Lansing, John Stephen
Contributed to
of07Balinese 'water temples' and the management of irrigation
Balinese 'water temples' and the management of irrigationarticle 1987
- Summary
- J. Stephen Lansing is an American anthropologist and complexity scientist. He is especially known from his decades of research on the emergent properties of human-environmental interactions in Bali, Borneo and the Malay Archipelago; social-ecological modeling, and complex adaptive systems. He is an external professor at the Santa Fe Institute and the Complexity Science Hub Vienna; a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford; a visiting scholar at the Hoffman Global Institute for Business and Society at INSEAD Singapore, and emeritus professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona. Wikipedia
- Gender or Sex
- Male [1][3][4][5]
- Unknown [2]
- Born
- 1950 [5]
- Language
- English [3]
- Occupation
- anthropologist [5]
- university teacher [5]
- researcher [5]
- Profession
- Anthropologe [2]
- Employer
- University of Southern California [5]
- University of Michigan [5]
- University of Arizona [5]
- Complexity Science Hub (CSH) [5]
- Nanyang Technological University [5][5]
- Santa Fe Institute [5]
- Educated at
- University of Michigan [5]
- Wesleyan University [5]
- Country of Education
- United States [5]
- Yale LUX
- Entity [5]
- Sources
- 1. VIAF
- 2. Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (Germany)
- 3. Bibliothèque nationale de France
- 4. Library of Congress
- 5. Wikidata
autorenewLast updated Jan 7, 2026