CURRICULUM VITAE DIANNE ROCHELEAU · CURRICULUM VITAE DIANNE ROCHELEAU Current Address: Graduate...

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1 CURRICULUM VITAE DIANNE ROCHELEAU Current Address: Graduate School of Geography Clark University 950 Main Street Worcester, MA 01610-1477 Telephone: (508) 793-7176 Email: [email protected] Education University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, 1976-1983, Ph.D. 1985 (Geography/Systems Ecology) Phi Beta Kappa, 1985 Dissertation Title: An Ecological Analysis of Soil and Water Conservation in Hillslope Farming Systems: Plan Sierra, Dominican Republic. Advisor: Prof. Gustavo Antonini, Geography/Latin American Studies University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, 1973-1976, M.A. 1976, (Geography). University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, 1971-1973, B.A. 1973, (Geography/Philosophy) Honors. Eckerd College, St. Petersburg, Florida, 1969-1971. Professional Positions Professor, Graduate School of Geography, International Development, Community and Environment, Women‟s Studies, Environmental Sciences. Clark University, Worcester, 1989-present. Director, Women‟s Studies Program 2004-2006. Director, Global Environmental Studies Major (2009-present). Program Officer, Rural Poverty and Resources, Eastern and Southern Africa, Nairobi Office, The Ford Foundation, New York, 1986-1989.

Transcript of CURRICULUM VITAE DIANNE ROCHELEAU · CURRICULUM VITAE DIANNE ROCHELEAU Current Address: Graduate...

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CURRICULUM VITAE

DIANNE ROCHELEAU

Current Address: Graduate School of Geography Clark University 950 Main Street Worcester, MA 01610-1477

Telephone: (508) 793-7176 Email: [email protected]

Education University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, 1976-1983, Ph.D. 1985 (Geography/Systems Ecology) Phi Beta Kappa, 1985 Dissertation Title: An Ecological Analysis of Soil and Water Conservation in Hillslope Farming Systems: Plan Sierra, Dominican Republic. Advisor: Prof. Gustavo Antonini, Geography/Latin American Studies University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, 1973-1976, M.A. 1976, (Geography). University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, 1971-1973, B.A. 1973, (Geography/Philosophy) Honors. Eckerd College, St. Petersburg, Florida, 1969-1971.

Professional Positions

Professor, Graduate School of Geography, International

Development, Community and Environment, Women‟s Studies, Environmental Sciences. Clark University, Worcester, 1989-present. Director, Women‟s Studies Program 2004-2006. Director, Global Environmental Studies Major (2009-present).

Program Officer, Rural Poverty and Resources, Eastern and Southern Africa, Nairobi Office, The Ford Foundation, New York, 1986-1989.

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Professional Positions (cont‟d.)

Geographer/Senior Scientist, International Center for Research in Agroforestry, ICRAF, Nairobi, Kenya 1983-1986.

Technician, Hillsborough County, Environmental Protection Commission, Tampa, Florida, 1975-1976.

Environmental Specialist, Air and Water Quality Planning, Evaluation and Monitoring. Interscience, Inc., Tampa, Florida, 1974-1975.

Professional Service and Leadership

Member Editorial Board, International Journal of the Commons 2006-present. Member, Association of American Geographers. Committee on Research Awards, 2001-2002. Committee on the Status of Women. 2007-2010.

Elected Member, Executive Council. International Association for the Study of the Commons (IASC – www.iascp.org ) 2002-8. Series Editor (with Arturo Escobar) Duke University Press. New Ecologies for the 21st Century. 2002- present. Elected Member, Board of Trustees, Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) Bogor, Indonesia. 1995-2001. Executive Committee, 1997-99. Program Committee Chair 1999. Editorial Board, Gender, Place and Culture. 2003-2006. Editorial Board. The Geographical Journal. 2002 – present. Editorial Board, Forests, Trees and Livelihoods Journal, 1997 to present. National Science Foundation Geography and Regional Science Research Awards Panel. 1998-1999. Member, National Science Foundation Geography and Regional Science Dissertation Research Panel. 1997-98.

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Professional Service and Leadership (cont‟d.) Member, Policy Consultative Group on Africa, World Resources Institute and U.S.A.I.D., Washington, D.C. 1991-1999 (service and consultancies). Professorial Fellow, Sustainable Land Use Program, African Center for Technology Studies (ACTS), Nairobi. 1993 - 1996. Member, Advisory Board, Land Tenure Center, University of Wisconsin, Madison. 1989 - 1996. Chair. 1991-92. Associate Fellow. Sustainable Agriculture Program. International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED). London. 1989 - 1994. Board of Trustees, Regional Environmental Council. Worcester. 1993-2000. Member, National Academy of Sciences (NAS/NRC) Review Panel on Tropical Forestry Research. 1991. Member, Advisory Board, Wildlife and Human Needs Program. World Wildlife Fund. 1990 - 1992. Regional Councilor, Eastern U.S., Cultural Ecology Specialty Group, Association of American Geographers, AAG. 1990-91.

Editorial Advisory Board. Society and Natural Resources 1987 - 1991.

Awards and Honors

Contributing Author to edited volume Awarded AAA 2006 Lourdes Arizpe Award. P. Brosius, A. Lowenhaupt Tsing, and C. Zerner. Eds. 2005. Communities and Conservation. Altamira Press. Fellowship Award, 2002-3, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, to conduct research and writing on The Invisible Ecologies of Machakos: Landscapes, Livelihoods and Life Stories. 1900-2000.

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Awards and Honors (cont‟d.) Fulbright Senior Specialist Award – Environmental Sciences. Invited lectures and seminars, Chiang Mai University, Thailand, July 1-30, 2003. Choice Outstanding Academic Book, Interdisciplinary, 1996. Gender, Environment, and Development in Kenya: A grassroots perspective by B. Thomas-Slayter and D. Rocheleau. 1995. Lynn Rienner, Boulder. Award for Exemplary Teaching, Geography, Clark University. 1994-95.

Phi Beta Kappa. University of Florida, Gainesville, 1985.

Rockefeller Foundation (Post Doctoral) Research Fellowship: Social Sciences in Rural Development, 1983-1985. O.A.S. Fellowship for Ph.D. Fieldwork. O.A.S. Washington, D.C. 1979-81. Title XII Research Funds. University of Florida. Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, 1979-1980. Supplemental Fellowship. University of Florida, 1979-1980. Title VI Foreign Language Fellowship (Portuguese). Center for Latin American Studies. University of Florida, 1978-1979 and 1977-1978. Graduate School Fellowship for entering graduate students. Office of the Dean. University of Florida, 1976-1977. Florida Regents Tuition Scholarship 1969-1973. Full Scholarship. University of Pennsylvania, 1969. Declined.

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Research Grants Henry J. Lier Luxembourg Program Workshop Grant. 2011 Conference on Feminist Political Ecology $14,500.

NSF Dissertation Awards. PI/Faculty Advisor or co-advisor: 2007, Susan Aragon, $12,000; 2005, Susannah McCandless, $11,000; 2004, Sonja Pieck, $9,000; 2002, Christina Hamm. $4,500; 2000, Alice Hovorka, $9,500; 2000, Jennifer Brewer $9,000; 1996 Sunita Reddy $7,500.

Clark University. Faculty Development Grant. Support for Remote sensing imagery for preliminary analysis and proposal on social, ecological and land use change in Santiago, Dominican Republic, 2002-3. $2,500. USDA Forest Service Research Branch. Research Grant. Social Constituencies of Adirondack Ecologies. PI‟s Dianne Rocheleau, Luis Malaret (Marsh Institute) and Marla Emery of USDA Forest Services, Northeast Research Station, Burlington, VT. 2000-2001 $47,000.

USDA Forest Service Research Branch Seed Grant. Social and Ecological Dimensions of Biodiversity in Complex Regional Ecologies. PI‟s Dianne Rocheleau of Marsh Institute and Marla Emery of USDA Forest Service, Northeast Research Station, Burlington VT.1999-2000 $10,000.

Faculty Development Grant from Clark University for analysis of biodiversity data from Kenya and the Dominican Republic, 1994-95, $1,500.

Ford Foundation grant to produce an edited volume on Gender and Environment. Principal Investigator/Senior Editor. 1992-1995, $50,000; 1994-1995, $20,000. Published Feminist Political Ecology in 1996.

USAID research grants to ECOGEN Project (Faculty Researcher;

Barbara Thomas-Slayter, P. I) to document relationship of gender, community organization and ecology in rural resource management (Kenya-1990/91, $150,000; Philippines, Honduras, Dominican Republic.1992-5, $85,000).

World Wildlife Fund; Co-PI w. Calestous Juma ,ACTS, Policy History, Land Use and the Future of the Dry Forest (Kenya).1992-94. $25,000.

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Research Grants (cont‟d.)

Research grant for Kenya Case Study; sub-grant of Clark University National Science Foundation grant on Human Dimensions of Global Environmental Change (B.L. Turner and R.E. Kasperson, Co-Principal Investigators) 1990-91. Sub-grant, $8,000. Published Chapter on Kenya.

Faculty Development Grant from Clark University for landscape

ecology data analysis, Kenya and Dominican Republic, 1990-91, $1,500.

Ford Foundation Research Grant to document women's use of off-farm lands and domestication of trees and wild plants in Kenyan farming systems. Principal Investigator (for ICRAF). 1985-1986, $45,000.

Swedish International Development Agency Grant to ICRAF to write a

book on agroforestry for field researchers and extensionists in Africa. Senior Author/Principal Investigator, 1984-1986, $60,000.

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Publications

Books/ Edited Volumes

Rocheleau, D., B. Thomas-Slayter and E. Wangari. Eds. 1996. Feminist Political Ecology: Global Perspectives and Local Experiences. Routledge. London.

Thomas-Slayter, Barbara and Dianne Rocheleau. 1995. Gender,

Environment and Development in Kenya: Perspectives from the Grassroots. Lynn Rienner. Boulder.(Choice Outstanding Book,1996).

Slocum, L., L. Wichart, D. Rocheleau and B. Thomas-Slayter. Eds. 1995. Power, Process and Participation: Tools for Change. Intermediate Technology Publishers. London.

Rocheleau, D., F. Weber and A. Field-Juma. 1988. Agroforestry in Dryland Africa. ICRAF. Nairobi. 311 pp. (Three printings, French translation 1996, other translations -in whole or in part- Japanese, Portuguese)

Articles in Refereed Journals

Lin, Brenda, M. Jahi Chappell, John Vandermeer, Gerald Smith, Ivette Perfecto, Eileen Quintero, Rachel Bezner-Kerr, Daniel Griffith, Stuart Ketcham, Steve Latta, Philip McMichael, Krista McGuire, Ron Nigh, Dianne Rocheleau, and John Soluri.In press. Effects of Industrial Agriculture on Global Warming and the Potential of Small- Scale Agroecological techniques to Mitigate those Effects. CAB Reviews.

