Emma Jane Lord
Position
Phd candidate
Affiliation
Research groups
Work
Emma鈥檚 dissertation narrates the story of how global climate debates and carbon mitigation funding co-joined with development policy for addressing deforestation in Tanzania, using an empirically grounded, locally situated REDD+ pilot project case study. Her work contributes to wider debates on power dynamics and accountability relations in forestry project design, environmental justice, climate justice and reductionism and complexity in the design of the global mechanism of Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+). By adopting a reflexive engagement with science, using qualitative interviews, participant observation, archival documents and grey literature, she compares her in-depth analysis highlighting contested, unjust and ethically problematic accounts from the local point of view with success claims in the developmental policy rhetoric. This brings to the fore the discrepancy between what developmental actors say and what they do, in the style of Anthropology of Development and drawing from political ecology and environmental justice scholarship.
Emma has a longstanding interest in tropical deforestation. She has a dual award Erasmus Mundus Masters in Sustainable Tropical Forestry from the University of Copenhagen and AgroParisTech in Montpellier. Her undergraduate degree is in Environmental Science from University of Stirling, enabling her to adopt interdisciplinary approaches to research and the social studies of science. She is also interested in humanistic dimensions of land use change including forced evictions within the tropical conservation industry and internal displacement in Colombia. She has an advanced level of Spanish and is interested in comparative approaches to global forest policy, especially in Latin America.
Her recent article was published in Political Geography as part of a Special Issue coordinated by Chr. Michelsen Institute鈥檚 anti-corruption group. Prior to taking up her PhD position, in 2018, Emma鈥檚 book chapter, was published in and introduced readers to injustices caused by global power inequities in forest carbon offsetting. This theme is more deeply explored in her PhD thesis.
Outreach
Panelist in Book launch roundtable during the , 14.08.2023
Presentation of PhD article: . Institute of Development Studies, Brighton (Zoom - a recording of the presentation is available via the link), 15.06.2022
Opinion piece: Bistandsaktuelt, 17.03.202 (in Norwegian)
Blog post: on the platform 02.03.2017
Teaching
Emma has taught on Masters level courses at 黑料吃瓜资源 during her PhD position, both at the Centre for the Study of the Sciences and Humanities and Geography department in the Faculty of Social Sciences.