Prof. dr hab. Adam Izdebski
Forschungsinteressen
Umweltgeschichte
Seuchenforschung
Komplexe Systeme und Resilienztheorie
Griechische und römische Antike
Mittelalter
Frühmoderne Europa
Paläoklimatologie
Paläoökologie
aDNA und Isotopenanalyse in historischen Anwendungen
Vita
2023: Professor of Human Ecology, state nomination from the President of the Republic of Poland
2020: Habilitation in Geschichte, Jagiellonen-Universität in Krakau
2018-heute: Max-Planck-Institut für Menschheitsgeschichte, Jena: Max Planck Independent Research Group Leader (W2-Stelle)
2012-heute: Jagiellonen-Universität in Krakau, Institut für Geschichte: Dozent (beurlaubt)
2017-2018: Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton: Mitglied (School of Historical Studies)
Frühjahr 2017: Universität Warschau, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: Gastprofessor
Frühjahr 2016: Princeton University, Fachbereich Geschichte: Gastprofessor im Council of the Humanities
2011-2012: Freie Universität Berlin, Fachbereich Philosophie und Geisteswissenschaften: Postdoc-Stipendiat der Humboldt-Stiftung
2011: Universität Warschau, Fakultät für Geschichte: Doktor
2008: Universität Oxford, Fakultät für Geschichte: Master of Studies
2008: Universität Warschau, Fakultät für Psychologie: Magister
2007: Universität Warschau, Fakultät für Geschichte: Magister
Wichtigste Veröffentlichungen
Monographien und Sammelbände
Izdebski A., Ein Vormoderner Staat als Sozioökologisches System: Das Oströmische Reich 300-1300 [= Forschungen zur Geschichte und Kultur des Östlichen Mitteleuropa 59]. Dresden: Sandstein, 2022.
Izdebski A., Filipkowski P., Haldon J. (eds.), Perspectives on public policy in societal-environmental crises. What the future needs from history. [= Risks, Systems, Decisions]. Cham: Springer, 2022.
Izdebski A. & Szmytka R. (ed.), Krakow. Ecobiography. Pittsburgh 2020: Pittsburgh University Press.
Izdebski A. and M. Mulryan (eds.), Environment and Society during the long Late Antiquity, Late Antique Archaeology 11 & 12 (Leiden, 2018), 2 vols.
Gogou A., Holmgren K., Izdebski A. (eds.), Special Issue: Mediterranean Holocene Climate, Environment and Human Societies, Quaternary Science Reviews vol. 136, Springer 2016.
Diese Bücher wurden rezensiert von:
T. Newfield & I. Labuhn, in The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 48 (2017) 211-240.
R. Ousterhout in The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 45 (2014) 223-224;
V. La Salvia in The European Journal of Post-Classical Archaeologies 4 (2014) 482-483;
H. Elton, Byzantinische Zeitschrift 107 (2014) 903-905;
N. Tsivikis, Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2015.03.53;
V. La Salvia in Medieval Archaeology 59 (2015) 349.
Zeitschriftenartikel und Buchkapitel
Izdebski A., Guzowski P., et al. Palaeoecological data indicates land-use changes across Europe linked to spatial heterogeneity in mortality during the Black Death pandemic. Nature Ecology and Evolution 6 (2022) 297-306.
Izdebski A., Bloomfield K., et al., L’émergence d’une histoire environnementale interdisciplinaire. Une approche conjointe de l’Holocène tardif / The emergence of interdisciplinary environmental history: bridging the gap between the humanistic and scientific approaches to the Late Holocene, Annales HSS 77/2 (2022) 1-48.
Haldon J., Izdebski A., et al., SDG 13: Climate Action. How Societies Succeeded or Failed to Respond to Environmental Disruption. In: Gorman D., Gutmann M., Before the SDGs. A Historical Companion to the UN Sustainable Development Goals, Oxford 2022, Oxford University Press, in press.
Haldon J., Binois-Roman A., Eisenberg M., Izdebski A., Mordechai L., Newfield T., Slavin P., White S., Wnęk K. Between resilience and adaptation: a historical framework for understanding stability and transformation of societies to shocks and stress. In: I. Linkov, J. M. Keenan, B. Trump (eds.), COVID-19: Systemic Risk and Resilience. Cham 2021, Springer, 235-268.
Izdebski A., Persian Christians. In: E. Wipszycka, Monks and hierarchic church in Egypt and the Levant in Late Antiquity, JJP Supplement, Peeters 2021, in press (as appendix).
Izdebski A., Słoczyński T., Bonnier A., Koloch G., Kouli K., Landscape Change and Trade in Ancient Greece: Evidence from Pollen Data, Economic Journal (2020): 10.1093/ej/ueaa026.
Mordechai L., Eisenberg M., Newfield T., Izdebski A., Kay J., Poinar H, The Justinianic Plague: An inconsequential pandemic?, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116/51 (2019): 25546-25554.
Izdebski, A., L. Mordechai, S. White. The Social Burden of Resilience: A Historical Perspective. Human Ecology, 46 (2018) 291-303.
Haldon, J., L. Mordechai, T.P. Newfield, A.F. Chase, A. Izdebski, P. Guzowski, I. Labuhn, N. Roberts. History Meets Palaeoscience: Consilience and Collaboration in Studying Past Societal Responses to Environmental Change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 9 March 2018, 201716912.
Izdebski A., Jaworski M., Üstündağ H., Sołtysiak A., Bread and class in medieval society: foodways in Anatolia, Journal of Interdisciplinary History 48:3 (2017) 1-23.
Izdebski A., Pickett, J., Roberts N., Waliszewski T., The environmental, archaeological and historical evidence for climatic changes and their societal impacts in the Eastern Mediterranean in Late Antiquity, Quaternary Science Reviews 136 (2016) 189-208.
Izdebski A., Koloch
G., Słoczyński T., Wolicka M., On the Use of Palynological Data in Economic
History: New Methods and an Application to Agricultural Output in Central
Europe,
0--2000 AD, Explorations in Economic History 59 (2016) 17-39.
Izdebski A., Holmgren K., Weiberg E., Stocker S., Büntgen U., Florenzano A., Gogou A., Leroy S.A.G., Luterbacher J., Martrat B., Masi A., Mercuri A.M., Montagna P., Sadori L., Schneider A., Sicre M.-A., Triantaphyllou M., Xoplaki E., Realising consilience: how better communication between archaeologists, historians and geoscientists can transform the study of past climate change in the Mediterranean, Quaternary Science Reviews 136 (2016) 5-22.
Izdebski A., Koloch G., Słoczyński T., Exploring Byzantine and Ottoman economic history with the use of palynological data: a quantitative approach, Jahrbuch der Österreichischen Byzantinistik 65 (2015) 67-110.