• アレクサンドロス・ガスパラトス

    Alexandros Gasparatos
    教授
Profile

Alexandros Gasparatos is Professor at the Institute for Future Initiatives (IFI), University of Tokyo. Before joining the University of Tokyo as an Associate Professor (2013-2023) he conducted research at the University of Oxford (2011-2013), the Institute of Advanced Studies of the United Nations University (UNU-IAS) (2008-2011) and the University of Dundee (2006-2008). He has held a Marie Curie Research Fellowship (University of Oxford), a James Martin Research Fellowship (University of Oxford), a JSPS-UNU Research Fellowship (UNU-IAS), a Canon Foundation Research Fellowship (UNU-IAS) and an EPSRC-funded research position (University of Dundee).

He is an Editor for Sustainability Science, an Associate Editor for People and Nature, an Associate Editor for Environmental Conservation, an Editor for Anthropocene Science, an Associate Editor for Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems and an Associate Editor for Frontiers in Environmental Science. He was a Section Editor for PLOS Sustainability and Transformation.

He has served as a Coordinating Lead Author (CLA) for the Asia-Pacific Assessment Report and a Scoping Expert and Review Editor of the Nexus Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).

Since 2013, he has participated in 20 national and international research projects, having been the PI or co-PI in 15 projects. He has led or co-led research in 15 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia, including Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, China, Eswatini, Ghana, Indonesia, Japan, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Myanmar and Senegal.

Research interests

As an ecological economist and sustainability scientist, be is interested in the development, refinement and application of sustainability assessment and ecosystem services valuation tools. He has applied such tools in different topics such as food and energy security, nature-based solutions, green economy, urban biodiversity and urban metabolism in diverse geographical contexts.