Rocheleau, D. In press. A Review of Explaining Human Actions and Environmental Changes by Andrew P. Vayda. One of a series of 5 review papers and author response. Requested, Submitted and Accepted. Dialogues in Human Geography.

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Articles in Refereed Journals (cont‟d.) Hawkins, Roberta, and Diana Ojeda Editors. Contributors: Kiran

Asher, Brigitte Baptiste, Leila Harris, Sharlene Mellott, Andrea Nightingale, Dianne Rocheleau, Joni Seager and Farhana Sultana * 2011. Gender and Environment: Critical Tradition and New Challenges. Environment and

Planning D. Society and Space.

*This article is the result of a collaborative effort and all editors and contributors are listed in

alphabetical order.

Jacqueline Vadjunec and Dianne Rocheleau. 2009. Beyond Forest Cover: Land Use and Biodiversity in Rubber Trail Forests of the Chico

Mendes Extractive Reserve. Ecology and Society: 14(2): 29. [online] URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol14/iss2/art29/ Rocheleau, D. 2008. Review of Globalization and the New Geographies of Conservation by Karl Zimmerer. Annals of the AAG. Rocheleau, D. 2008. Political Ecology in the key of policy: from chains of explanation to webs of relation. Geoforum 39 (2008) 716-727. Rocheleau, D. and R. Roth. 2007. Rooted networks, relational webs and powers of connection: Rethinking human and political ecologies. Geoforum 38 (2007) 433-437.

Rocheleau, D., L. Ross, J. Morrobel, and L. Malaret. 2001. Complex Communities and Emergent Ecologies in the Regional Agroforest of Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. Ecumene 8 (4): 465-492.

Rocheleau, D. 1999. Commentary on After Nature: Steps to an Anti-Esentialist Political Ecology by Arturo Escobar. Current Anthropology. 40:1.

Rocheleau, D., and C. Radel. 1999. Commentary on Analyses and Interventions: Anthropological engagements with environmentalism by Peter Brosius. Current Anthropology. 40 (3).

Articles in Refereed Journals (cont‟d.)

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Rocheleau, D.1999. Beyond Dueling Determinisms: Toward Complex,

Humane and Just Ecologies. Human Ecology Review. 6 (2):116-120. Rocheleau, D. and D. Edmunds. 1997. Women, Men and Trees:

Gender, Power and Property in Forest and Agrarian Landscapes. World Development. 25 (8): 1351-1371.

Rocheleau, D. 1995. Maps, Numbers, Text and Context: Mixing Methods in Feminist Political Ecology. Professional Geographer. 47 (4): 458-467.

Rocheleau, D. and L. Ross. 1995. Trees as Tools, Trees as Text: Struggles Over Resources in Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. Antipode. 27 (4): 407-428.

Rocheleau, D., P. Steinberg and P. Benjamin. 1995. Environment, Development, Crisis and Crusade: Ukambani, Kenya 1890-1990. World Development. 23 (6): 1037-1051.

Thomas-Slayter, B. and D. Rocheleau. 1995. Research Frontiers at

the Nexus of Gender, Environment, and Development: Linking Household, Community and Ecosystem. Women in Development Annual Review. Vol. 4. Westview, Boulder.

Rocheleau, D. 1994. Participatory Research and the Race to Save the Planet: Questions, Critique and Lessons from the Field. Agriculture and Human Values 11: (2).

Rocheleau, D. 1991. Gender, Ecology and the Science of Survival. Agriculture and Human Values. 8 (1): 156-165.

Rocheleau, D. 1991. Participatory Research in Agroforestry: Learning from Experience and Expanding our Repertoire Agroforestry Systems.12(2)

Fortmann, L., and D. Rocheleau, 1984. Women and Agroforestry: Four Myths and Three Case Studies. Agroforestry Systems, 2: 253-272.

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Other Journal Publications

Rocheleau, D. 2006. Putting property in context: From common property to the properties of the commons. The Commons Digest. 2: 6-8.

Rocheleau, D. 2005. Cultures of Peace: Women in the Rural Federation of Zambrana-Chacuey. Development 48(3): 93-100. Escobar, A., D. Rocheleau and S. Kothari. 2002. Environmental Social Movements and the Politics of Place. Development. 45 (1): 28-36.

Rocheleau, D.2001. Complex Communities and Relational Webs: Stories of Surprise and Transformation in Machakos. IDS Bulletin, 32 (4):78-87. Rocheleau, D. L. Ross, J. Morrobel, R. Hernandez. 2000. Sistemas Agroforestales en Zambrana-Chacuey en la Republica Dominicana: un enfoque de genero. Agroforesteria en Las Americas. 7 (25): 15-23.

Rocheleau, D. 1997. Shared Spaces and Sub-Divided Interests in the Uncommons: Gendered Forests, Tree Farms, and Gardens in the Agroforests of Zambrana-Chacuey. The Common Property Resource Digest. No. 40:1-6.

Rocheleau, D. 1995. Commentary on More People, Less Erosion by Michael Mortimore and Mary Tiffen. Environment. 37 (7): 3-5.

Rocheleau, D. 1995. Gender and Biodiversity: A Feminist Political

Ecology Perspective. IDS Bulletin. 26 (1): 9-16.

Rocheleau, D., B. Thomas-Slayter and D. Edmunds. 1995. Gendered Resource Mapping. Cultural Survival Quarterly 18 (4): 62-68.

Thomas-Slayter, B. and D. Rocheleau. 1994. Ecology, Community Organization and Gender (ECOGEN) Project Overview. Culture and Agriculture. 48: 19-23.

Rocheleau, D. and J.B. Raintree. 1986. Agroforestry and the Future of Food Production in Developing Countries. Impact of Science on Society. 142: 127-141.

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Other Journal Publications (cont’d)

Fortmann, L., and D. Rocheleau. 1985. Why Agroforestry Needs Women: The Case of Plan Sierra. Unasylva. Women and Forestry. 36: 145.

Rocheleau, D. and Remko Vonk. 1983. The Role of Agroforestry in FSR & D. Farming Systems Support Program Newsletter 1(3)Gainesville.

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Chapters in Books

Harcourt, W., A. Brook Wilson, A. Escobar, D. Rocheleau. In press(2011). A Massey Muse. In Spatial Politics: Essays For Doreen Massey. Edited by David Featherstone and Joe Painter. Wiley-Blackwell. Oxford UK.

GESEC (Gender and Environment Series Editorial Committee)* In Press (for 2012 release). Feminist Political Ecology. In The Women, Gender and Development Reader. London. ZED Press. * 1 of 8 authors

Rocheleau, D. 2011. Rooted Networks, Webs of Relation, and the Power of Situated Science: Bringing the Models Back Down to Earth in Zambrana” in Knowing Nature, Transforming Ecologies: A conversation between Science and Technology Studies and Political Ecology. In Mara Goldman, Paul Nadasdy, and Matthew Turner eds. Chicago. University of Chicago Press.

Rocheleau, D. 2007. Neoliberal Environments, Technologies of

Governance and Governance of Technologies. In Nik Heynen, James McCarthy, Scott Prudham, and Paul Robbins Eds. Neoliberal Environments: False Promises and Unnatural Consequences. Routledge. New York.

Rocheleau, D.E. 2007. Paisajes políticos y ecologías de Zambrana-

Chacuey: el legado de Mama Tingo. In: Las Mujeres y las Politicas del Lugar, Edited by Wendy Harcourt and Arturo Escobar. U.N.A.M. Mexico, D.F. pp. 83-96. (translation, see 2005).

Rocheleau, D.E. 2007. Ecología Política Feminista. in Tejiendo

Redes entre Genero y Ambiente en los Andes. Edited by Susan Poats, Maria Cuvi, and Adriana Burbano Tzonkowa. Quito: Flora Tristan; Abya Yala; Corporacion Grupo Randi-Randi.

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Chapters in Books (cont’d) Rocheleau, D. 2005. Political Landscapes and Ecologies of

Zambrana-Chacuey: The legacy of Mama Tingo. In W. Harcourt, A. Escobar Eds. Women and the Politics of Place. Kumarian, Bloomfield.

Rocheleau, D. 2005. Maps as Power-Tools: Locating “Communities”

in Space or Situating People(s) and Ecologies in Place? In Communities and Conservation: Histories and Politics of Community-Based Natural Resource Management. Edited by Peter Brosius, Anna Tsing, Charles Zerner. Altamira Press. (Lourdes Arizpe AAA Anthropology Award, 2006)

Rocheleau, D. 2004. Listening to the Landscapes of Mama Tingo: From the Woman Question in Sustainable Development to Feminist Political Ecology in Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. In J. Seager and L. Nelson Eds. The Companion to Feminist Geography. Blackwell‟s. Oxford.

Rocheleau, D., B. Thomas-Slayter, and E. Wangari. 2004. Genero y

Ambiente: Una Perspectiva de la Ecología Política Feminista. In Miradas Al Futuro: Hacia la consruccion de sociedades sustentables con equidad de genero. Edited by Verónica Vasquez Garcia and Margarita Velásquez Gutierrez. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. Mexico. Translation and revision of prior work. pp. 343-372.

Rocheleau, D., L. Ross, and J. Morrobel. 2004. Mujeres, Hombres, y

Madera en Zambrana-Chacuey, Republica Dominicana. In Miradas Al Futuro: Hacia la construcción de sociedades sustentables con equidad de genero. Edited by Verónica Vasquez Garcia and Margarita Velásquez Gutierrez. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. Mexico. Translation and revision of prior work. pp. 373-404. Rocheleau, D. 2003. Participation in Context: What‟s Past, What‟s Present and What‟s Next. In Managing Natural Resources for Sustainable Livelihoods: Uniting Science and Participation. Edited by Barry Pound, Ann Braun, Sieglund Snapp, Cynthia MacDougall. Earthscan. London. (15pp.)

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Chapters in Books (cont’d) Rocheleau, D., L. Ross and J. Morrobel. 1999. Gender, Ecology and

Landscape Change in Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. In Jonathan Harris and Neva Godwin Eds. Sustainable Development . University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor.

Rocheleau, D. 1998. Confronting Complexity, Dealing with Difference:

Social Context, Content and Practice in Agroforestry. In Louise Buck, James Lassoie, and Erick Fernandes, Eds. Agroforestry in Sustainable Ecosystems. CRC Publishers.

Rocheleau, D. 1998. Sustaining What for Whom? Differences of

Interest within and between Households. In U. Sinclair and M. Swisher. (eds.) Sustainability in Managed Ecosystems: The MesoAmerican Experience. Oxford University Press. Oxford and New York.

Hoban, A., P. Peters and D. Rocheleau,1998. Participation, Civil

Society, and Foreign Assistance to Africa. In P. Veit, (ed.) Africa‟s Valuable Assets: A Reader in Natural Resource Management. World Resources Institute. Washington D.C.

Rocheleau, D. and L. Ross. 1997. Gendered Landscapes, Gendered

Lives: Maps and Life Histories from Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. In I. Guijt and M. Kaul Shah. Eds. The Myth of Community: Gender Issues in Participatory Development. Intermediate Technology Press. London.

