Julia Patricia Gordon Jones

Professor

Accepting PhD Students

PhD projects

I have supervised 15 PhDs to completion. These students worked on a range of topics from REDD+ implementation in Indonesia, to evaluating the impacts of conservation interventions in Madagascar and Bolivia. They were funded by a variety of sources including NERC, the Leverhulme Trust, the EU Erasmus Mundus programme known as FONASO, and Bangor University. I don't currently have funding for PhD projects but if you identify a potential funding source I would be delighted to help suitable students develop their proposal. I am particularly interested in supervising projects on conservation effectiveness and applying causal inference to conservation impact evaluation, forest conservation, interactions between local people (especially on the forest frontier) and conservation, community forest management, links between business and biodiversity (especially the mitigation hierarchy and biodiversity offsets), mining and conservation.

Former students:
Matthew Somerville (with E.J. Milner-Gulland, Imperial College London)
Aidan Keane (with E.J. Milner-Gulland, Imperial College London)
Andrea Wallace (with E.J. Milner-Gulland, Imperial College London)
Freya St John (with Gareth Edwards-Jones, Bangor University)
Sophie Williams (with James Gibbons, Bangor University)
Nadia Richman-Dewhurst (with Sam Turvey, Zoological Society of London)
Ranaivo Rasolofoson (with Helle Overgaard-Larsen, University of Copenhagen)
Josil Murray (with Laura Secco, University of Padua)
Edwin Pynegar (with James Gibbons, Bangor University)
Amy (Spike) Lewis (with James Gibbons Bangor University)
Harriet Ibbett (with Freya St John, Bangor University)
Zoe Melvin (with Alex Georgiev, Bangor University)
Rachel Dolan (with Simon Willcock, Bangor University)
Katie Devenish (with Simon Willcock, Bangor University, and Kathryn Goodenough, British Geological Survey)

20022025

Research activity per year

Personal profile

Overview

My research aims to help make conservation more effective so that it delivers better outcomes for both people and nature. I do this by developing and advancing methods for evaluations of conservation policy and practice. I am both interested in ex-post evaluations with existing (almost inevitably flawed) designs and data, but I am even more interested in looking forward and finding opportunities to design interventions and data collection in parallel to allow a clearer understanding of "is conservation working"?

I am interested in nature markets (especially REDD+, BNG, biodiversity credits), reconciling conservation and developments (especially infrastructure projects), and local costs of conservation.

I have a strong interest in Madagascar where I have worked, with many Malagasy colleagues, for 24 years on issues around conservation and development.

I co-lead the College of Environmental Science and Engineering research theme on Conservation and Restoration of Resilient Ecosystems.

I am on the board of WWF-UK.

I serve on the Joint Nature Conservation Committee, which advises the UK and devolved governments on nature conservation. 

I am on the advisory board of Sounds Right (a collaboration between Spotify and UN-Live to all Nature to collect royalties from her creation).

I am currently the Prince Bernhard Chair in International Nature Conservation at Utrecht University. The Prince Bernhard Chair (funded by WWF-The Netherlands) is appointed for a term of five years. The purpose of the Chair is to serve international nature conservation through strengthening the link between conservation science and practice, while opening new avenues for multidisciplinary approaches. You can watch my inaugural lecture here.

I was the director of the Sêr Cymru Low Carbon Energy and Environment Research Network Wales.

Watch a public lecture for the UN Association on the role of tropical forests in tackling climate change.

Watch a public lecture exploring the question 'Is conservation working?' (to the Oxford Martin School).

 

Contact details: Thoday Building, Deniol Road, Bangor University, LL57 2UW, 01248 382650

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email: [email protected]

Research

I am PI of 'Conservation Agreements in the Comores: Evidence-informed forest conservation and restoration for people and biodiversity' (funded by the Darwin Initiative Innovation fund and International Science Partnership Fund). This project is in collaboration with the Comorian conservation NGO Dahari.

I was PI of the Forest4Climate&People project which was funded by the CLARE programme (UKAid). The aim is to ensure forest carbon programmes are more effective (can lock up more carbon) and pro-poor (contribute to poverty alleviation and avoid avoid negative impacts). This project is continuing as MIRARI (lead by Sarobidy Rakotonarivo).

I am PI of the GCRF-funded project 'The perfect invader? Exploring impacts on human health from a rapidly invading crustacean in one of the world’s poorest countries'.

I was director of the Sêr Cymru National Research Network for Low Carbon, Energy and Environment. We worked with the Welsh Government and partner universities to support Wales’ world-leading research in low carbon energy, nature-based solutions to environmental challenges, the bioeconomy, and sustainable food production.

I was a co-I of the Nature4SDGs project which was funded by NERC and research councils in Sweden and India. We used multiple existing datasets to explore the relationship between nature and wellbeing, and how this varies for different people in varied parts of the Global South.

I was the PI of the p4ges project (can paying 4 global ecosytstem services reduce poverty?). Our central research question was: Can capturing global benefits from ecosystems (specifically carbon sequestration/storage and biodiversity) reduce poverty in low income countries, given bio-physical, economic and political realities? Our aim was to influence the development and implementation of international ecosystem service payment schemes such as REDD+ in the interests of poverty alleviation.

I was PI of The Leverhulme Trust and Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)-funded research project: "Can payment for ecosystem services deliver environmental and livelihood benefits?" The project was a three-year-long series of investigations in collaboration with local NGO partners in Bolivia and Madagascar. Our aim was to provide research to inform the development and implementation of ecosystem service payment schemes as well as other incentive-based approaches so as to maximise their potential in contributing to environmental conservation and improving the welfare of local people.

Teaching and Supervision

I teach the modules DXX1002: Environmental Management and Conservation; ENS 4402: Interdisciplinary Conservation Science; DXX3304: Tropical Conservation Management (Madagascar field course); DXX3510/11 Advances in Conservation

Expertise related to UN Sustainable Development Goals

In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):

  • SDG 1 - No Poverty
  • SDG 2 - Zero Hunger
  • SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
  • SDG 13 - Climate Action
  • SDG 15 - Life on Land

Related documents

External positions

Welsh Committee, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds

20192022

External examiner Biodiversity & Conservation Management MSc, Oxford University

20172020

Darwin Expert Committee, DEFRA

1 Aug 2016 → …

external examiner (MSc), University of Kent

20122016

external examiner (post graduate diploma), WildCru,Oxford University

20122016

Keywords

  • GE Environmental Sciences
  • conservation science
  • local people
  • protected areas
  • GF Human ecology. Anthropogeography
  • Madagascar
  • social impacts
  • payments for ecosystem services
  • REDD+
  • QL Zoology
  • conservation ecology
  • monitoring
  • crayfish

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