EXPERTISE
Profile
Dr. Kathrine I. Johnsen is a senior research scientist. She has a split position between NIVA’s Water and Society section and the International Centre for Reindeer Husbandry in Kautokeino, Norway. She works within the broad field of human geography, where she engages in research that focuses on natural resource management, policy development, and land-use conflicts. She is particularly interested in the role of traditional/indigenous knowledge in public environmental governance and how different knowledge systems, values, and power relations influence decision-making processes. She has also published articles that discuss and show ways to combine science and local/indigenous knowledge.
Kathrine holds a PhD in Environment and Development Studies from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU). Her thesis discusses knowledge systems that inform the governance of Sámi reindeer husbandry and pasture landscapes in Finnmark, Norway. Kathrine has extensive experience in social science research methods, including designing and carrying out semi-structured and in-depth interviews, participatory mapping, scenario analysis, and other participatory research methods. In addition to publishing scientific texts, she has published reports that synthesise complex science and make information available in layman’s terms for policymakers and the public.
Kathrine has 20 years of experience writing assessments, analysing data, and facilitating capacity building. Before joining NIVA in 2019, she was a Senior Expert on Indigenous and Community Issues at GRID-Arendal. She was responsible for various projects focusing on nature conservation and enhancing the resilience of rangeland ecosystems and pastoralists’ livelihoods. She contributed to several Arctic Council working groups’ assessments and was an observer at the Senior Arctic Officials meetings on behalf of the UN Environment Programme. She also contributed to the UN Environmental Programme’s ethical guidelines for indigenous issues, its global initiative on sustainable pastoralism and rangelands, and the work of IUCN on fair governance of conserved areas in Vietnam.
Kathrine has a bachelor’s degree in environmental health from the University of Western Sydney, Australia, and a Master of Science in natural resource management from NMBU. Her master’s thesis was a case study of gender and access to natural resources in Nepal. Kathrine is Norwegian, born in Oslo, but lives today in Grimstad in the south of Norway.
Kathrine holds a PhD in Environment and Development Studies from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU). Her thesis discusses knowledge systems that inform the governance of Sámi reindeer husbandry and pasture landscapes in Finnmark, Norway. Kathrine has extensive experience in social science research methods, including designing and carrying out semi-structured and in-depth interviews, participatory mapping, scenario analysis, and other participatory research methods. In addition to publishing scientific texts, she has published reports that synthesise complex science and make information available in layman’s terms for policymakers and the public.
Kathrine has 20 years of experience writing assessments, analysing data, and facilitating capacity building. Before joining NIVA in 2019, she was a Senior Expert on Indigenous and Community Issues at GRID-Arendal. She was responsible for various projects focusing on nature conservation and enhancing the resilience of rangeland ecosystems and pastoralists’ livelihoods. She contributed to several Arctic Council working groups’ assessments and was an observer at the Senior Arctic Officials meetings on behalf of the UN Environment Programme. She also contributed to the UN Environmental Programme’s ethical guidelines for indigenous issues, its global initiative on sustainable pastoralism and rangelands, and the work of IUCN on fair governance of conserved areas in Vietnam.
Kathrine has a bachelor’s degree in environmental health from the University of Western Sydney, Australia, and a Master of Science in natural resource management from NMBU. Her master’s thesis was a case study of gender and access to natural resources in Nepal. Kathrine is Norwegian, born in Oslo, but lives today in Grimstad in the south of Norway.