Rocheleau, D., B. Thomas-Slayter and E. Wangari. 1996. Gender and Environment: A Feminist Political Ecology Perspective. In Rocheleau, D., B. Thomas-Slayter and E. Wangari. Eds. Feminist Political Ecology: Global Perspectives and Local Experiences. Routledge. London. Rocheleau, D., L. Ross, and J. Morrobel, with Ricardo Hernandez, C. Amparo, C. Brito and D. Zevallos. 1996. Gender, Politics and Everyday Science in the Forests, Fields and Gardens of Zambrana-Chacuey. In Rocheleau, D., B. Thomas-Slayter and E. Wangari. Eds. Feminist Political Ecology: Global Perspectives and Local Experiences. Routledge. London.

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Chapters in Books (cont’d) Thomas-Slayter, B., D. Rocheleau and E. Wangari. 1996. Feminist

Political Ecology: Summary and Conclusions. In Rocheleau, D., B. Thomas-Slayter and E. Wangari. Eds. Feminist Political Ecology: Global Perspectives and Local Experiences. Routledge. London.

Wangari, Esther, B. Thomas-Slayter and D. Rocheleau. 1996. Gendered Visions for Survival in Kenya: Semi-Arid Regions in Kenya. In Rocheleau, D., B. Thomas-Slayter, and E. Wangari. Eds. Feminist Political Ecology: Global Perspectives and Local Experiences. Routledge. London.

Rocheleau, D., P. Benjamin and A. Duang'a. 1995. The Ukambani Region of Kenya. In R. Kasperson, J. Kasperson and B. Turner II (eds.). Critical Environmental Zones: Regional Case Studies. United Nations University Press. Tokyo. 59 pp.

Rocheleau, D. and Slocum, R. 1995. Participation in Context: Who,

Where, When, How and Why? In Slocum, L., L. Wichart, D. Rocheleau and B. Thomas-Slayter. Eds. Power, Process and Participation: Tools for Change. Intermediate Technology Publishers. London. pp. 17-31.

Rocheleau, D. 1995. Gendered Resource Mapping. In R. Slocum, L.

Wichart, D. Rocheleau and B. Thomas-Slayter (Eds.) Power, Process and Participation: Tools for Change. Intermediate Technology Publications. London. pp. 110-120. Rocheleau, D. and L. Ross. 1995. Landscape/Lifescape Mapping. In R. Slocum, L. Wichart, D. Rocheleau and B. Thomas-Slayter (eds.) Power, Process and Participation: Tools for Change. Intermediate Technology Publications. London. pp. 138-142.

Ross, L. and D. Rocheleau. 1995. Land Use Feltboard. In R. Slocum, L. Wichart, D. Rocheleau and B. Thomas-Slayter (eds.) Power, Process and Participation:Tools for Change. Intermediate Technology. London. pp.132-7.

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Chapters in Books (cont‟d):

Rocheleau, D. 1994. Investigating Contradictions and Mysteries. In H. Feldstein and J. Jiggins (eds.) Tools for the Field: Methodologies Handbook for Gender Analysis in Agriculture. Kumarian Press. West Hartford.pp.71-3.

Feldstein, H., D. Rocheleau and L. Buck. 1990. Agroforestry

Extension and Research: A Case Study from Siaya District. In H. Feldstein and S. Poats (eds.). Working Together: Gender Analysis in Agriculture. Kumarian Press. West Hartford. pp. 167-209

Rocheleau, D., K. Wachira, L. Malaret and B. Wanjohi. 1989. Local

Knowledge of Agroforestry and Native Plants. In R. Chambers, A. Pacey and L. Thrupp (eds.). Farmer First: Farmer Innovation and Agricultural Research. Intermediate Technology Publications. London. pp. 14-23.

Poats, S., H. Feldstein, and D. Rocheleau. 1989. Gender and Intra-Household Analysis in On-Farm Research and Experimentation. In R. Wilk (ed.) The Household Economy: Reconsidering the Domestic Mode of Production. Westview Press. Boulder. pp. 245-266.

Rocheleau, D. 1988. Women, Trees and Tenure - Implications for Agroforestry. In L. Fortmann and J. Bruce (eds.) Whose Trees? Proprietary Dimensions of Forestry. Westview. Boulder.pp.254-272.

Rocheleau. D. 1988. Gender, Resource Management and the Rural Landscape: Implications for Agroforestry and Farming Systems Research. In S. Poats, M. Schmink, A. Spring and G. Gearing (eds.) Gender Issues in Farming Systems Research and Extension. Westview. Boulder.pp.149-170.

Rocheleau, D. 1987. A Land User Perspective for Agroforetry Research and Action. In H. Gholz (ed.) Agroforestry: Realities, Possibilities and Potentials. Martinus Nijhoff. Doerdrecht. pp. 59-87. *

Antonini, G. and D. Rocheleau, 1985. Rural Land Use in the Caribbean: Critique and Suggestions for Future Research. In K.J. Grieb (ed.) Research Guide to Central America and the Caribbean. University of Wisconsin Press. Madison.

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Articles in Proceedings

Rocheleau, D. 2006. Ecología Política Feminista: Poder en Redes y Poderes Enredados. Memoria de la Conferencia Tejiendo Redes. Lima, Sept. 2006. Corporación Grupo Randi Randi. Quito, Ecuador.

Rocheleau, D. 1995. Encompassing Difference: Ecological and Social Diversity. In Conference Proceedings of the Political Ecology Workshop. April 14-17, 1994. Michigan State University. East Lansing, Michigan.

Rocheleau, D. 1995. The Stance of the Observer in Political Ecology. In Conference Proceedings of the Political Ecology Workshop. April 14-17, 1994. Michigan State University. East Lansing, Michigan.

Rocheleau, D. 1992. Farmers of the Living Landscape. In L.

Borkenhagen and J. Abramovitz (eds.) Women and Biodiversity. Proceedings of a Conference at Harvard Institute for International Development. Cambridge. October, 1991.

Rocheleau, D. 1992. Whose Common Future? A Land User Approach to Gendered Rights and Responsibilities in Rural Landscapes. In Swedish International Development Agency Report of the Workshop on Gender and Environment. Stockholm. Submitted as an official government document for the Earth Summit, Rio de Janeiro, 1992. 34 pp.

Rocheleau, D. 1990. Gender, Conflict, and Complementarity in Social Forestry Development: A Multiple User Approach." IUFRO: Congress Report, Vol. B, pp. 432-448. Montreal: International Union of Forest Research Organizations, 5-11 August.

Rocheleau, D. 1989. The Gender Division of Work, Resources and

Rewards in Agroforestry Systems. In ICRAF. Agroforestry Development in Kenya. Proceedings of the Second Kenyan National Seminar on Agroforestry. ICRAF. Nairobi.

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Articles in Proceedings (cont‟d.) Rocheleau, D. and L. Malaret. 1987. Use of Ethnoecology in Agroforestry Systems Research: An Example of Agroforestry and Pest Management Research in Kenya. In University of Arkansas andWinrock International (eds.) How Systems Work. Selected Proceedings, Fourth Farming Systems Research Symposium. Fayetteville/Morrillton. Rocheleau, D. 1987. Women, Trees and Tenure: Implications for Agroforestry Research and Development. In J.B. Raintree (ed.) Land, Trees, and Tenure: Proceedings of the International Workshop on Tenure Issues in Agroforestry, 26-30 May, 1985. ICRAF/LTC. Nairobi/Madison.

Rocheleau, D. 1985. Criteria for Re-appraisal and Re-design: Intra-

household and Between-household Aspects of Three Kenyan Agroforestry Projects. In C. Flora and M. Tomacek (eds.) Selected Proceedings of the Annual Symposium on Farming Systems Research and Extension: Monitoring and Implementation, October 7-10, 1984. Kansas State University. Manhattan.*

Fortmann, L., and D. Rocheleau. 1985. Women's Participation in

Agroforestry in Kenya and Dominican Republic. In R. Gallin and A. Spring (eds.) Women Creating Wealth: Transforming Economic Development. Selected Papers and Speeches from the Association for Women in Development Conference, April 25-27, 1985. AWID. Washington D.C.*

Working Papers and Occasional Papers

Rocheleau, D., L Ross, and J. Morrobel. 1997. Forests, Trees and Fields of Power: Makings and Takings of Biodiversity in the Regional Agroforest of Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. Prepared for Agrarian Studies Seminar, Yale University. Marsh Institute. Clark University. 41 pp. Hoben, A., P. Peters and D. Rocheleau. 1996. Participation, Civil Society and Foreign Assistance to Africa: A Discussion Paper. Policy Consultative Group. World Resources Institute. Washington D.C. 30 pp.

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Working Papers and Occasional Papers (cont‟d.)

Rocheleau, D., L. Ross, J. Morrobel and R. Hernandez. 1996. Forest/Garden/Tree Farm: Gender and Class at Work in the Landscapes of Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. ECOGEN Project Case Study. Worcester. Clark University. 60 pp.

Rocheleau, D., P. Steinberg, and P. Benjamin. 1994. A Hundred

Years of Crisis? Environment and Development Narratives in Ukambani, Kenya. Working Paper Series on Land Use History in Africa. Boston University Center for African Studies. Boston. 45pp.

Thomas-Slayter, B.and D. Rocheleau. 1994. Essential Connections:

Linking Gender to Effective Natural Resource Management and Sustainable Development. Working Papers on Women and International Development. Michigan State University. East Lansing. 25 pp.

Rocheleau, D.1993. Policy History, Land Use and the Future of the Dry Forest. ACTS Research Memorandum No. 1. ACTS. Nairobi. 23pp.

Rocheleau, D. 1992. Changing Values in Africa: Gendered History, Gendered Geography and the Shape of Possible Futures." Center for International Perspectives, University of New Hampshire. Durham. 35 pp.

Rocheleau, D. 1992. Gender, Ecology and Agroforestry: Science and Survival in Kathama. Ecogen Working Paper. Clark University. 32pp.

Thomas-Slayter, B., D. Rocheleau, D. Shields, and M. Rojas. 1991. Concepts and Issues Linking Gender, Natural Resources Management and Sustainable Development, Ecogen Working Paper . Clark University 63 pp.

Rocheleau, D. K. Schofield and J.N. Mbuthi. 1991. People, Property, Poverty and Parks: A Story of Men, Women, Water and Trees at Pwani. Ecogen Working Paper. Clark University.35 pp.

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Working Papers and Occasional Papers (continued)

Rocheleau, D. 1985. Land Use Planning With Rural Farm Households and Communities: Participatory Agroforestry Research. ICRAF Working Paper No. 36. ICRAF. Nairobi.

Rocheleau, D. and A. van den Hoek. 1984. The Application of

Ecosystems and Landscape Analysis in Agroforestry Diagnosis and Design. ICRAF Working Paper No. 36. ICRAF. Nairobi. 92 pp.

