The following statistics are from the last 5 full calendar years: 2021-2025
Publications
12
Publications co-authored with institutions in Serbia
| Title | Type | Publisher | Date Sort ascending | Journal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current Wildland Fire Patterns and Challenges in Europe: A Synthesis of National Perspectives | article | SAGE | Air, Soil and Water Research | |
| Gap analysis of the Ramsar site network at 50: over 150 important Mediterranean sites for wintering waterbirds omitted | article | Springer-Verlag | Biodiversity and Conservation |
Pagination
5
Publications by IIASA researchers from Serbia
| Title | Type | Publisher | Date Sort ascending | Journal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hosentaschenphotogrammetrie für die Waldinventur | book_section | VDE | ||
| High-resolution canopy fuel maps based on GEDI: a foundation for wildfire modeling in Germany | article | Environmental Research: Ecology | ||
| New Directions in Mapping the Earth’s Surface with Citizen Science and Generative AI | article | Cell | iScience | |
| Ecosystem Resilience Monitoring and Early Warning Using Earth Observation Data: Challenges and Outlook | article | Springer Netherlands | Surveys in Geophysics | |
| Refinement of Individual Tree Detection Results Obtained from Airborne Laser Scanning Data for a Mixed Natural Forest | article | Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) | Remote Sensing |
Projects
324
Projects related to Serbia
| Name | Start | End Sort ascending | Abbreviation | Classification |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Promoting disaster preparedness and resilience by co-developing stakeholder support tools for managing the systemic risk of compounding disasters | 2022 | 2026 | PARATUS | Multi-Regional / Country |
| Nature for insurance, and insurance for nature | 2022 | 2026 | NATURANCE | Global |
| Link4Skills | 2024 | 2026 | Link4Skills | Global |
| For the provision of services for developing a science and evidence-based study for a strategy on “System’s approach to sustainable cooling” | 2025 | 2026 | Cooling | Global |
| Open Modelling Toolbox for development of long-term pathways for the energy system in Africa | 2023 | 2026 | OpenMod4Africa | Global |
| LAnd use and MAnagement modelling for SUStainable governance | 2022 | 2026 | LAMASUS | Multi-Regional / Country |
| WorldTrans - Transparent Assessments for Real People | 2022 | 2026 | WorldTrans | Global |
| Accelerating collection and use of soil health information using AI technology to support the Soil Deal for Europe and EU Soil Observatory | 2023 | 2026 | AI4SoilHealth | Global |
| Integrated Disaster Risk Reduction for extreme climate events: from early warning systems to long term adaptation and resilience building | 2022 | 2026 | DIRECTED | Global |
| Developing circular pathways for a EU low-carbon transition | 2022 | 2026 | CircEUlar | Global |
Pagination
0
Projects sponsored by funders from Serbia
Engagement
19
Number of times participants from Serbia joined IIASA events
12
IIASA staff visits to Serbia
People
4
- Women
- Men
Staff members from Serbia
1
- Women
- Men
Postdoctoral researchers from Serbia
3
- Women
- Men
Total number of alumni from Serbia
News
14 February 2025
Strengthening citizen science and sustainability monitoring in Europe
Researchers from the IIASA Novel Data Ecosystems for Sustainability (NODES) Research Group are part of the newly launched RIECS-Concept (Towards A Pan-European Research Infrastructure for Excellent Citizen Science), a project designed to develop a conceptual framework for a pan-European citizen science research infrastructure. The initiative aims to enhance the role of citizen science in data collection, validation, and policy engagement, ensuring long-term sustainability and broader participation in scientific research across Europe.
Events
Focus
Annual Report 2025: Advancing Global Partnerships Highlights
Throughout 2025, IIASA expanded its international cooperation through new agreements, research initiatives, and high-level exchanges focused on sustainability, climate action, and systems science.
Feasible futures
Policy Brief #41, October 2023. Embracing the notion of feasibility, this research shows that the world will probably overshoot
1.5°C, largely owing to low institutional capacity. Energy demand reduction and electrification are two options to turn down the heat, and addressing weak institutions is crucial.