
Johannes DittmannUniversity of Bonn | Uni Bonn · Department of Geography
Johannes Dittmann
Master of Science
About
6
Publications
44
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
0
Citations
Citations since 2017
Introduction
Development geographer @ University of Bonn; research interests: social inequality, environmental governance, development interventions, international relations.
PhD project: Political authority and transboundary conservation. Politics of the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA TFCA)
Additional affiliations
January 2018 - present
DFG Collaborative Research Centre "Future Rural Africa"
Position
- Associate Member
Description
- project management; science coordination; collaborative research
Education
January 2018 - December 2022
October 2014 - March 2017
October 2011 - September 2014
Publications
Publications (6)
Die deutsche Kolonialherrschaft in "Südwestafrika" dauerte drei Jahrzehnte, aber ein Jahrhundert nach ihrem Ende sind ihre Spuren im heutigen Namibia immer noch unübersehbar und überschatten die Beziehungen zwischen beiden Ländern. Die Auswirkungen der kolonialen Vergangenheit Namibias sind äußerst vielschichtig, wie beispielhaft anhand von drei As...
Der Diskurs um Herausforderungen der Fischerei im Naivasha-See wird auf politischer und wissenschaftlicher Ebene durch eine technisch-naturwissenschaftliche Perspektive dominiert. Sozioökonomische und politische Komplexitäten bleiben dabei weitgehend unbeleuchtet. Bezüglich der Ursachen für Probleme der Fischerei herrscht starke Uneinigkeit und die...
https://www.geographie.uni-bonn.de/forschung/ags/ag-geographische-entwicklungsforschung/paper-series/wp-cop-21.pdf
https://www.geographie.uni-bonn.de/forschung/ags/ag-geographische-entwicklungsforschung/paper-series/2occasional-paper-6-dittmann-et-al..pdf
https://www.kuladig.de/Objektansicht/O-57850-20121130-2
Projects
Projects (3)
With their focus on “future-making”, the members of this large-scale project adopt a perspective that is different from previous approaches to social-ecological research: priority will be given to African actors and their ideas, wishes and expectations in respect of the shaping of future-oriented developments. The general concept of the project is inspired by recent debates in future theory. It distinguishes between concepts of the future based on probabilities, forecasts and models, and concepts which consider future in the form of visions, imaginations and aspirations. While the former approach is common in the natural sciences, the latter is preferred by researchers in the social sciences. For any enquiry into “future-making” in the field of tension between probabilities and possibilities, both approaches are important.