Rocheleau, D. 1984. Geographic and Socioeconomic Aspects of the Recent Haitian Migration and the Haitian Economy. Occasional Paper No. 3. Caribbean Migration Program. Center for Latin American Studies. University of Florida, Gainesville. Rocheleau, D. 1983. Ecosystem Analysis in D & D Applications. In J. Raintree (ed.) Resources for Agroforestry Diagnosis and Design. Working Paper No. 7. ICRAF. Nairobi. pp. 137-155.

Rocheleau, D. 1983. Watershed Evaluation Guidelines. In J. Raintree (ed.) Resources for Agroforestry Diagnosis and Design. Working Paper No. 7. ICRAF. Nairobi. pp. 165-171.

Rocheleau, D. 1983. Functional Diagramming for Ecological Analysis of Farms and Ecosystems. In J. Raintree (ed.) Resources for Agroforestry Diagnosis and Design. Working paper No. 7. ICRAF. Nairobi. pp. 233-251.

Technical Papers

Rocheleau, D.E. 1993. Environment, Development and Social Justice in the Dominican Republic: Program Review and Prospects for the Rural Poverty and Resources Program . Ford Foundation. 22 pp.

Review Panel on International Forestry Research, National Research Council (1 of 7 panel members) 1991. Tropical Forestry Research: Developing a U.S. Strategy. Panel Report. BOSTID/NRC Washington, D.C. 56 pp.

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Technical Papers (continued)

Rocheleau, D. 1985. Women's Use of Off-Farm Lands: Implications for AF Research. Project Report to Ford Foundation. ICRAF Nairobi. 45pp. Huxley, P., D. Rocheleau, and P. Wood. 1985. Farming Systems and Agroforestry Research in Northern Zambia. Phase I Report: Diagnosis of Land use Problems and Research indications. ICRAF. Nairobi. 64 pp.

Hoekstra, D., P. Huxley, and D. Rocheleau. 1985. Diagnosis of Land Use Systems and Design of Agroforestry Interventions for the Drylands of Karnataka (India). ICRAF. Nairobi. 67pp.

Rocheleau, D., M. Baumer and D. Depommier. 1985. Consultancy Report and Project Proposals for the Soil Conservation Program of the Kenyan Ministry of Agriculture and the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA). ICRAF. Nairobi. 76 pp.

Raintree, J., D. Rocheleau, P. Huxley, P. Wood, and F. Torres. 1984. Report on the Joint Diagnostic and Design Exercise at the Bhaintan Watershed in the Outer Himalaya of Uttar Pradesh. Nairobi. ICRAF. 78 pp.

Rocheleau, D., S. Kanani, F. Torres, P. Huxley, D. Hoekstra, and R. Kareri. 1984. Development of Improved Agroforestry Systems for the Seasonally Dry Uplands of Costa Rica. ICRAF. Nairobi. 66 pp.

Biggs, S., W. Burns, J. Goebel, N. Hudson, D. Rocheleau, and F. Torres. 1984. Proposed SADCC Land and Water Management Research Programme. Overseas Development Administration. London 86 pp.

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Conference Papers and Presentations

2011. 1) Dispossession by Green Deceit: Taking Land through Strategic Purchases and Territorial Cleansing in Chiapas (Rosa Luz Perez); 2)Participatory Methods to Inform and Prepare Communities to Decide on Free, Prior and informed Consent or to Withhold Consent on Land Deals. 3) Plenary panel: Conceptual perspectives on land grabbing and the politics of agrarian change. International Conference on Global Land Grabbing. Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, England. April 6-8,

2011. Notes and Ruminations on Networks, Complexity and the Pluriverse; Pluriverse Workshop, St. Johns, Newfoundland September,28 - October 3, 2010 2010. Poderes de Conexión: Redes con Raíces, Marañas Relacionales, y Territorios de Mundos Múltiples. Notas preliminares (27 p.) para el Taller sobre Ontologías y Relacionalidad, (Relational Ontologies Workshop), Casa Claver, Bogotá,Colombia

2010. Situated Sciences and Global Environmental Justice: Feminist Alternatives. Also Panel on Gender and Environment resulting in collective paper (see publications) AAG April 11-14, 2010. Washington D.C. 2009. Gender, Culture, Nature and the Powers of Connection: Rooted Networks and Relational Webs in Changing Ecologies Across Scales

Invited paper in symposium on Contemporary Debates on Ecology, Culture and Society (Session 2): Environmental discourses and cultural practices in Latin America. Annual meetings of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) June 2009. Rio de Janeiro.

2008. Contributor to: A Feminist Agenda for Transforming Structural and Technological Convergence: A Contribution to a Global CSO Seminar on the threats from BANG (manipulation of Bits, Atoms, Neurons and Genes) Technologies in Montpellier, France from 22-26, November 2008.

2008. Networks, Patchworks, Roots and Power in Relational Landscapes. AAG April 14-19, 2008. Boston.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

2008. Networks with a Difference: Situated Science for Global Climate Change. Social Science Research Council Workshop on Environmental Change and the Social Sciences. March 13-14, 2008. NYC. 2008. Segmented Sustainability and the Undoing of Diverse Ecologies. Conference on Environments Undone: The Political Ecology of Globalization and Development. Feb. 29- Mar. 1, 2008. U.N.C. Chapel Hill.

2008. From Feminist Political Ecology to Situated Science . Contribution to Feminist Seminar on Global Environmental Justice, Climate Change and Technology Change. Jan. , 2008. Dag Hammarskjold Foundation. Uppsala. 2007. Rooted Networks/Relational Webs: Theories and Models for a Socio-Ecological Science. (Plus related panel and discussion sessions in Poverty and Conservation I and III) AAG. April 17-21 San Francisco. 2006. Ecología Política Feminista: Poder en Redes y Poderes Enredados. Conferencia Tejiendo Raíces: Género y Medio Ambiente en Los Andes. (Rooted Networks and Feminist Political Ecology. Conference on Gender and Environment in the Andes.) Oct. 12-13, Lima, Perú. 2006. Principios De Ordenamiento Territorial Participativo y Comunitario: Complicando para Clarificar. Taller: Análisis de Enfoques Metodológicos del Ordenamiento Comunitario del Territorio. (Principles of Community-Based Land Evaluation and Planning: Complicating to Clarify, National Workshop on Community Land Evaluation and Planning). ERA/ GAIA/COINBIO 27-28 Sept. Universidad IberoAmericana, Campus Puebla. 2006. Whose Commons, Whose Properties? Complex Commons, Nested Networks, and the Properties of Place.(Plus panel presentation and discussion). Global Conference. IASCP. June 19-23, Ubud, Bali, Indonesia. 2006. Biodiversity, Species Composition, and Land Use Categories in Tupper Lake, Adirondacks: People, Plants and Animals in Residential, Recreational and Working Forest Ecologies. 13th Annual Adirondacks Research Consortium Conference. May 24-25 Lake Placid, NY.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.): 2006. Impact of Silvicultural Practices on Leaf Litter Amphibians in

the Adirondacks, by Luis Malaret, Gary Wade, Monika Szymurska, Rachel

Regeczi, Dianne Rocheleau, and Marla Emery, presented by Luis Malaret. Northeast Natural History Conference (9). April 20-21, 2006. Albany, NY.

2006. Powered Webs and Rooted Networks in Complex Landscapes(II). Session 1(of 3) Political Ecologies of Knowledge, Science and Technology AAG. Chicago, March 7-11.

2006. Powered Webs and Rooted Networks in Complex Landscapes (I) Interdiscplinary Workshop on Political Ecologies of Science and Technology. University of Wisconsin, Madison. March 6-7. 2005. Gendered Ecologies, Material Networks: Feminist Political Ecology, Empiricism, and Situated Knowledge. Women and Gender Studies Conference. Clark University. September 16-17. 2005. Diverse Economies/Diverse Ecologies and the Political Ecologies of Home. Session on Diverse Economies and Political Ecology. AAG. Denver, April 4-9. (plus invited panel presentations, 2; discussant,1) 2005. Biodiversity in Agrarian Landscapes: Implications for Hunger and Health. International Workshop on Agriculture and Human Health. Convened by CIP (Intentional Potato Research Center) at Harvard Forest. Jan. 26-28. 2004. Environmental Justice where the Forest Meets the Pavement in Santiago, Dominican Republic. Environmental Justice Abroad Conference. Rutgers University. October.

2004. Design and Methods for Socio-Ecological Studies of Biodiversity as a Commons: From Plot to Regional Scale (Half Day Workshop prepared and presented with Luis Malaret) at Global Conference, IASCP Oaxaca, Mexico. Aug. 9.

2004. Multi-Mapping in the Complex Commons of Regional Agroforests: Connecting Networks to Territories; IASCP Oaxaca, Aug. 12.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

2004. Constructing and Conserving Biodiversity as a Complex Commons in Two Dominican Landscapes, (with L. Malaret); IASCP Aug. 10 2004. Scale, Power and the Invisible Political Ecologies of Home. Plenary address. Millenium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA) Conference on Bridging Scales and Epistemologies. Alexandria Egypt, March 19. 2004. Multiple perspectives, Situated Knowledges. World Café Workshop on Linking Knowledge Systems in Research. Millenium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA) Conference on Bridging Scales and Epistemologies. Alexandria Egypt, March 19. 2004. Networks, Roots and Power in Practical Political Ecology. Invited panel presentation and discussion. Association of American Geographers. (AAG) Philadelphia, March 16. 2003. Through the Kaleidoscope: Place and the Complex Construction of Power in Emergent Ecologies. American Association of Anthropologists (AAA), Chicago, November 17-23. 2003. Private Property, Gendered Space and Collective Action: Conserving and Constructing Biodiversity in the Dominican Republic. Workshop on Common Property, Collective Action and Genetic Resources. International Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI) and International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) Rome, September.

2003.Commonalities and Contrasts: Complex Politics of the Post-

Colonial Commons in Comparative Perspective. Summary paper presented at conference on Politics of the Commons: Articulating Development and Strengthening Practice. Southeast Asia Regional Meeting of the International Association for the Study of Common Property (IASCP). Chiang Mai. July 10-14. 2003. Discussant. Gender Issues in Common Property Research in Indigenous Communities of Southeast Asia. Southeast Asia Regional Meeting of the (IASCP). Chiang Mai. July 10-14.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.): 2002. Cyborg Forest, Garden City: Culture, Nature and Webs of Power in Santiago, Dominican Republic. American Association of Anthropologists (AAA), New Orleans, Nov. 23, 2002.

2002. Relational Networks and Complex Communities in Place: Gendered Connections between People, Plants, Animals, Artifacts and Technologies in Santiago, R.D. Society for International Development Conference on Women and the Politics of Place: Politics, Culture and Justice. Eugene, Oregon. April 3-6.

2002. Toward Just, Viable and Humane Ecologies in Santiago: The Relational Roots of Practical Political Ecology. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting. Los Angeles, March 23.

