Outputs
Outputs
Publications
Whatmore, S., Landstr�m, C. and Bradley, S. 2008. ‘Democratising science’, Science & Public Affairs, British Association for the Advancement of Science, June: 17. Science and Public Affairs June 2008
Whatmore, S. 2009. ‘Mapping Knowledge Controversies: science, democracy and the redistribution of expertise’, Progress in Human Geography 33(05) 2009 Mapping Knowledge Controversies: science, democracy and the redistribution of expertise.
Whatmore, S. and Landstrom, C. 2009 “Manning’s N – Putting Roughness to Work”, prepared for Morgan M. and P. Howlett (eds), How well do facts travel?, CUP, Cambridge. Manning’s N – Putting roughness to work.
Donaldson, A., Ward, N. and Bradley, S (2010, in press)”Mess among Disciplines”, Environment and Planning A.
Forthcoming publications
Lane, S. and Odoni, N. “Knowledge-theoretic models in hydrology”, Progress in Physical Geography
Lane, S. “Making mathematical models perform in geographical spaces”
Landstrom, C., Whatmore, S. and Lane, S. “Virtual engineering: producing flood risk knowledge for a market”, Science and Human Values.
Whatmore, S. “Stenger’s experimental constructivism”, Society and Space
Whatmore, S. and Landstrom, C. “Flood apprentices: an exercise in making things public”, Economy and Society
Landstrom, C., Whatmore, S., Lane, S., Odoni, N., Ward, N., Bradley, S. “The accidental model”, Environment and Planning A.
Lane, S., Odoni, N, Landstrom, C., Whatmore, S., Ward, N. and Bradley, S. “Doing flood science differently”, Transactions
Whatmore, S., Landstrom, C., Lane, S., Odoni, N, and Ward, N. “Trying things out” Cultural Geographics
Whatmore, S. Landstrom, C., and Lane, S. “Manning’s n: hydraulic modelling and the ontological politics of fiction” Annals
Landstrom, C, Whatmore, S., Lane, S, and Odoni, N. “Modelling flood risk: academic and consultancy practices”
Ward, N. “Overflowing with issues”
Ward, N. “Q method and interdisciplinarity”
Ward, N. “Experimenting in public participation in science”
Lane, S., Landstrom C., and Whatmore, S. “Imagining Flood Futures – the role of simulations modelling in the dynamics of risky landscapes”, Trans of the Royal Society
Odoni, N. and Lane, S. “Development of the OVERFLOW distributed model for testing catchment-wide land management interventions to reduce flood risk – model conception and testing”, Hydrological Processes
Odoni, N. and Lane, S. “Development of the OVERFLOW distributed model for testing catchment-wide land management interventions to reduce flood risk – testing interventions”, Hydrological Processes
Odoni, N. and Lane, S. “Numerical experiments and the testing of multiple small interventions in river catchments”, Water Resources Research
Odoni, N. Nisbet, T., Broadmeadow, S., Lane, S., Huckson, L.V., Pacey, J. and Marrington, S. “Evaluating the effects of riparian woodland and large woody debris dams on peak flows in Pickering Beck, North Yorkshire”, Flood and Coastal Risk Management Conference
Media coverage
Stuart Lane interviewed on Radio 4 Farming Today, 27th June 2007
Neil Ward interviewed on Radio 4 Westminster, October 2007
Stuart Lane interview with Nick Higham of BBC News 24, 7th November 2007
Activities
Team Training Events
30th April – 4th May (Oxford and Sussex), 14th – 18th May 2007 (Durham and Malton)
Advisory Panel
First Advisory Panel meeting. Oxford, July 2007.
EPFL, Lausanne
Project team visit to EPFL. March 2008.
Advisory Panel
Second Advisory Panel meeting. Arundel, September 2008.
Ryedale Exhibition
Flooding – can local knowledge make a difference? 28th October 2008, Pickering Memorial Hall.
Swedish Environmental Agency – Stockholm
Project team visit hosted by Katarina Schough of the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency, May 2009.
Project Conference – Oxford
Held at St Anne’s College, Oxford, December 2009, with an invited audience of academics, stakeholders, and Competency Group members.
Presentations
ESRC interdisciplinarity symposium
February 2007, Oxford
Sarah Whatmore presented “Between earth and life:geography as an inter-discipline”
People and the Rural Environment Forum
19th March 2007, London
Sarah Whatmore presented a paper on Understanding Environmental Knowledge Controversies at the 3rd RELU People and the Rural Environment Forum.
