Oxford Biodiversity Network
The Oxford Networks for the Environment (ONE) mobilise the University's expertise in science, technology, business and society in relation to the environment. They enable researchers at the University of Oxford to find solutions to the complex, converging challenges of energy, water, and food security, climate change, and threats to biodiversity.
The Oxford Biodiversity Network is the network of researchers and practitioners in and around the University working on biodiversity. The network includes academics, senior researchers, students, and staff spanning multiple departments (most notably Zoology, Plant Sciences, Earth Sciences, and Geography), the Gardens, Libraries, and Museums, and Wytham Woods Research Facility. It extends over more than 20 Departments and Institutes, supporting almost 200 members. The Biodiversity Network team seeks to highlight and integrate the range of biodiversity-related research and activites going on in Oxford, and to work closely with other ONE network
The Spirit of the Rainforest - Rosa Vásquez Espinoza
The Natural Capital of Wasps - Seirian Sumner,
What drives species sensitivity to deforestation? Clue: it’s not what you think
How Story Creates Agency for the Nature and Climate Crises - Jules Pretty
Cull of the Wild: Killing in the Name of Conservation
Nature’s Genius: Evolution’s Lessons for a Changing Planet, David Farrier
Earth’s Biodiversity: Its Origins, Impacts and Potential Fate
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Rethinking Human–Nature Relations Through Indigenous Epistemologies
HERO 11.6 Jed Soleiman Novel methods using energy as a common currency to interpret ecosystem change
Megafauna recovery and relevance amidst people and poverty in India
Nature-based Solutions for Societal Transformation. - Prof Nathalie Seddon
Economics of nature-based solutions for mitigating climate change. Edward B Barbier.
From greening to wellbeing
Biodiversity Governance: past, present and future: Reflections on COP-16, & on 16 COPs. David Cooper
Equity in Urban Green Space Access and Governance: an interdisciplinary Oxford case study.
Practices & principles of re-engaging young people with nature. Kim Polgreen and Joseph Boyle:
Joining the blue dots. Joanne Preston
Leveraging human behavioural science for conservation. Brock Bergseth
Biodiversity science for 2030 - knowledge needs to support action to reach the targets of the GBF
The Amazon Forest Climate Solution. Daniel Nepstad
From livelihoods to lifeways:Reflections on conservation justice from Africa's Upper Guinean forests
Nature, health and wellbeing: evidence and action. Professor Ben Wheeler
The Universal History of Us: The Science of Why We Exist. Professor Tim Coulson
Nature connection with CARE: Countryside Access, Recreation, & Environmental Stewardship. Anant Jani
The Screaming Sky: The strange allure of swifts. Charles Foster
Eat, Poop, Die: How Animals Make Our World.
The inevitable loss of large mammals in Malaysia
Understanding human-nature relations
Reimagining Bretton Woods: placing nature at the heart of global finance and governance