2002. Ethics, Reflexivity and the Future of Political Ecology. Panelist. Association of American Geographers (AAG) Los Angeles, Mar 23. 2001. Cyborg Forest, Garden City: Social Networks and Ecological Webs in Santiago, Dominican Republic. Latin American Studies Association Meetings. Washington D.C., September 6-8, 2001. 2001. Knowledges, Networks and Institutions: Multiple Sciences, Complex Communities and Changing Ecologies in Machakos District Kenya. Invited paper presented at the workshop Localizing and Globalizing Knowledge: Cultures of Environment and Development. Kennedy School of Government. Harvard University April 6-7. 2001. Constructing Worlds: Webs, Networks and Power in Social and Ecological Relations. Paper presented in session, Hybrid Theorizations of Political Economy and Environment. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting. New York City. March 1. 2001. Network theory and metaphors for complex communities and emergent ecologies. Panel on Incorporating Nature: Ecology and the Non-Human in Critical Approaches to Nature. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting. New York City. March 1. 2001. Discussant. Critical Latin American/Caribbean Geographies: Association of American Geographers (AAG) New York City. March 2.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.): 2001. Environmental Social Movements and Moving Social and Environmental Policy. Panel on Rethinking Political Economy and Environment. Association of American Geographers (AAG) NYC March 3. 2000. Complex Communities and Relational Webs: Stories of Surprise and Transformation in Machakos. Invited Paper presented at the Conference on Communities, Uncertainty and Resource Management. Institute for Development Studies. University of Sussex. Brighton. Nov. 4-6. 2000. Gendered Landscapes and Livelihoods in Conservation and Development Programs. Invited presentation to the Workshop on Gender, Environment, and Protected Area Management. The Nature Conservancy. Washington, D.C. Sept. 13-14. 2000. Power lines, relational webs, and complex communities in three landscapes: An empirical and ethical critique of social capital. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting. Pittsburgh. April 7. 2000. Discussant. Ecologies of Culture and Power: North/South Continuities in Political Ecologies. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting. Pittsburgh. April 7. 2000. Ecological Re-structuring and Landscape Change in Three Dominican Communities. Latin American Studies Association Meeting. Miami, Mar. 16. 1999. Feminist Visions and the Invisible Ecologies of Home. Women‟s Studies Faculty Conference. Clark University. Nov. 11. 1999. Keynote Lecture. Feminist Political Ecology and Environmental Justice. Conference on Women and Environmental Justice, Cannon Center for Women‟s Leadership, Loyola U. Chicago, May 20.

1999. Discussant. Livelihoods and Landscapes in Transition III: Cultural and Political Ecologies of Forest Environments. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Honolulu, Hawaii. March 26.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1999. Organized session at AAG. Designs on Their land: Political Ecology of Community Based Resource Management. Sponsored by Cultural Ecology, Latin American and Values/Ethics/Justice Specialty Groups. Association of American Geographers (AAG), Honolulu, Mar 26.

1999. Complex Cultures and Emergent Ecologies: Social Relations

and Biotic Communities in Three Dominican Landscapes. Paper presented at the American Geographers Annual Meeting, Honolulu. March 26.

1998. The Restructuring of Everyday Ecologies: Humans and Other

Beings, In Relation, In Place(s) in Three Dominican Landscapes. Conference on Space, Place and Nation: Reconstructing Neo-Liberalism in the Americas. Center for Latin American and Latino Studies, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Nov. 20-21.

1998. Joint Implementation: Accounts and Accountability in Global Carbon Trade. Annual Meetings of the Association of American Geographers. Boston. March 1998.

1997. Conflict management in Participatory Forest Research and

Development. Summary Panel. World Forestry Congress, Antalya, Turkey. October, 1997.

1997. Feminist Political Ecology: Gender, Environment and

Development in the Curriculum. Workshop on Internationalizing the Women‟s Studies Curriculum. Women‟s Studies Program. University of Wisconsin, Madison. October 30-November 1,1997.

1997. Mapping Powers: Framing Forests/ Picturing Complex Cultures and Ecologies. Conference on Community Based Resource Management. University of Georgia/University of California, Santa Cruz. Helen, Georgia. June, 1997.

1996. From Political Critique to Critical Practice: At Work in the Fields

of Contested Ecologies. American Association of Anthroplogists Annual Meetings, San Francisco. November 20-24.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1996. Givings and Takings: The Invisible Workings of Private and Public Power in the Common Property Resources of Main South, Worcester, Massachusetts. Bi-Annual Conference IASCP (International Association for the Study of Common Property). UC Berkeley. June 5-8.

1996. Discussant. Lines in the Sand: The Consequences of Mapping

Technologies for Property Relations. Biannual Conference. IASCP. UC Berkeley. June 5-8.

1996. Feminist Theory and Political Ecology. Working Conference on Political Ecology / Dialogue of the Disciplines. UMASS Amherst. May 4-5.

1996. Farming the Forest, Gardening with Trees: Gendered

Landscapes and Livelihoods in Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. Assoc. of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Charlotte, March13-18.

1996. Gender, Maps and GIS. Discussant.Association of American Geographers Annual Meetings, Charlotte, March 13-18.

1996. Cultural Politics and Social Movements. Discussant.Association of American Geographers Annual Meetings, Charlotte, March 13-18.

1995. Gender, Ecology and the Shape of Possible Futures: A

Feminist Reading of Two Landscapes in Transition. Political Ecology. American Association of Anthropologists Annual Meeting, Wash. D.C. Nov.15-19.

1995. Rocheleau, D. and D. Edmunds. Women, Men, Trees and

Tenure: Gender, Power and Property in Forest and Farm Landscapes. Invited Discussion Paper Prepared for CGIAR Electronic Conference on Gender and Property International Food Policy Research Institute. Washington D.C./Internet.Aug-.Dec.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1995. Gendered Landscapes, Gendered Methods: Maps, Numbers, Pictures, and Stories. Keynote address (Spanish) at Annual Latin American Studies Conference, University of Florida, Center for Latin American Studies: Gender, Participation and Natural Resource Management. Mar 30.

1995. Reintegrating Home, Habitat, and Workplace: Stories,

Questions, and A Proposal. Association of American Geographers Annual Meetings, Chicago. March 14-18.

1994. Miracle Tree Monocrops, Indigenous Intercrops and

Biodiversity: Social Forestry Options in Complex Landscapes in Zambrana-Chacuey. International Meeting of the Society for Conservation Biology and the Association for Tropical Biology. Universidad de Guadalajara. Guadalajara. June 7-11.

1994. Encompassing Difference: Social and Ecological Diversity. Invited presentation. Political Ecology Workshop. Michigan State University. East Lansing. April 15.

1994. The Stance of the Observer in Political Ecology. Invited presentation. Political Ecology Workshop. Michigan State University. East Lansing. April 16.

1994. Gender, Politics and the Science of Everyday Life in the Farms,

Fields and Forests of Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. Invited paper presented at the Session on Gender, Ecology and Communities. Association of American Geographers, San Francisco. Mar.30-Apr.3.

1994. Maps, Stories, and Feminist Field Research Methods. Invited panel presentation in "Should Women Count? Feminist Epistemology and Quantitative Methods in Geographic Research." Association of American Geographers. San Francisco. March 30-April3.

1994. Land Use Change and Restructuring of Landscapes and Livelihoods. Invited panel presentation in "Development as Destruction." Association of American Geographers. San Francisco. March 30-April 3.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1994. Feminist Political Ecology and Locally Grounded Field Methods. Invited panel presentation in "Political Ecology: Theoretical and Methodological Approaches." Association of American Geographers. San Francisco. March 30.

1994. Landscapes, Lifescapes, Livelihoods: Mapping Methods for

Field Research on Gendered Environments. Invited presentation. Workshop on Training and Research Methods for Gender and Environment Genesys Project. University of Florida. Gainesville. March 18 and 20.

1994. Political Ecology: Discussion and Comments. Discussant. Political Ecology panel. African Studies Association. Boston. Dec. 4-7.

1993. One Hundred Years of Environmental Crisis? Environment and Development Narratives in Ukambani, Kenya (First author, with P. Benjamin and P. Steinberg). Paper presented in the session on History of Land Use (2). African Studies Association. Boston. December, 4-7.

1993. Farming the Forest, Gardening with Trees: Landscapes and Livelihoods in Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic (with L. Ross, J. Morrobel, and R. Hernandez). Invited paper. Gender and Natural Resources. Assoc. Women in Development. Wash.D.C. Oct. 20-24.

1993. One Hundred Years of Environmental Crises in Ukambani (with P. Benjamin). Invited paper (78 pp.). Tropical Peoples and Deforestation. International Congress of Anthropology/Ethnology, Mexico City, July 29-31.

1993. Policy History, Land Use and the Future of the Dry Forest: Lessons from Machakos and Kitui District; Results of Field Work and Preliminary Analysis. May 5, 1993. Public Presentation at Professional Center. Nairobi. Convened by ACTS, Nairobi.

1992. The Commons Between: Shared Use of Private and Public

Property. Commissioned/invited paper presented to the Workshop on Common Property in Africa. Stockholm Environment Institute. Sept.18 - 22.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1992. Agroforesteria, como los campesinos, vive en el campo, no en la parcela. Primer Taller Nacional sobre Agroforesteria en la Republica Dominicana. National Agroforestry Workshop. Presentation on participation and land user perspective in agroforestry. Santiago, R.D. Dec. 8-12.

1992. Women in Fragmented Landscapes: Reintegrating Home,

Habitat, and Workplace. Invited presentation. En/gendering Environmental Thinking: A Symposium of Scholars, Strategists and Community Activists. M.I.T. May.

1992. One Hundred Years of Crisis: Single Geographies of Separate

Realities in Ukambani. Invited paper presented to the Annual Meetings of the AAG. San Diego. April.

1992. Sustainable Development and Participatory Research Methods: Issues and Questions. Invited presentation. Workshop on Sustainable Development and Geographical Research Methods. Congress of the International Geographical Union. Washington, D.C. August.

1991. Ethnobotany and Biodiversity in Lived-In Landscapes: A Case Study from Kenya. Poster paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the Ecological Society of America/American Institute of Biological Sciences. San Antonio, Texas. August.

1991. Landscape, Land Tenure, and the Gender Division of Land Use. Invited presentation. Workshop on Gender and Tenure. Land Tenure Center. University of Wisconsin, Madison. October.

1991. Farmers of the Living Landscape. Invited address. Plenary

presentation. Conference on Women and Biodiversity. Harvard Institute for International Development. Cambridge. October.

1991. Space, Place, Power and Gender: Stories and Maps from the

Spaces Between. Association of American Geographers. Annual Meeting Miami. April.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1991. Reweaving Home, Habitat and Workplace in "Sustainable Development." Invited plenary panel presentation. Stanford University Centennial Symposium: Ethnicity, Equity, and Environment--Confronting a Global Dilemma. Palo Alto, California. April.

