Roman Hoffmann Earns Awards, Joins Academy

IIASA

IIASA researcher Roman Hoffmann has been honored with two prestigious awards and elected as a member of the Young Academy of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, recognizing his contributions to climate change research and environmental social sciences.

Portrait picture of Roman Hoffmann © Silveri | IIASA

Roman Hoffmann

Hoffmann, who leads the Migration and Sustainable Development Research Group in the IIASA Population and Just Societies Program, was selected as a member of the Young Academy of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, a distinguished platform that brings together exceptional early-career scientists from diverse disciplines. The Young Academy fosters interdisciplinary collaboration and supports scientific discourse on critical societal challenges. His membership was officially announced earlier this month, in recognition of his impactful work in the fields of migration, climate impacts, and sustainability research.

In addition to this membership, Hoffmann received the IPUMS Research Award together with IIASA colleagues Guy Abel and Raya Muttarak. The award honors outstanding research utilizing IPUMS data. The researchers received the award based on a joint publication published last year in Nature Climate Change, in which they investigated the impacts of drought and aridity on human migration across multiple global regions. Their work provided new insights into how shifts in climate patterns influence population movements, particularly in vulnerable areas. The IPUMS award acknowledges the study's innovative application of demographic and climate data to address critical questions of human mobility in the context of climate change.

Most recently, Hoffmann was also named a recipient of the EAERE Award for European Research Council (ERC) Grants Laureates in the field of environmental and resource economics. This award recognizes his work on the ERC-funded 2C-RISK project, which addresses critical gaps in understanding climate-related (im)mobility by examining when, how, and why households move - or remain immobile - under climatic and non-climatic stressors. Unlike previous research, which often considers environmental factors in an isolated way, this project takes a comprehensive approach by integrating underrecognized risks, co-stressors, and insecurities.

"I am deeply honored to receive these recognitions. They underscore the importance of climate change research and the need for evidence-based solutions to address global challenges. I am grateful to my collaborators and institutions for their support and look forward to advancing this work further," says Hoffmann.

IIASA congratulates Roman Hoffmann on this well-deserved recognition and celebrates his commitment to pioneering research in the fields of migration, climate impacts, and sustainability.

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