RIFS conducts research with the goal of understanding, advancing, and guiding processes of societal change towards sustainable development.
In brief
Research on Zoonotic Infections
A RIFS team is participating in the collaborative project “ONEMuc – Respiratory Mucus as a One Health Interface”. Research is being conducted into the function of the mucus layer in the respiratory tract as a natural protective barrier against viral infections. The aim is to develop strategies for the prevention and risk assessment of future pandemics.
Watch the Video: Amazongraphy
In this Video a performed lecture of RIFS scientist Maria Cecilia Oliveira with the EcoPol Research Group follows the flow of the Amazon River from the Andes to the Atlantic, exploring the “rights of nature” movement through an ecofeminist and anti-authoritarian lens. The focus is on the sensory, affective, and lived dimensions of how the rights are experienced and enacted.
How Sustainability Is Studied
RIFS Scientist Marianne Bartels has co-authored chapter 13 “Science and Sustainable Development” in the new open-access book "Rethinking Sustainability: Principles and Practice" together with colleagues from the University of St Andrews, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and University of Bonn. Bartels’ analysis highlights how Arctic oil and gas resource estimates are produced from significant uncertainty but are often communicated as precise.