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Congratulations to Eloise Stancioff!

On the 9th of May Eloise successfully defended her PhD dissertation in front of a board of examiners in the Klein Auditorium at Leiden University

Eloise awarded her doctorate degree after a successful defense, congratulations!

Landscape, land-change and well-being in the Lesser Antilles: case studies from St. Kitts and the Kalinago Territory, Dominica

This research investigates the changing landscape and land use in two case studies of the coastal villages of St. Kitts and the Kalinago Territory of Dominica. By integrating human and ecological aspects of agrarian landscapes, this research analyzes how land degradation or land change impacts ecosystem services, that ultimately disrupts community wellbeing. First, as a primary goal, the research focus is established together with local communities or stakeholders, identifying both direct and indirect causes of landscape change. Second, by using a variety of qualitative and quantitative methods, but grounded in local participation, the research indicates that landscape change never happens in a vacuum but rather, it is always a part of a larger socio-political context and historical background that must be considered. In both case studies, there remains emphasis on the tangible, as results not only lead to new directions in landscape research but also deliverables used by community stakeholders for continued land sustainability. By investigating the synergies of nature and community within landscape change, this research proposes that local communities assert local agency. This moves away from how local communities fit into global phenomena of land change, to how communities can assert their diversity within a global process.

Eloise's dissertation is available for purchase at Sidestone Press.

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