Julia Kieslinger
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
5 Papers
Julia Kieslinger is an academic researcher from University of Erlangen-Nuremberg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Land use, land-use change and forestry. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Encounters Between Experiences and Measurements: The Role of Local Knowledge in Climate Change Research
TL;DR: In this article, the authors combine local knowledge about climate change and adaptation, based on perceptions and experiences, with quantitative climate measurements in a remote tropical dry forest region of the Andes in southern Ecuador.
Capturing Meanings of Place, Time and Social Interaction when Analyzing Human (Im)mobilities: Strengths and Challenges of the Application of (Im)mobility Biography
Julia Kieslinger,Stefan Kordel,Tobias Weidinger +2 more
- 26 May 2020
TL;DR: In this paper, a participatory approach based on biographical-narrative approaches and participatory ideals is proposed for reconstructing human mobility and related negotiations of meanings of place, time and social interaction.
Unravelling the Meaning of Place and Spatial Mobility: Analysing the Everyday Life-worlds of Refugees in Host Societies by Means of Mobility Mapping
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed mobility mapping as a valuable space-related instrument to tackle the lack of attention to the meanings of places and everyday spatial mobility in the process of refugee settlement.
The road to integrate climate change projections with regional land‐use–biodiversity models
Juliano Sarmento Cabral,Alma Mendoza-Ponce,Johannes Oberpriller,Anne Mimet,Julia Kieslinger,Thomas Berger,Alice Classen,Stefan Fallert,Florian Hartig,Christian Hof,Markus Hoffmann,Thomas Knoke,Andreas Krause,Anne Lewerentz,Perdita Pohle,Uta Raeder,Anja Rammig,Sarah Redlich,Sven Rubanschi,Wolfgang W. Weisser,Daniel Vedder,Peter H. Verburg,Damaris Zurell +22 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors focus on the indirect effects of climate change on biodiversity via its effects on land-use change as well as feedbacks into land use and climate, following direct and indirect pathways, such as indirect pathways from climate change into biodiversity change via climate-driven changes in land use.