How do indigenous territories and agroecology connect to each other in practice ? Networks are different but can be connected when agroecological principles are adapted to indigenous contexts.
From Participation to Sustainable Futures: Anchoring Transdisciplinary Research for Touristic Mountain Regions
A transdisciplinary tourism project in alpine Switzerland demonstrates how structured, multi-level participation enhances contextual relevance and stakeholder collaboration, supporting sustainable regional development through locally grounded knowledge and institutional engagement.
Providing Safe Drinking Water in the Himalayas: A Tale of Two Cities
This study focuses on the analysis of water quality and market and policy failures in water governance.
Mobility behaviour of trail runners to events: the dominance of the car and local races offers prospects for a transition to more sustainable events
We think that trail running is marked by heightened environmental awareness, including in terms of mobility. Then, we study this mobilities to trail events to think about more sustainable events.
From Risk to Vision: Participatory Foresight for climate resilience in South Tyrol
Mountain-top bird species face extreme conditions, shaping breeding site selection. We monitored alpine nests in temperate Andes. Rock cavities buffer temperatures, potentially enhancing breeding success and adaptation to harsh weather
Communities-in-places and welcoming practices in low mountains: place-based solutions for thriving life contexts and sustainable tourism models
The communities-in-places perspective show how strategic place-based planning ensuring citizens rights and favouring thriving communities can also lead to sustainable tourism models in low mountains.
From donor- to regional science driven policy – experiences from a bottom-up approach in High Mountain Asia
How do we move from a donor-driven approach to policy to supporting regional science and local knowledge in shaping a sustainable future in High Mountain Asia?

