L. Jan Slikkerveer
Professor emeritus
- Name
- Prof.dr. L.J. Slikkerveer
- Telephone
- 071 5273590
- l.j.slikkerveer@umail.leidenuniv.nl
Director & Founding Member of the LEAD Programme
More information about L. Jan Slikkerveer
News
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Dubois archive presented to Naturalis -
Visit of Prof.Dr. Richard Leakey from Kenya to the LEAD PhD Workshop -
Visit of Prof.Dr. Ioannis Pallikaris from the University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece. -
Working visit of Dr. Asep Mulyana from Universitas Padjadjaran in Bandung, Indonesia -
Visit of Prof. Dr. Budi Nurani from Universitas Padjadjaran in Bandung, Indonesia -
International Promotive Seminar on Integrated Microfinance Management, FEB, UNPAD, Bandung -
Lecture in the World Cultural Forum in Bali 2013 -
Professor Jan Slikkerveer petitions for worldwide local development at the World Culture Forum in Indonesia
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Celebration of 65 years of Independence of The Republic of Indonesia at LEAD -
SIBIOL Conference at NUS with Dr. Jane Goodall and Orchid Naming at Singapore Botanic Garden -
Celebration of 50 years of Independence of The Republic of Indonesia at LEAD -
Pithecanthropus Centennial Commemoration with an International Conference and Exhibition in Leiden, The Netherlands
About the LEAD Programme
In addition to its academic endeavour to document, study and analyse indigenous systems of knowledge, belief and practice as the ‘cultural dimension of development’ in the subfields of ethnomedicine, ethnobotany; ethno-pharmacology, ethno-agriculture, ethno-ecology, indigenous bio-cultural diversity management and conservation, integrated microfinance management and culturally appropriate higher education management, the LEAD Programme also seeks to further develop a specific IKS-oriented complementary qualitative and quantitative research methodology, based on the special design and implementation of the ‘Leiden Ethnosystems Approach’.
The related advanced analytical model encompasses a stepwise bivariate, multivariate and multiple regression analysis of independent, intervening and dependent variables, focused on the understanding, explanation and prediction of participants’ behaviour in the dynamic transcultural setting of local-global systems interaction in the research areas. In addition to the provision of a contribution to the theoretical and methodological development of applied ethnoscience, LEAD also seeks to contribute to the new paradigm of ‘development from the bottom’ by formulating evidence-based recommendations for alternative strategies ’from the bottom’ for policy planning and implementation of integrated local-global systems with a view to attain truly sustainable community development in the various sectors in the research areas and beyond.
In 1990, LEAD received the official recognition and logo of UNESCO as an important research programme of the Decade for Culture and Development.
Professor emeritus
- Faculty of Science
- Faculty general