Skip to content

dr. JEM (Judith) Klostermann

dr. JEM (Judith) Klostermann

Researcher policy processes

Biography

Biography

I started my career as a biologist providing environmental policy advice at TNO. While working there I started to wonder if a sustainable society is achievable at all. To learn more about the human aspects I did a PhD which resulted in a dissertation on social construction of sustainability. Since 2003, I am working in Wageningen as a hybrid scientist, using knowledge from public administration and social science in the domains of climate change, water, nature and agriculture. Technically educated people often ask themselves why good ideas aren’t simply implemented in society. They see their solutions as politically neutral. People without a technical background sense the political content of the technical solutions but when they enter into a dialogue with natural scientists, they are deterred by the deeply technical discussions. What I try to do is build bridges between these two groups. I have just enough knowledge to more or less follow the natural science; and sufficient knowledge how people think and operate to create a connection and facilitate a dialogue.

Some examples of the kind of projects I do:

Involving users in the quality assurance project of the Copernicus Climate Data Store (CDS): The CDS aims to serve everyone in Europe and elsewhere with climate information. Large datasets are available as well as software tools to analyse the data for the user’s own specific purposes. The CDS is developed by climate scientists and software specialists, and is not usable yet for less specialized users. By involving different types of users we provide advice how the CDS can develop to expand its user base.

Communities of practice in municipalities to discuss the results of the URBANFLUXES project: In this project micro-meteorology approaches were applied to find out how much heat humans add to the urban heat island, for example, with badly insulated housing. In the end it was not possible to calculate the anthropogenic heat because there were too many uncertainties.

Negotiation of uncertainties in the South-Western Delta of the Netherlands: The Delta Works created hard barriers between seawater and freshwater. To help nature, more interaction between salty and freshwater is promoted, but in this discussion, many different views were revealed what ‘salty’ or ‘brackish’ or ‘fresh water’ actually means. These different views partly block progress towards a compromise between stakeholders.

Ancillary activities - dr. JEM (Judith) Klostermann

Ancillary activities
  • Gemeenteraad Ede (29-3-2018/21-3-2026)
    Bijdragen aan werk van Fractie GroenLinks in de gemeente Ede
  • Gemeente Ede (21-3-2018/18-3-2026)
    Fractie GroenLinks werk voor de gemeente Ede
About

Personal information

Address

Droevendaalsesteeg 3, 6708PB, WAGENINGEN

Postal address

Postbus/POBox 47, 6700AA, WAGENINGEN

Building

Lumen, 100, A.019

Telephone

+31317486427

Secretary

+31317486543

Expertise

Spatial planning, Community participation, Multi-stakeholder processes, Public administration, Participation methods, Social sciences, Sustainability, Water policy, Governance, Climate adaptation, Green infrastructure, Stakeholder, Urban green areas, Qualitative methods, Resilience, Marine spatial planning, Climate services, Nature-based solutions, Transdisciplinary research

Subdivision

Climate Resilience