1990. Participatory Research and Sustainable Development in Africa: the Role of NGO's. Invited panel presentation, "NGO's in Africa." Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association. Baltimore, MD. October.

1990. Gender Conflict and Complementarity in Social Forestry: A Land User Approach. Invited sub-plenary address on Social Forestry, International Union of Forestry Research Organizations (IUFRO) Quinquennial Congress. Montreal. Aug.

1990. Indigenous Ecological Economics: Projecting the Long Term View from Local Space. Presentation to the International Society for Ecological Economics Meeting: Sustaining the Future. World Bank, Washington, D.C. May.

1990. Mapping Separate Realities and Futures Possible for Agricultural Innovation in Rural Landscapes. Invited paper. Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting. Toronto, April.

1990. Women's Ecological Science and Development: Our Common Futures? Presented at the Interdisciplinary Conference on Scholarship on Women. Clark University. Worcester. March.

1990. Participatory Research in Agroforestry: Exploitation, Eclipse or Empowerment of Rural People's Science and Practice? Invited overview paper presented to the ICRAF International Workshop on Participatory Methods for On-Farm Agroforestry Research. ICRAF. Nairobi. February.

1989. Women's Indigenous Science and the Future of Resource

Allocation and Management in Africa: Three Stories and a Question from Kenya. Invited paper Association of Women in Development Conference: The Global Empowerment of Women. Washington D.C. November.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1989. Agroforestry as Popular Science: A Land User Perspective for Research and Design in Rural Landscapes. Invited paper presented to a Technical Session of the Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. San Francisco. January. 1988. With L. Fortmann. Women's Spaces and the Role of Women in Rural Food Production Systems. Invited paper presented (by co-author) to the International Congress of Rural Sociologists. Bologna, Italy. June. 1988. Landscape and Place in Agroforestry Planning and Evaluation: Using Maps, Pictures, Memories and Projections. Invited paper presented to CARE International Workshop on Participatory Monitoring and Evaluation of Agroforestry Research and Extension Projects. Kisumu, Kenya. May.

1987. Rural Women, Social Forestry and the Role of Professional Foresters in Development. Invited presentation to the Society of American Foresters Annual Meetings. International Working Group on Tropical Forestry. Minneapolis, Minnesota. October.

1987. With L. Malaret. Use of Ethnoecology in Agroforestry Systems Research: AF Technology and Pest Management Research in Kenya. Invited overview paper presented to the Farming Systems Research Symposium. University of Arkansas. Fayetteville, Arkansas. October.

1987. With L. Malaret. Ethnoecological Methods to Complement Traditional Knowledge and Farmer Innovations in Agroforestry. Invited overview paper presented to the Workshop on Farmers and Agricultural Research: Complementary Methods. Institute of Development Studies. University of Sussex. July.

1987. Third author with Feldstein, H. and S. Poats. Intra-Household Analysis and On-Farm Research and Experimentation. Invited paper presented at the CIMMYT Networkshop on Intra-Household Dynamics and Farming Systems Research. Lusaka, Zambia. April.

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1986. Gender, Natural Resources and the Rural Space Economy: Implications for Agroforestry/Farming Systems Research. Plenary session paper presented to the Conference on Gender Issues in Farming Systems Research. Gainesville, Florida. March. 1985. Women, Trees and Tenure. Invited overview paper presented to the ICRAF/Land Tenure Center International Workshop on Tenure Issues in Agroforestry. Nairobi. May. 1985. Second author with L. Fortmann. Women's Participation in Agroforestry in Kenya and the Dominican Republic. Invited paper presented (by senior author) to the Association of Women in Development Conference; Women Creating Wealth. Washington D.C. April. 1985. Women, Environment and Development: A Question of Priorities for Sustainable Rural Development. Document No. B 3/E, Invited background paper prepared for the Global Meeting on Environment and Development (for NGO's). Environment Liaison Centre. Nairobi. February. 1984. Land Use Planning With Rural Farm Households and Communities: Participatory Agroforestry Research. Paper presented to the CIMMYT Regional Workshop on the Role of Sociologists and Anthropologists in Farming Systems Research. Lusaka, Zambia. Nov.

1984. Criteria for Re-Appraisal and Re-design: Intra-Household and Between-Household Aspects of FSRE in Three Kenyan Agroforestry Projects. Paper presented to the Farming Systems Symposium. Manhattan, Kansas. October.

1980. The Role of Geographers in the Development Process; Plan Sierra as a Case in Point. Invited paper presented to the Conference of Pan-American Geography. Sponsored by the Pan American Union of Geographers. Santo Domingo. August (Spanish).

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Conference Papers and Presentations (cont‟d.):

1980. A Research Project on Erosion and Sedimentation within the Context of a Rural Development Project. Invited paper presented to the First Conference on Watershed Management. Santo Domingo. May (Spanish).

1978. With M.E. Swisher. The Mangaon, India Agroecosystem. Paper

presented to the S. E. Conference of the AAG. Athens, Georgia. Sept.

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures:

Rooted Networks, Territories, and Power: A discussion of recent work on Political Ecology and STS, based on the paper Rooted Networks, Webs of Relation, and the Power of Situated Science. Environmental Politics Workshop. Environmental Science, Policy and Management. University of California, Berkeley. April 22, 2011. La Ecología Política en Chiapas: Resistencia y Transformación Frente a Políticas de Limpieza Étnica-Política. (Political Ecology in Chiapas: Resistance and Transformation in the Face of Ethno-Political Cleansing). Public panel presentation at opening of Art and Resistance, New York University International Graduate Class at Centro Hemisferico, San Cristobal de Las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico. July 18, 2010.

Cultura, Naturaleza, Género y Poderes Enredados, presentación en un panel sobre La Política Mas allá de la Política. (Culture, Nature, Gender, Politics and Power in public panel presentation on Politics beyond the (formally) Political. Universidad de los Andes, Bogota. June 30, 2010.

Gender, Culture, Nature and Networks: Moral and Political Ecologies of Indigenous, Feminist, Campesin@ and Conservation Politics. Dean‟s Lecture Series, Oklahoma State Univeristy. Stillwater. OK March 1, 2010.

Redes con Raíces: Tierra, Territorio, Cultura, Género y Poder en

Tres Ecologías Politicas (Rooted Networks, Territory, Culture and Power in Three Political Ecologies) Keynote lecture to inaugurate the MA Program in Geography at the Universidad de los Andes, Bogota. October, 2009.

Rooted Networks, Complex Webs and Feminist Political Ecology: Seminar presentation at Mount Holyoke Environmental Studies Department. Mount Holyoke College. South Hadley MA. November, 2009. Women in Social Movements in Chiapas and Oaxaca, Mexico: Making a World where Many Other Worlds are Possible. Annual Shorbach Lecture at Worcester State College, Worcester MA. April 23, 2008.

Reflections on the Walls of Oaxaca in 2006. Panel presentation at War of the Walls Art Exhibit. Clark University. Oct. 15, 2007.

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures (cont’d.):

Observations and Reflections on Social Movement(s) and Popular Rebellion in Oaxaca. Praxis Lecture. Clark University Feb. 6, 2007.

Observing Local Action and Global Networking in the Context of Popular Rebellion in Oaxaca. Guest Lecture. Clark University. Feb. 5, 2007.

Ecología Política Feminista: Historia, Reflexiones y Retos. (Feminist

Political Ecology: History, Reflections and Challenges). Invited Seminar. CIESAS, San Cristóbal de Las Casas. Jan. 10, 2007. Investigación Integrada Socio-Ecologica: Desde 800 Parcelas Privadas a Un Agro-Bosque Regional en R. D. (Agroecology Public Lecture. ECOSUR. SCLC. Mexico. (with L Malaret) Jan. 5, 2007 Comentarios: Descorriendo velos en las Ciencias Sociales: Estudios sobre mujeres y ambiente en el Ecuador, editado por Maria Cuvi Sanchez, Susan Poats, y Maria Calderon. FLACSO, Quito, Ecuador. Oct. 20 2006.

Ecología Política Feminista: Reflexiones y Rumbos Hacia El Futuro (Feminist Political Ecology: Reflections and Future Prospects). Seminario. Grupo de Discusión Agroecología y Genero. Quito, Ecuador. Oct. 17 2006.

Ecología Política Feminista: Practica, Teoría y Metodología. (Feminist

Political Ecology: Theory, Practice and Method) Seminar. Centro de Estudios de La Mujer, Flora Tristan. Lima, Peru, Oct. 11, 2006.

Outlasting Empire(s): The Invisible Ecologies of Machakos. Yi Fu Tuan lecture series, Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin, Madison. March 3, 2006.

Private Property, Gendered Space and Collective Action: Conserving and Constructing Biodiversity in the Dominican Republic. Department of Geography. University of Miami. April 6, 2004.

Feminist Political Ecology: Feminist-Informed Research on Biodiversity, Complexity, Networks and Social Movements. Political Ecology Seminar, Depts of Geography and Anthropology, UMass. March 3, 2004.

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures (cont’d.):

Gendered Landscapes: A Feminist Political Ecology Perspective. Public Lecture in Fulbright Lecture Series. Chiang Mai University. Regional Center for Social Science and Sustainable Development. July 18 2003. Mapping Multiple Realities and Complex Commons: Maps as Power Tools. Chiang Mai University. Regional Center for Social Science and Sustainable Development. July 25, 2003. Through the Kaleidoscope: The Political Ecologies of Home. Lecture, Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University, Toronto, Mar 27, 2003. Practical Political Ecology in the Cyborg Forests of Santiago: Seminar/Workshop. York University, Toronto, March 28, 2003. The Invisible Ecologies of Machakos: Landscapes and Life Stories, 1900-2000. Public Lecture in Fellows‟ Colloquium Series, Harvard University, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies Feb. 5, 2003. The Invisible Political Ecologies of Home: A Feminist Analysis of Networks, Webs and Cyborg Forests in Three Landscapes. Gender, Justice and Environmental Change lecture Series. Michigan State University. East Lansing. April 12, 2002. The Invisible Political Ecologies of Home: A Feminist Analysis of Networks, Webs and Cyborg Forests in the Urbanizing Fringe of Santiago, Dominican Republic. Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens. January 26, 2002.

Transnational Ecologies and Everyday Lives: A feminist political ecology perspective. Grayson Kirk Distinguished Lecture Series. Miami University of Ohio. September 27, 2001. Machakos Stories: Emergent Ecologies, Complex Communities, Unfolding Histories. Department of Geography Colloquium. University of Florida, Gainesville May 3, 2001.

