertook research on microfinance and long- Aug 13 term livelihood change.

Jan 08 – ESRC-funded fellowship in India. This was part of a research fellowship exploring Mar 08 relationships between conservation and livelihoods.

Oct 06 – ESRC-funded fellowship in the Southern Alps, Australia. This was part of a research Dec 06 fellowship exploring relationships between conservation and livelihoods.

Jan 07 – ESRC-funded fellowship in New Zealand. This was part of a research fellowship May 07 exploring relationships between conservation and livelihoods.

Jan 05 – Oppenheimer-funded work in Grahamstown on conservation and livelihoods.Mar 05

Aug 99 – British Academy funded post-doctoral research in Rukwa, Tanzania. I examined change Oct 00 to livelihoods and natural resource governance.

Jan 95 – ODA funded research on conservation and livelihood change in north-east Tanzania.

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Dec 96

Teaching

I have established with colleagues a website which brings environmental film into the classroom. We took an extraordinary, multi-award winning film ‘Green’ and set up a website which made the film physically accessible and intellectually appealing to educators by writing a series of brief essays, together with a response from the filmmaker, to facilitate its use in the classroom. The site is www.studyinggreen.wordpress.com

University of Manchester – courses taught2014-15 ‘Representations in Development’ for Masters in International Development.

‘Development Research’ for Masters in International Development.‘Social Development Fieldwork’ (in Uganda) for Masters in International Development.

2013-14 ‘Representations in Development’ for Masters in International Development.‘Conservation and Development’ for Masters in International Development.‘Development Research’ for Masters in International Development.‘Social Development Fieldwork’ (in Uganda) for Masters in International Development.

2011-12 ‘Representations in Development’ for Masters in International Development.2009-10 ‘Conservation and Development’ for Masters in International Development.2008-9 ‘Conservation and Development’ for the Masters in International Development

‘Development Research’ for the Masters in International Development. The Fieldwork trip to Uganda.

2007-8 ‘Conservation and Development’ for Masters in International Development. (Recommended for a teaching award)

2005-6 ‘Environment and Development’ for Masters in International Development.

Rhodes University – courses taught2005 Designed and delivered a course on ‘Social and Economic Aspects of Complex Systems’

to second year undergraduates.

University of Oxford – courses taught2003-5 ‘Communities, Conservation and Development’. MSc in Biodiversity Conservation.2002-5 ‘Environmental Policy’. Masters in Nature, Society and Environmental Policy.2002-5 ‘Environments and Environmentalisms’ and ‘Geographies of Inequality’ Geog Hons.

University of Cambridge – courses taught2000-2 I convened a series of lectures and tutorials about pastoral societies for the Geography of

Africa, a third year undergraduate option.

I have presented a précis of student evaluations of my masters teaching at Manchester below. The table below shows the percentage agreeing (A), or mostly agreeing (B) my teaching was excellent.

Course Year A B Respondents

Dev Research 14-15 70 21 60Representations 14-15 88 8 25Fieldwork 14-15 100 - 18Cons and Dev 13-14 100 - 5Representations 13-14 100 - 7Dev Research 13-14 71 24 38Representations 11-12 71 29 9Cons and Dev 09-10 87 13 30Cons and Dev 08-09 89 5 18Dev Research 08-09 16 68 74

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Cons and Dev 07-08 91 9 22Env and Dev 05-06 56 36 17

Knowledge Transfer and Impact

I enjoy the challenges of the ‘impact agenda’ facing academia. I have found that I am able to build in stakeholder engagement in my work by constructing bespoke websites to share results and questions and to promote discussion of them. The technology for this is free and straightforward (I simply use a wordpress blog and turn off the blogging and comments function). But the results have been rewarding and we are using this same technique in the current DfID/ESRC funded projects.

I have had a number of engagements with media interested in reporting on my work. I was both an advisor and one of a panel of experts and voices interviewed for three documentaries about conservation. The best of these were the film ‘A Place without People’ (http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=QrEmUjNhwyo), and ‘Unnatural Histories: the Serengeti’ (BBC4 June 2011). I was also interviewed for ‘Conservation’s Dirty Secrets (Channel 4 June 2011).

