Bereichsbild Wasser und nachhaltige Umweltplanung: ein Wasserhahn, Absperrventil

Water and Sustainable Environmental Planning

 

Publications

Kluge, Thomas/Liehr, Stefan/Lux, Alexandra/Moser, Petra/Niemann, Steffen/Umlauf, Nicole/Urban, Wilhelm (2008):  IWRM Concept for the Cuvelai Basin in Northern Namibia. In: Journal of Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Vol. 33, No. 1-2, p 48-55

Bibliography multilingual

 

Projects

INTAFERE – Integrated Analysis of Mobile Organic Foreign Substances in Rivers ... more

further projects

 

Lecturs

"Present Needs Future Options - Foresight Transnational Watermanagement and –policies”. Den Haag Foresight-Workshop on European Rivers:

further lectures

Dr. Stefan Liehr

Foto Stefan Liehr

 

 

 

 

 

Tel. 0049 (69) 707 69 19 36
Fax 0049 (69) 707 69 19 11
liehr@isoe.de

 

Stefan Liehr has been a research assistant at ISOE since 2003, with a focus on sustainable water management and model-supported concepts for an integrated description of social-ecological problem fields. He studied physics, chemistry and geophysics at the Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main and Göttingen University, receiving his doctorate in 2001 from the University of Bremen in the field of non-linear dynamics, with a thesis on “The Modeling and Analysis of Non-Stationary Stochastic Processes.”  

Focus of research

 


Research Projects

further research projects of ISOE


Recent Publications

Bibliography multilingual


Lectures (Selection)

  • Den Haag Foresight-Workshop on European Rivers: In Den Haag fand am 2./3.12.2004 der Workshop "Present Needs Future Options - Foresight Transnational Watermanagement and –policies" des Netherlands Advisory Council for Research on Nature and Environment (RMNO) statt. Presentation: Present Needs Future Options - Foresight Transnational Watermanagement and –policies”. Presentation and  Concept-Paper as Download
  • Integrated water quality management – development of a social-ecological approach. DFG-Workshop on Integrated Water Research and Water Management, 28./29.6.2004
    Lecture as pdf-file (164 kb), Abstract pdf-file, 112 kb