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures (cont’d.): Grounding Globalization: Roots, Webs and Networks in African Studies. Center for African Studies. University of Florida, Gainesville. May 2, 2001. Complex Communities, Emergent Ecologies, and Rooted Networks: Land Use Change and Biodiversity in Two Dominican Landscapes. Invited Colloquium. CIPEC (Center for Institutions, Population and Environmental Change). University of Indiana, Bloomington. April 11, 2001. The Invisible Ecologies of Home: Social Relations and Biodiversity in Rapidly Changing Forest and Farm Landscapes. Tufts University. Sustainable Agriculture Policy Seminar. April 4, 2001. A Feminist Political Ecology of Biodiversity and Land Use/Cover Change in Two Dominican Landscapes. Invited Presentation to Latin American Political Ecology Seminar. Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Science. New Haven. February 28, 2001. A Feminist Political Ecology Perspective on Ecological Change in Two Dominican Landscapes. Women‟s Studies Program. Florida International University. Miami. Feb.12, 2001. Social Movements, Biodiversity and Land use Change in Three Dominican Landscapes. Department of Geography Colloquium. University of Arizona, Tucson. Jan. 8, 2001. Roots, Webs, Wheels and Networks: Complex Communities and Emergent Ecologies in Two Dominican Landscapes. Department of Geography Colloquium. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Lecture to the. Dec. 1, 2000. Biodiversity in the Complex Ecologies of Home: A Feminist Political Ecology Perspective. University of California, Santa Barbara. Women‟s Studies Program on Culture, Development and Environment. Lecture. May 4, 2000

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures: Complex Communities and Ecological Restructuring in the Dominican Republic: Stories and Images from Three Communities. Invited lecture. York University. Ontario. Founders College/Env. Studies January 20, 2000. International Development: Bridging into Home Places and Urban Spaces. Invited Seminar Presentation. York University. Ontario. Environmental Studies and International Studies Programs. Jan. 20, 2000.

Feminist Political Ecology: Practice and Policy. University of California

at Davis, Gender and Global Initiatives Lecture Series, May 5, 1999. Landscapes of Cohabitation: Social Relations and Emergent

Regional Ecologies, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Geosciences Lecture Series, November 6, 1998.

Complex Communities and Emergent Ecologies in Two Dominican

Landscapes. University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, Department of Geography/Global Environment Lecture Series, October, 1998.

Landscapes, Ecologies and Mapping Home Places: An Example from

Kenya.(Invited Lecture) Clinton Collaborative/New England Science Center Study Circle, Clinton MA. February,1998.

Feminist Poststructuralist Approaches to Forests, Trees and People. Invited panel presentation. Anthropology Dept. University of Georgia, Athens. June,1997.

Contingent Communities and Complex Ecologies in the Regional

Agroforest of Zambrana-Chacuey. Invited Lecture. Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. New Haven,CT. April 28, 1997. Mapping Multi-Dimensional Realities and Complex Ecologies: Examples from Kenya and the Dominican Republic. Department of City and Regional Planning. Cornell University. March, 14, 1997.

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures: Forests, Trees and Fields of Power: Makings and Takings of Biodiversity in the Regional Agroforest of Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. Invited Lecture. Agrarian Studies Seminar Series. Yale University. February 7, 1987.

The Social Origins of Species Richness in the Agroforests of Zambrana-Chacuey. Invited Lecture. Rutgers University. October 8, 1996. Gender, Ecology and Land Use Change in Latin America: A Case Study from the Dominican Republic. Latin American Studies and Women's Studies Programs. Gettysburg College. Jan. 30, 1996.

Feminist Political Ecology: Methods and Perspectives to Address Race, Class, Culture and Gender in Environmental Change. Environment and Development Seminar. Departments of Anthropology and Geography. University of Massachusetts at Amherst. March 12, 1996.

Trees as Tools, Trees as Text: Signs of Struggle in the Agroforests of Zambrana Chacuey. Research Seminar. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management (ESPM) at UC Berkeley, May 8, 1995.

High Standards, Broad Horizons. Keynote address at New England Science Center/Johns Hopkins University CTY (Center for Talented Youth) May 6, 1995.

Gender, Environment, and Development. Lecture with Barbara Thomas-Slayter at Five Colleges Seminar Series, Hampshire College. April 12, 1995.

Landscapes, Lifescapes, Livelihoods and Life Stories: Feminist Methods for Fieldwork. Gender and Environment Seminar. University of California, Davis. May 9, 1994.

Gendered Landscapes and Livelihoods in Natural Resource Management: Putting Home/Habitat/Workplace Back on the Maps of Global Environmentalism. Public Lecture. Gender and Environment Lecture Series. University of California, Davis. May 10, 1994.

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures: Urban Ecology and Inner City Consciousness (with Luis Malaret).

Workshop for Earth Day Seminar. Regional Environmental Council. Worcester. Apr 21, 1994.

Designs on Their Land: Putting Women's Places Back on the Map.

Women In Development Program and African Studies Center Colloquium. Michigan State University. April 13, 1994.

Participation, Process and Politics in Social Forestry Research:

Reflections on Recent Work in Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. International Development Seminar Series. Clark University. Dec.12, 1993.

Gender and Participatory Research on Environmental Issues

(Spanish). CEUR/PUCMM Center for Urban and Regional Studies; Pontifical Catholic University, Santiago, Dominican Republic Dec. 1992.

Segmented Sustainability: Parks, People, Power, and Property. Center for Tropical Conservation and Development and Center for Latin American Studies. University of Florida. September, 1992.

Segmented Sustainability? Reintegrating Home, Habitat, and Workplace in Rural Landscapes. Agroecology Seminar. Cornell University. Ithaca. April, 1992. Feminist Approaches to Environment and Development. Center for African Studies. Boston University. Boston. 1992.

Changing Values in Africa. Invited Lecture. International Perspectives Program Seminar Series, University of New Hampshire, Durham. February, 1992.

Agroforestry: Segmented Sustainability or Integration of Trees in Home, Habitat, and Workplace? Seminar presentation to Natural Resources Program faculty and students. University of New Hampshire. Durham. February, 1992.

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures:

Women at Work in the Landscape: Reintegrating Home, Habitat, and Workplace. Seminar presented for Radcliffe Seminars, Landscape Design, Women and the Land Series. February, 1992.

Appreciating Women Worldwide: Stories and Lessons from Kenya.

Lecture presentation to Theological Opportunities Program. Harvard School of Divinity. Cambridge. October, 1991.

Agroforestry: Maintaining or Undermining Biodiversity? Seminar presented to the Tropical Ecology Seminar. Harvard University. HIID. Cambridge. October, 1990.

Agroforestry in Context: Land Use, Land Users, Conflict, and

Complementarity. Seminar presented to Department of Geography at University of Massachusetts. Amherst. November, 1990.

Sustainable Development: Our Common Future? Seminar presented to Five Colleges Faculty Development Seminar. Hampshire College. Amherst. Oct.1990.

Sustainable Development: Exploitation, Eclipse, or Empowerment of

Rural People's Science and Practice? Seminar presented to the Department of Natural Resource Management. Cornell University. Ithaca. October, 1990.

Community, Landscape, and Land User Groups: Setting the Social and Ecological Context for Agroforestry Research and Action. Seminar presented to the Agroforestry Research Seminar. Department of Natural Resource Management. Cornell University. Ithaca. October, 1990.

Women, Agriculture and Access to Resources. Critique and

Discussion of a Film on Women and Agriculture in Africa. Association of Women in Development. Radcliffe College. Cambridge.Oct. 1989.

Yours, Mine, and Ours: Gender Division of Rights, Responsibilities, and Labor in Agroforestry Systems. Public Lecture in International Forestry Lecture Series. University of Wisconsin. Madison. April, 1988.

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Invited Seminars and Public Lectures: Women as Land Users in Agroforestry Systems. Presentation to the

Seminar on Agroforestry convened by the Women in Agricultural Development Program, the School of Forestry, Center for Latin American Studies and Center for African Studies at the University of Florida. Gainesville. April, 1988.

Gender Division of Rights, Responsibilities and Labor in Agroforestry Systems. Ford Foundation Meeting:Governance, Rural Poverty and Resources. Bangalore, India. April, 1988.

Governance Issues in International Agricultural Research. Ford Foundation Meeting: Governance, Rural Poverty and Resources. Bangalore, India. April, 1988. A Land User Perspective for Agroforestry and Social Forestry. Seminar presented to the Department of Forestry and Resource Management. University of California. Berkeley. April, 1987.

Women in Agroforestry. Seminar presented to the Departments of Forestry and Resource Management, African Studies and Women's Studies. University of California. Berkeley. April, 1987.

The User Perspective and Women's Participation in the Planning and

Management of Rural Agroforestry Projects. Seminar. Department of Tropical Forestry. Wageningen University. The Netherlands. March, 1987.

The User Perspective and the Agroforestry Research and Action

Agenda. University of Florida Agroforestry Seminar.Gainesville. Mar. 1986.

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Consultancies

Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT- International Center for Tropical Agriculture). Cali, Colombia. Internally Commissioned Review of the Agroecosystems Program, Chief of Party. May, 2006. University of Cincinnati, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Program Review of MA and MA/JD in Women‟s Studies. November, 2005. World Resources Institute: Natural Resources Policy Consultative Group on Africa. Member 1992-99.

Ford Foundation, Evaluation and Planning: Environment, Development, Social Justice Programs, Dominican Republic. Feb. 1993.

Ford Foundation, Women's Program Forum, Planning of seminar on Women and Sustainable Agriculture in Africa. August, 1993.

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Teaching

Course Offerings (* most current)

Geog. 321 * Ecologies of Resistance and Transformation (ID) Geog. 380 * Urban Ecology: Cities as Ecosystems (Field course and 280 cross-listed in ESP, UDSC, CDP; see listings below )

Geog. 353 * International Political Ecology (seminar, ID) Geog. 358 Landscape and Human Ecologies Geog. 355 * AgroEcology, Agroforestry, Community Forestry (ID) Geog. 310 Research Seminar in Development Geography (ID) Geog. 344 * Special Topics in Environment and Development** Geog. 277 Gender, Resources, and Development (ID, WS) Geog. 281 Tropical Ecology (Bio 281) Geog. 255 Qualitative Research Methods (ID) Geog. 179 * Global Environmental Justice (ID) Geog. 136 * Gender and Environment (W.S., I.D., GES) ES 131 Introduction to Ecological Systems (Geog.,Bio. 94 -95) ES 110 Environment and Culture (first year seminar, 99, 2000)

100-level = lectures, field trips, discussions (undergraduates) 200-level = lectures, discussions, lab/field projects (grad/undergrad) 300-level = graduate seminar with papers or field projects Cross listings: International Development (ID); Women‟ Studies (WS);

Environmental Science and Policy (ESP); Biology (Bio); Urban Development and Social Change (UDSC); Community Development and Planning (CDP); Global Environmental Studies (GES). ** SpecialTopics: Networks and Complexity (Theories and Models); Biodiversity and Community-Based Conservation; The Commons:

Other Departments and Programs: Global Environmental Studies Director 2009 – present. Women‟s Studies Director 2004-2006, Faculty 1989 – present. International Development, Community, Environment 1989 - present. International Studies Stream Faculty - 1996 - present Environmental School Faculty - 1994 - 1998.

