Project Team

Partner 1

The Macaulay Institute (MI), UK. Grant Davidson, Dr. Roy Behnke, Dr. Carol Kerven

Overall project co-ordination. Responsible for field studies to be carried out on the historical and institutional overview of the rangeland enclosure process and pastoral livelihoods and household welfare.

Partner 2

The Chengdu Institute of Biology (CIB), P. R. China. Prof Wu Ning, Dr. Luo Peng, Dr. Zhang Yongmei

Coordinates all field studies to be carried out on rangeland vegetation and condition and will also carry out the field studies for livestock and production management at the proposed field sites in SichuanProvince.

Partner 3

The College of Pastoral Agriculture Science and Technology (PAST), LanzhouUniversity, P. R. China. Dr. Ruijun Long

Coordinates all field studies to be carried out on livestock and production management and will also carry out the field studies on rangeland vegetation and condition at the proposed field sites in GansuProvince.

Partner 4

Qinghai Academy of Animal and Veterinary Science (QAS), P. R. China. Prof Ma Yushou, Dr. Dong Quanmin

Responsible for field studies carried out on livestock and production management and rangeland vegetation and condition in QinghaiProvince.

Partner 5

Tibet Academy of Agricultural and Animal Sciences (TAAAS), P. R. China. Dr. Nyima Tashi

Responsible for field studies carried out on livestock and production management and rangeland vegetation and condition in the Tibet Autonomous Region.

Partner 6

Queen Elizabeth House, University of Oxford (QEH), UK. Dr, Dawn Chatty, Dr. Ken Bauer

Will collaborate with the Macaulay Institute on delivering the outputs for the historical and institutional overview of the rangeland enclosure process and on pastoral livelihoods and household welfare across all sites.

Partner 7

University of Tromsø (UT), Norway. Dr. Joe Fox

Responsible for all field studies carried out on the impacts on biodiversity and wildlife.

Partner 8

Institute of Ethnography, University of Leipzig (ULEI), Germany. Dr. Annegret Nippa, Jarmila Ptackova

Using a range of participatory methodologies, will work with pastoral communities to identify and describe the impacts of enclosure policy on the pastoral way of life.

Garden Tiger Moth photographed by Gabor Pozsgai

 

 

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