Co-supervisors and affiliated faculty

Ina Möller is an Assistant Professor at the Environmental Policy Group of Wageningen University. She has a background in political science and studies the social dynamics that link climate science and policy making. Originally from Germany, Ina completed her PhD at Lund University in Sweden. Her research has focused on the emergence of climate geoengineering as a new type of solution to address climate change. She is now expanding this focus by studying the role of major emitters in climate politics and their engagement with climate transparency mechanisms. Within the TRANSGOV project, she co-supervises Robert Bergsvik and Heather Jacobs.


Sanneke Kloppenburg is an Assistant Professor at the Environmental Policy Group of Wageningen University. She has a background in sociology and is interested in emerging digital technologies and their implications for the governance of sustainable production and consumption practices. Thematically, she focuses on digital infrastructures for energy, mobility and food provisioning. Within the TRANSGOV project, she is Robert Bergsvik’s co-promoter.


Ingrid Boas is a Professor at the Environmental Policy Group at Wageningen University. Ingrid’s research is based in the fields of environmental change, mobilities, and governance, and is specialised in the subject of climate mobility Currently her focus is to further study the political and power dimensions of climate im/mobilities. Within the TRANSGOV project, she co-supervises Max van Deursen.


Robbert Biesbroek is a Professor of “Public governance and climate change adaptation” at Wageningen University & Research, the Netherlands. He is particularly interested in how state and non-state actors deal with emerging boundary-spanning policy problems that crosscut spatial, temporal and administrative systems, particularly climate change impacts and risks. He has a particular fascination for the governance challenges these problems present, how these actors respond, and whether progress is being made to reduce risks. Most of his work is comparative in nature, using a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods. Within the TRANSGOV project, he co-supervises Susanne Konrad.