Environmental Science and Policy Faculty - 1998- present

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Graduate Advisees

Ph.D. Graduates L. Ciro Marcano (co-advisee) Ph.D. Candidate Geography (2011) Christina Hamm (co-advisee) Ph. D. Candidate Geography (2011) Lily Ray,(co-advisee) Ph. D. Geography (2010) Susannah McCandless, (co-advisee) Ph.D. Geography 2010 Deb Sinha, Ph.D. Geography 2009 Thidiliei Tshiguvo, (coadvisee) Ph.D. Geography 2008 Solange Bandiaky. Ph. D. Women‟s Studies 2008 Elizabeth Webb. Ph.D. Geography 2008 Jennifer Brewer. Ph.D. Geography 2007 Carolyn Finney. Ph.D. Geography 2007 Sonja Pieck. Ph. D. Geography 2006 Aaron Pollack. (co-advisee) Ph.D. Geography 2005 Hu Yukun. Ph.D. Women‟s Studies. 2005 Claudia Radel. (co-advisee) Ph. D. Geography 2005 Pablo Pacheco, (co-advisee) Ph. D. Geography 2005 Robin Roth Ph. D. Geography 2004

Alice Hovorka (co-advisee) Ph.D. Geography 2003 Pat Benjamin (co-advisee) Ph.D. Geography 2002 Davison Gumbo (co-advisee) Ph. D. Geography 2002 Patricia Melzer, Ph. D. Women‟s Studies 2002 Bill McConnell. Ph. D. Geography 2002

Sunita Reddy Ph. D. Geography, 2000 Curt Holder Ph.D. Geography. 2000

David Edmunds Ph.D. Geography. 1997 Linda Roth Ph.D. Geography. 1997 Francis Lelo Ph.D. Geography. 1994 Camillus Sawio (co-advisee) Ph.D. Geography. 1993

Ph. D. Advisees / Candidates: Susan Aragon-Carrasco, Ph. D. Candidate (2011) Diana Ojeda, Ph. D. Candidate (2011) Roberta Hawkins, (co-advisee) Ph.D. Candidate (2011) Maya Manzi, Ph. D. candidate (2012) Emily Gallagher, Ph. D. student (2013)

Member (current) on over 12 Ph.D. Exam and Dissertation Committees in Geography and outside Clark.

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M.A. Advisees George Anim. MA. Environmental Science and Policy. 2008 Ariana Lomas-Gomez. M.A. International Development. 2006 Corrie Mauldin. MA Environmental Science and Policy. 2005 Emily Harvey. MA Environmental Science and Policy. 2005 Hugh Hogan. M.A. International Development. 2001 Naoko Kubo. M.A. International Development. 2001 Amy Cisse M.A. International Development.1996 Rachel Slocum M.A. International Development.1996 Genese Sodikoff M.A. International Development.1996 Thomas Wimber. M.A. International Development. 1995 Laurie Ross M.A. International Development. 1995 Ana Ronderos M.A. International Development. 1993 Laura Kelly M.A. International Development. 1992

Undergraduate Theses

Seth McClaskey, Geography, honors thesis 2005 Yae Sahashi, Geog./Int‟l. Development honors thesis 2005 Jonah Vitale-Wolfe, Geography BA honors thesis 2001

Naoko Kubo, Geography BA honors thesis 1999 Mara Goldman, Geography BA honors thesis 1996

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Professional and Institutional Service

Professional and Scientific Association Memberships: Member, Latin American Studies Assoc. 1999 – present, intermittent* Member, Association of American Geographers (AAG).1988 -present. Member, Int'l. Assoc. for the Study of the Commons. 1996-present*

Member, African Studies Association. 1990 – present, intermittent * Member, American Anthropological Association. 1995 - present. Member, Conservation Biology. 1994-2000. (* family**) Member, Ecological Society of America. 1990 - 2000. (*family**) Member, Association for Tropical Biology. 1994 – 2002* (family) Member, International Society for Ecological Economics. 1990-91. Member, American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). 1989 - 1996, (family*). Member, Association of Women in Development (AWID).1989 - 1993. Member, Social Forestry Network, O.D.I. 1986 - present. Member, Common Property Resources Network. 1985 - 1989 * Intermittent membership ** Family membership, intermittent, refers to shared membership dues, subscriptions, meetings, formally recognized (ATB) or not.

University and Departmental Service:

Departmental: Global Environmental Studies Major, Director, 2009-present Doctoral Program Admissions Committee, Chair 2007-8; 8-09 Global Environmental Studies Major Committee Chair 2001-2 Atwood Lecture and Colloquium Committee.1989-95; 99-2000; 09-10. Search Committee, GIS. 2001. Director Search Committee. 2003. Promotion, Tenure and Re-appointment Committees. 1994, 2005. Graduate Curriculum Committee. 90-1, 95-6, 98-9, 2000-1, 03-4, 04-5 Undergraduate Curriculum Committee.1991-92.1995-6. 2005-6;09-10 Economic Geography Management Committee . 1994. Coordinator, Environmental Stream (in Geog.). 1993 - 1995.

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University Committees: Admissions Committee 2009-10

Faculty Chairs 2004-2006 (as Director of Women‟s Studies) Human Subjects Research Oversight Committee 2003-4.

Faculty Steering Committee/Faculty Parliamentarian 2000-2002. University Academic Board (UAB) 1998-2001.

University Trustees Investment Committee 1994 - 1997. University Premedical/Predental Advisory Committee 1991-1994. Working Group on Environmental School. 1993-1994. University Park Neighborhood Steering Committees 1995-96. 98-00.

Other Departments and Programs, Committees: Envionmental Sciences, Member 2006-present Difficult Dialogues Program, Member 2006-present Women‟s Studies Director 2004- 2006 International Development/Women‟s Studies MA committee 2005-6 Women‟s Studies Graduate Studies Committee 2004-5 Women‟s Studies Undergraduate Major Committee 2004-5 Women‟s Studies Conference Committee Chair 2005 Women‟s Studies Ph.D. Program Committee – 2001-2 Int‟l Development, Community Environment- Searches „01, 02, 03, 04 Women‟s Studies - Funding committee, 1999.

Women's Studies - Steering Committee, 1994-96, 2003-4 Women's Studies - 50th Anniversary of Women at Clark, 1992. Women's Studies - International Women's Day Committee, 1991. Environmental School Organization Committee. 1995-1996. Environmental School Steering Committee. 1999-2001.

Reviews /Evaluations Reviewer of tenure and promotion cases for Anthropology, Geography, Environmental Science and International Development departments at: University of California, Berkeley; Rutgers; U.C.L.A.; Pennsylvania State University; University of British Columbia; Miami University of Ohio; University of Ottawa; I.D.S. University of Sussex; Mills College; Hampshire College.

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Reviews and Evaluations (Cont‟d.): Reviewer of journal articles for: World Development; Geoforum; Annals of the Association of American Geographers; Current Anthropology; Professional Geographer; Gender, Place and Culture; Society and Natural Resources; Ecology and Society; Human Ecology Review; Urban Geography; American Anthropologist; Forest Livelihoods; Environment and Planning (A, D), Ethnobiology. External Examiner of dissertations for: University of Zimbabwe; York University, Toronto; University of British Columbia, Vancouver; Program Evaluations, Academic / Research Institutes: See Consultancies

Language Proficiency

Spanish: Reading, writing, speaking (fluent) French: Reading, some comprehension Portuguese: Reading, some comprehension Kiswahili: Rudimentary reading, comprehension, some speech

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Work in Progress

Books Rocheleau, D., with A. Field-Juma, L. Malaret and P. Benjamin. In

progress. The Invisible Ecologies of Resistance and Resilience in Machakos: Landscapes and Life Stories, 1900-2000. (Submission to Duke University Press, 2011).

Rocheleau, D and Anita Nayar. Feminist Political Ecology of Climate Justice: an evolving framework and emerging insights from social movements and activists. 2012. Zed Press. GISEC group,(including W. Harcourt and D. Rocheleau) Feminist Political Ecology: Principles and Process for Global Environmental Justice 2012 or 2013. Zed Press.

Journal Articles

Blaser, Mario, Marisol de la Cadena, Arturo Escobar, et al. (including D. Rocheleau) Relacionalidad: Ontologias Alternativas y Movimientos Sociales. Follow-up to 2010 writing workshop in Bogota. Rocheleau, D. and Robin Roth. Networks, Territories and Power in the Postcolonial Commons. Presented at IASCP International Conference. To be submitted to the International Journal of the Commons, Spring 2011.

Luis Malaret, Gary Wade, Monika Szymurska, Rachel Regeczi, Dianne

Rocheleau, and Marla Emery. Impact of Silvicultural Practices on Leaf Litter Amphibians in the Adirondacks, Article in preparation from prior conference paper with additional recent data analysis, submission to Northeastern Naturalist, Dec. 2011. Rocheleau, D., A. Versluis, and S. Aragon-Carrasco. Networks, Roots, and Power: The Varieties of Connection in Complex Ecologies. Ecology and Society. In early stages of preparation.

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Work in progress (cont’d.) Rocheleau, D., L. Malaret, S. McCandless and S. Aragon-Carrasco, with M. Szymurska, L. Penniman, and J. Vitaly-Wolfe. Where the Forest Meets the Pavement: Culture and Biodiversity in the Urban-Rural Borderlands of Santiago, Dominican Republic. Professional Geographer or Ecology and Society. In preparation for submission Summer 2011. Rocheleau, D. Through the Kaleidoscope: Networks, Place and the Complex Construction of Power in Emergent Ecologies. Human Organization or Environment and Planning D, Society and Space. In preparation.

Rocheleau, D., L. Malaret, and Susan Aragon, with L. Ross, J. Morrobel and T. Kominiak. Confronting Complexity and Dealing with Diversity in the Regional Agroforest(s) of Zambrana-Chacuey: Socio-ecological Methods for Biodiversity Research. Ecology and Society. Submission Spring 2011.

Rocheleau, D. , L. Malaret, S. Aragon-Carrasco and C. Radel, with J. Morrobel, L. Ross, and T. Kominiak. Situating Species, Re-Structuring Diversity in the Regional Agroforest of Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic, Ecology and Society. Submission Spring/Summer 2010. *(completed 10-years after field data, repeated ecological survey in 2007, replicating survey in 1996, incorporating both data sets in write-up).

Rocheleau, D. and Robin Roth. Complex Webs, Relational Networks

and Multi-dimensional Maps: Re-framing Development Ecologies. In early stages of preparation. Summer 2011

Rocheleau, D. and P. Nirmal. Relational Networks, Complex Webs

and Alternative Ontologies: In search of post-development ecologies. Summer 2011.

Rocheleau, D., M. Emery, L. Malaret, R. Roth, A. Hovorka. Fractal Forests, Timber Towns and Tent Cities: Culture, Values and Biodiversity in in the Tupper Lake Area of the Adirondacks. Annals of the AAG, Ecology and Society or Human Ecology. Summer 2011.