With respect to my work on celebrity I have received numerous invitations to brief journalists, talk on radio and write pieces for different outlets in numerous countries and international news outlets. The full list of these newspaper reports and blogs is available on the project website. They include articles in the Independent, New York Times, Observer, Guardian Weekly and Daily Mail. There are also a number of blogs covering the work I have been interviewed for ABC Radio in Australia and ‘Science for the People’ based in Edmonton, Canada, with additional requests from BBC Scotland, KCBS (California) and LBC Radio

One particularly interesting area of work has been efforts to encourage the larger conservation NGOs to form a self-policed code of practice with respect to human rights. This work is being led by Nick Winer who has been an honorary Research Fellow at the University of Manchester. The longer term project of which this is part is that the conservation community needs to see its activities as part of a broader set of interventions, which includes Development policy, and to which the same standards and principles apply. Currently we can have ridiculous situations whereby eviction of people to create dams and development projects requires elaborate protocols and procedures to ensure as little harm is done to evictees as possible, yet eviction for conservation requires no such measures. We want to encourage NGOs to form a set of best practice principles by which they will police their own community to discourage some of the abuses we have observed elsewhere. We have set up the ‘Just Conservation’ website to facilitate information sharing about this issue (www.justconservation.org).

The other channel for my engagement with conservation NGOs is as a board member and advisor. I serve on the board of Micaia, a rapidly growing NGO working in Mozambique, on environmental issues and rural development. I also serve on the board of Dakshin, a similar, but smaller outfit based in India, and as an advisor to CREE a US based funder.

I am working on a project which is mapping development NGO networks in the UK. This is revealing interesting and surprising trends with respect to the strength of public support for development and the vigour of the movement. We have now convened two workshops with colleagues from the sector to share the findings and pursue next steps in the form of a collaborative research project to understand better the changing nature of public support and engagement in International Development. The safeguarding scandal which has hit Oxfam and others has added impetus to this work. This is at an early stage of development (its third year). I have leveraged approximately £30k from the University of Manchester to support this work.

I have two projects working on rural livelihood change in Eastern Africa which are concluding. We have had two stakeholder workshops in Dar es Salaam to present findings in the last two years, for which I leveraged >£20k of support from the ODI and HEFCE QR funding and partner Universities. This has

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identified a network of potential users of this research with whom I am continuing to work through other projects in Tanzania.

Academic Service and Leadership

Editorial Work

EDITORSHIPS

2010 - 19 Editor, Environment and Society, Advances in Research2007 - 19 Editor, Conservation and Society2013 - 15 Editor, ‘Critical Green Engagements’ Book Series, Arizona University Press.2009 - 15 Associate Editor, Environmental Conservation

JOURNAL EDITORIAL BOARDS

2018 + Journal of the Geographical Association of Tanzania2017 + Journal of Sociology and Development2014 + Celebrity Studies2011 + Journal of Development Studies

Administrative Service

2017 + Council Member and Treasurer, Development Studies Association2015 + Director, Sheffield Institute for International Development2014-15 School Director of Research, School of Environment, Education and Development 2013-14 Associate School Director of Research, SEED.2013-14 Joint Champion of the Environment Research Theme for SEED.2010-12 Research director of the IDPM.2009-11 Co-ordinator of the Society and Environment Research Group.2009+ Co-convenor the IDPM’s Environment and Development research theme.2009-10 Programme Director of the International Development Masters (140+ students)2008-9 Deputy Programme Director for the Masters in International Development.2007-8 Convenor of the Social Development Seminar Series

Service as an External Examiner or Referee

REF 2021. Panel Member for sub-panel 22. Anthropology and Development Studies.

External Examiner: UEA Undergraduate Degree in Development Studies 2006-8; UCL Masters Degree in Anthropology, Environment and Development 2012-2015.

Member of the Management Board of an EC Marie Curie EXT Award 2006-11.

Member of the International Advisory Board of the Wageningen School of Social Sciences (WASSS).

25 PhD Viva examinations for the Universities of Cambridge (2002); Stockholm (2003, 2011, 2015); Oxford (2004, 2007); the Central European University, Budapest (2006, 2017); Rhodes University, Grahamstown, (2006); Sheffield (2007); UCL (2007; 2014, 2016); Kent (2009); Sydney (2010); the University of Manchester (2010 twice; 2013; 2014), SOAS (2011); IDS (2011); Victoria University of Wellington (2016); Vrije Universitat, Amsterdam (2015), Kings College London (2016) and University of Edinburgh (2017). I was also invited to the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris for a continuation review (2011) and to the NMBU (Norway) in 2019.

Reviewer for research proposals for the ESRC (as a member of the Review College), the Royal Society (Newton Post-Doctoral Fellowships), the National Science Foundation (USA), ESPA, DfID, the Newton Trust (Cambridge University), the Wildlife Conservation Society, Flora and Fauna International, the Welcome Trust, the Centre for Advanced Study at the Norwegian Academy of

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Science and Letters, Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) - French National Research Agency, the European Research Council and the International Foundation for Science.

Assessor and panel member for the Academy of Finland, Environment and Society Panel (2010).

I have served as peer reviewer for MS from 7 publishing houses and over fifty different journals

Dan Brockington – CV – 15