Conference Presentations by J. Kolen
HERCULES seeks to empower public and private actors to protect and sustainably manage cultural la... more HERCULES seeks to empower public and private actors to protect and sustainably manage cultural landscapes that possess significant cultural, socio-economic, historical, natural and archaeological value, at a local, national and Pan-European level. The project is funded by the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement no 603447 and follows the European Landscape Convention’s call for transdisciplinary research and involves all actors with stakes in cultural landscapes of historical and archaeological value. HERCULES brings together 13 partners representing European universities and research institutes, small and medium-sized enterprises and non-governmental organisations, all of whom are experts in landscape science and practice. The overarching goal is to increase understanding of drivers, patterns, and values of European cultural landscapes and to use this knowledge to develop, test, and demonstrate strategies for their protection, management, and planning.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Papers by J. Kolen
HERCULES develops insights, tools, technologies and strategies and applies and tests theseat regi... more HERCULES develops insights, tools, technologies and strategies and applies and tests theseat regional case studies that span major environmental and land use history gradientsthroughout Europe. As ...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Work Package 2.3 of the HERCULES project brings together a protocol for studying the long-term ch... more Work Package 2.3 of the HERCULES project brings together a protocol for studying the long-term changes in cultural landscapes and spatial dynamic modelling frameworks and tools. Additionally it pre ...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Cultural landscapes are closely linked to human well-being, but they are undergoing rapid and fun... more Cultural landscapes are closely linked to human well-being, but they are undergoing rapid and fundamental change, often leading to the loss of landscape values. Understanding the societal transformation underlying these landscape changes, as well as the ecological and societal outcomes of cultural landscape transformations across scales are prime challenges for landscape research. Nevertheless, so far, a common understanding of cultural landscapes is missing, which has inhibited the design of effective policies to safeguard cultural landscape values. Based on the foci of the Program on Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS), we propose a framework to manage and integrate the different understandings of cultural landscapes. Six major dimensions of landscapes emerged from recent progress in landscape research that we propose to consider when studying landscape change in relation to societal transformations: (1) social-ecological linkages in landscapes, (2) landscape structure and land us...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Multi-, inter- and transdisciplinary research in Landscape Archaeology, 2016
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
This paper presents the outlines of a new EU-funded research program for the long-term history, p... more This paper presents the outlines of a new EU-funded research program for the long-term history, present-day management and further development of the European landscapes, including their natural and cultural heritage: HERCULES. One of the subprojects of this program (Work Package 2) links archaeological, historical and historical ecological data to the analysis of geo-information in order to develop models of long-term landscape change in three carefully chosen study regions in the Netherlands, Sweden and Estonia. This is framed theoretically by integrating insights from landscape biography, historical ecology and complex systems theory. The linking and analysis of data will be done using a Spatial Data Infrastructure and by means of dynamic modelling. 1 IntroductIon In December 2013 a new large-scale program was launched for the research, protection and management of the European cultural landscapes within EU Seventh Framework Programme: HERCULES (Sustainable Futures for Europe'...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Ecology and Society, 2015
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Quaternary International, 2015
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Archaeological Dialogues, 2011
This paper investigates the rationale for excavation against the background of a new trend in arc... more This paper investigates the rationale for excavation against the background of a new trend in archaeology: the renewed interest in the values of experience and empiricism in both archaeological practice and interpretation. It is argued that we should seriously reconsider the principles of archaeological heritage management as it has developed from the 1970s onwards. Reasons for excavating are discussed by referring to three examples: (1) the reconstruction of cultural evolution in the time period roughly between 40,000 and 30,000 B.P., when anatomically modern humans entered Europe but Neanderthals were still there; (2) recent excavations in 20th-century terrorscapes; and (3) public activities, like geocaching, that evoke a kind of ‘archaeological experience’. It is concluded that the time is ripe for a broad empirical and experiential attitude, based on new intellectual orientations like the new empiricism, to return to the archaeological agenda. Excavation may fulfil a vital role ...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Archaeological Dialogues, 1994
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Archaeological Dialogues, 1997
Harm Tjalling Waterbolk (1924) is regarded, together with Pieter J.R. Modderman (1919) and Willem... more Harm Tjalling Waterbolk (1924) is regarded, together with Pieter J.R. Modderman (1919) and Willem Glasbergen (1923–1979), as the direct inheritor of the founder of Dutch archaeology Albert Egges van Giffen (1884–1973). From the middle of the 1950s, after Van Giffen's retirement, thistroikashaped the rapidly growing academic archaeology in the Netherlands. Until well into the 1970s and 1980s they occupied the most prominent chairs at the universities of Groningen, Leiden and Amsterdam. One look at Waterbolk's impressive list of publications (almost exclusively articles) tells us that for half a century he has been an authoritative participant in developments in Dutch archaeology. He has been involved, directly or indirectly, in the modernization of excavation practices, in changes in the organization of academic education and research, in the introduction of new methods and techniques and in shifts in theory and interpretation. He has made a valuable contribution to the devel...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
… , J., Spek, Th., Wijnen, M.-H …, 2001
Publikationsansicht. 1140054. De biografie van het landschap; ontwerp voor een inter-en multidisc... more Publikationsansicht. 1140054. De biografie van het landschap; ontwerp voor een inter-en multidisciplinaire benadering van de landschapsgeschiedenis en het cultuurhistorisch erfgoed (2001). ...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The Cultural Landscape and Heritage Paradox: Protection and Development of the Dutch Archaeological-Historical Landscape and its European Dimension, Feb 15, 2011
Europe's Cultural Landscape. Archaeologists and the management of change, Brussels/London (E... more Europe's Cultural Landscape. Archaeologists and the management of change, Brussels/London (Europae Archaeologiae Consilium/English Heritage), 89-96. Bloemers, JHF, 2005: Archaeological-historical landscapes in The Netherlands: management by sustainable development in planning, in MR Ruiz del Árbol/A. Orejas (eds.), Landscapes as cultural heritage in the European Research. Proceedings of the Open Workshop Madrid, 29th October 2004, Madrid, 69-85. Bloemers, JHF/GJ Borger, 1988: Cultural history and environmental planning: research ...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
RefDoc Bienvenue - Welcome. Refdoc est un service / is powered by. ...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Heart, 1998
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Circulation, 2009
Background— There are limited data on the long-term clinical outcome after an angiographically co... more Background— There are limited data on the long-term clinical outcome after an angiographically confirmed (definite) stent thrombosis (ST). Methods and Results— Four hundred thirty-one consecutive patients with a definite ST were enrolled in this multicenter registry. The primary end point was the composite of cardiac death and definite recurrent ST. Secondary end points were all-cause death, cardiac death, definite recurrent ST, definite and probable recurrent ST, any myocardial infarction, and any target-vessel revascularization. The primary end point occurred in 111 patients after a median follow-up of 27.1 months. The estimated cumulative event rates at 30 days and 1, 2, and 3 years were 18.0%, 23.6%, 25.2%, and 27.9%, respectively. The cumulative incidence rates of definite recurrent ST, definite or probable recurrent ST, any myocardial infarction, and any target-vessel revascularization were 18.8%, 20.1%, 21.3%, and 32.0%, respectively, at the longest available follow-up. Indep...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Conference Presentations by J. Kolen
Papers by J. Kolen