ALSIS symposium, “What is scientific about social science”?
March 2007, Royal Society
Sarah Whatmore presented “Knowledge multiple: from science of society to science in society”
Invited keynote lecture at the Centre for Interdisciplinarity Research symposium on “From lab to field: transforming research practices”
May 2007, Bielefeld University, Germany
Sarah Whatmore presented “Environmental Knowledge Controversies – Trying things out”
Centre for Interdisciplinarity
September 2007, University of Birmingham
Sarah Whatmore presented “Environmental knowledge controversies – science, democracy and the redistribution of expertise”
Connecting People, Participation and Place
January 2008, Durham University
Neil Ward and Sue Bradley presented “Testimonies of engagement: life history methods in participatory environmental research”
Flooding, Water and the Landscape
March 2008, University of Sheffield
Stuart Lane presented keynote speech
AAG
March 2008, Boston
Sarah Whatmore presented “Affective materials: Thinking through flooding”.
Catharina Landstrom presented “Virtual Engineering: the political technologies of flood risk modelling”
European Geosciences Union meeting
April 2008, Vienna
Stuart Lane and Nick Odoni presented “Environmental Competency Groups: the case of flood risk modelling”
European Geosciences Union meeting
April 2008, Vienna
Stuart Lane and Nick Odoni presented “Dynamic channel networks and non-linear runoff response”
European Geosciences Union meeting
April 2008, Vienna
Nick Odoni and Stuart Lane presented “Data-theoretic approaches to modelling catchment management impacts on flood magnitude”
Life histories of facts
April 2008, LSE
Sarah Whatmore and Catharina Landstrom presented “Manning’s n: a fact packaged for travel”
University of Hull
May 2008, Department of Geography LSE
Sarah Whatmore presented “Trying things out: an experimental intervention in the science and politics of flood risk”
4S/EASST Conference
August 2008, Rotterdam
Catharina Landstrom presented “Trying things out: an experimental intervention in the science and politics of flood risk.”
RGS/IBG annual conference
September 2008,London
Sarah Whatmore presented the Plenary Lecture (sponsored by Edward Arnold Publishers) entitled “Mapping environmental knowledge controversies:Science, Democracy and Redistribution of Expertise”
Catharina Landstrom presented “Beyond mess”: ethnography of science and engineering in the age of computer modelling”
Environment Agency breakfast briefing
September 2008, Cardiff
Sarah Whatmore and Catharina Landstrom presented “Flood modelling with local publics”
Distinguished International Guest Lecture
December 2008,University of New South Wales, Australia
Sarah Whatmore presented “Trying things out: an experimental intervention in the science and politics of flood risk”
Distinguished Guest Lecture
March 2008, Queen’s University, Canada
Sarah Whatmore presented ‘Environmental knowledge controversies: science, democracy and the redistribution of expertise’.
European Geosciences Union meeting
April 2009, Vienna
Stuart Lane presented “Repositioning social science in natural hazards research: key themes”
European Geosciences Union meeting
April 2009, Vienna
Stuart Lane presented “Repositioning social science in natural hazards research: case-study”
ESRC-NERC Natural Hazards Workshop
May 2009, University of East Anglia
Stuart Lane presented “Doing flood risk science differently”
RELU Annual Conference, The Future of Rural Land Use
June 2009, London
Stuart Lane presented “The Case for Flooding”
Invited Key Note Lecture at the Great North Meet of the Royal Agricultural Society
June 2009
Stuart Lane presented “The Case for Flooding”
Keynote Lecture at the 3rd Nordic Geographers’ Conference on “Change:Society, environment and science in transition”
June 2009, University of Turku, Finland
Sarah Whatmore presented “Mapping knowledge controversies: environmental science, democracy and the redistribution of expertise”.
Nordic Environmental Social Science Conference
June 2009, UCL, London
Catharina Landstrom presented “Modes of modelling. A comparison of consultant and academic research practices”.
RGS-IGB Annual Conference
August 2009, Manchester
Catharina Landstrom presented “The accidental model. An experiment in upstream public engagement with science” and chaired two sessions.
RGS-IGB Annual Conference
August 2009, Manchester
Anders Munk presented “Mapping the risk, risking the map?” in a session co-organised with Catharina Landstrom.
Invited plenary lecture at the Society for Cultural Anthropology bi-annual meeting on “Natureculture:entangled relations of multiplicity”
May 2010, Santa Fe
Sarah Whatmore is to present “Affective environments: thinking through flooding”.