ABOUT THE WRITER
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Robert Nasi was born in 1959 in Nice, France. He graduated as a forest engineer from the French National Forestry School and achieved a PhD in the field of ecology from the University of Paris Sud – Orsay. Since 1982, he has been living and travelling extensively in Africa, Asia and the Pacific, undertaking research activities in the fields of ecology and management of tropical forests. He joined CIFOR in August 1999 and held several research and management positions in the organization (principal scientist, biodiversity program leader, program director). He is director general of CIFOR and managing director of World Agroforestry (ICRAF).
BY THIS WRITER
DG’s Column
- 1 Apr 2022
Planet Earth is not a delicately balanced benign Being, but forests and trees can help
Humanity can redefine the Anthropocene
DG’s Column
- 25 Mar 2022
Discovering the forest wonders of Africa – and the threats they face
A tour of trees
DG’s Column
- 26 Jan 2022
Waiting for the end of deforestation: Companies must ante up
Not taking adequate steps to address the risk, Forest 500 report says
DG’s Column
- 9 Dec 2021
Deforestation pledge redux: Reflections on “forest loss” as dust settles on Glasgow summit
Moving from promises to actions
Analysis
- 1 Jul 2020
Trees: To plant or not to plant
Opinion
- 19 May 2020
Corporate carbon footprint pledges must be backed by transparent timelines
Now is the time to deliver on promises, write Satya S. Tripathi and Robert Nasi
Analysis
- 17 Apr 2020
COVID-19 pandemic: How nature steps in to refill ‘empty forests’ when animals disappear
Nature abhors a vacuum
DG’s Column
- 30 Mar 2020
COVID-19-led ban on wild meat could take protein off the table for millions of forest dwellers
Lack of access to wild meat could result in hunger and malnutrition for local and Indigenous communities