Anders Lunnan
Guest Research Scholar
Ecosystems Services and Management
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
Austria
Biography
Anders Lunnan has been a professor at the Department of Economics and Resource Management at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences since 1991. He also has a part time affiliation with the Norwegian Forest and Landscape Research Institute. From September 2010 until July 2011 he will be spending his sabbatical at IIASA. Dr. Lunnan holds a PhD in forest economics from the Norwegian University of Life Science and has had many administrative positions within the university. From 1996 to 1997 he was visiting professor at the University of Minnesota, working on projects related to rural economic development. Since 2005 he has been leading an MSc program on Innovation and Entrepreneurship in cooperation with the University of Oslo and Rice University. He is currently leading a research project financed by the Norwegian Research Council on "Bioenergy market research" involving a Phd student, a postdoctoral researcher and several part-time researchers.
Research Interest
His research involves rural economic development issues, competitiveness of bioenergy systems, forest policy analysis, and innovation research.
Publications
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Kraxner F, Schepaschenko D, Fuss S, Lunnan A, Kindermann G, Aoki K, & Shvidenko A (2015). Forest management certification - a new tool for certification monitoring, planning and mapping. In: XIV World Forestry Congress 2015, 7-11 September 2015, Durban, South Africa.
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Kraxner F, Shchepashchenko D, Fuss S, Lunnan A, Kindermann G, Aoki K, & Shvidenko A (2015). Forest management certification . application of a new tool for certification mapping to the boreal forest. In: 17th IBFRA Conference, Towards A New Era of Forest Science in the Boreal Region, 24-29 May 2015, Ravaniemi, Finland.
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Kraxner F, Schepaschenko D, Fuss S, Lunnan A, Kindermann G, Aoki K, Dürauer M, Shvidenko A, et al. (2017). Mapping certified forests for sustainable management - A global tool for information improvement through participatory and collaborative mapping. Forest Policy and Economics 83: 10-18. DOI:10.1016/j.forpol.2017.04.014.