Professor Dianne Rocheleau received her Ph.D. from the University of Florida in 1983. She served with the International Council for Research in Agroforestry and the Ford Foundation before coming to Clark in 1989. Her interests include environment and development, political ecology, forestry, agriculture and landscape change, with an emphasis on the role of gender, class and "popular" vs. "formal" science in resource allocation and land use. Professor Rocheleau has recently been awarded the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study Fellowship at Harvard University to work on her book, The Invisible Ecologies of Machakos; Landscape, Livelihoods, and Life Stories 1890-1990. Courses OfferedGeog 136 Gender, Space, and Environment Geog 179 International Political Ecology Geog 277 Gender, Environment, and Development Geog 280 Urban Ecology: Cities as Ecosystems Geog 281 Tropical Ecology Geog 353 International Political Ecology EN 280 Urban Ecology: Cities as Ecosystems Selected PublicationsD. E. Rocheleau. 2007/In press. Political Ecology in the key of policy: from chains of explanation to webs of relation. Geoforum GEOF 738. D. E. Rocheleau. 2007/In press. Rooted networks, relational webs and powers of connection: Rethinking human and political ecologies. Geoforum Reference: GEOF 660 available on-line 2 January 2007. D. E. Rocheleau, B. Thomas-Slayter and E. Wangari (eds.). 1997. Feminist Political Ecology: Global Perspectives and Local Experience. D. E. Rocheleau and B. Thomas-Slayter. 1995. Gender, Environment, and Development in Kenya: Perspectives from the Grassroots. Lynn Riener. Boulder (Listed as a Choice Outstanding Academic Book, 1996). D. E. Rocheleau and L. Ross. 1995. Trees as Tools, Trees as Text: Struggles over resources in Zambrana-Chacuey, Dominican Republic. Antipode, 27. D. E. Rocheleau, P. Steinberg and P. Benjamin. 1995. Environment, Development, Crisis and Crusade: Ukambani, Kenya 1890-1990. World Development, 23. D. E. Rocheleau, F. Weber and A. Field-Juma. 1988. Agorforestry in Dryland Africa. ICRAF. Nairobi. 311 pp. (Three printings, French translation 1996. other translations - in whole or in part- Japanese. Portuguese) |