Deadline for proposals: 1 August 2018

The Congress Scientific Committee invites submission of session 
proposals for the 2019 IUFRO World Congress. In keeping with the spirit 
of the Congress title – Forest Research and Cooperation for Sustainable 
Development ‐ the Congress Scientific Committee is developing a program 
that will highlight the contributions that forest science is making to 
address the significant environmental, social and economic challenges 
facing our world. The Congress program will reflect the forest science 
community’s diverse contributions across the full range of natural and 
social science disciplines, with special emphasis on key issues and 
research areas identified in IUFRO’s 2015‐2019 Strategy 
(https://www.iufro.org/discover/strategy/) . 

Who may submit a session proposal? 
All who share an interest in the future of forests and forest science 
are invited to submit session proposals. We encourage proposals that 
involve collaboration between two or more IUFRO Divisions  or Task 
Forces and/or with organizations not formally associated with IUFRO, and 
from university students at all levels. We strongly recommend IUFRO 
officeholders and others actively involved in IUFRO Research Groups, 
Working Parties, and Task Forces communicate with their respective 
Division representatives on the CSC (or Task Force coordinators) before 
submitting proposals – this will greatly facilitate broader involvement 
of IUFRO divisional units and Task Forces in the scientific program and 
avoid overlaps among sessions. 

Session proposals from non‐IUFRO member organizations are encouraged 
although preference will be given to those that are prepared jointly 
with IUFRO Divisional Units and Task Forces (see 
https://www.iufro.org/science/ for more information) – if assistance is 
needed to identify appropriate partners within IUFRO, please contact any 
member of the CSC. 
 
Preparing and submitting a session proposal. 
Proposals should be submitted in English, Portuguese or Spanish, online 
at www.iufro2019.com using the Session Proposal Form. Proposals will not 
be accepted after 1 August 2018. 

In addition to providing basic information on session organizer(s), 
session title, alignment with Congress themes, and a short abstract of 
the session proposal, those submitting proposals should submit (online) 
a more complete proposal (following the template provided). The template 
will prompt proposers about session objectives and content in relation 
to Congress theme(s), proposed session format (i.e., presentation of 
individual papers and/or posters, moderated panel discussion, or other 
forms of presentation) and names of proposed speakers (if known), their 
organizational affiliations and indicative titles of their 
presentations. Proposed sessions should be organized to be nominally 2 
hours in length. For sessions involving oral presentations, we recommend 
that 15 minutes be adopted for standard oral presentations. However, we 
encourage proponents to be innovative, and to consider panel 
discussions, interactive poster sessions and other ways to engage 
Congress participants. 

Please note that the abstract submission process (later this year) will 
be open to all, so session organizers may need to include papers or 
posters that were not originally proposed for their sessions. Please be 
aware of this possibility and the need for flexibility in designing your 
session . In the event that the number of accepted abstracts for a 
particular session exceeds the number that can be accommodated in a 
single session, organizers may be given an additional session slot in 
the Congress program. 
 
Criteria for selection. 
Session proposals will be reviewed and evaluated by members of the 
Congress Scientific Committee with primary consideration given to their 
scientific quality and relevance to the Congress themes. Other factors 
that will be considered are: the involvement of two or more IUFRO units 
(Divisions, Task Forces, Research Groups and Working Parties) and/or 
non‐IUFRO organizations; geographic and gender diversity of proposed 
session presenters; and the involvement of students and young 
scientists. We strongly encourage submissions well in advance of the 
August 1 deadline. 

Acceptance decisions will be made no later than 31 August 2018. An open 
Call for Abstracts will be issued in September, with online abstract 
submission until 15 December 2018, and acceptance decisions provided by 
28 February 2019. 
 
Responsibilities of session organizers. 
Session organizers of accepted proposals are expected to communicate 
with prospective presenters regarding submission of abstracts (online, 
from mid-September to mid‐December 2018), and will be asked to review 
abstracts submitted for their sessions during the abstract review period 
(i.e., in midDecember 2018 to end February 2019). Session organizers may 
be asked to assist the CSC in the editing of accepted abstracts. They 
will also be responsible for moderating sessions (or assigning session 
moderation responsibilities) and are encouraged to pursue publication 
options for papers presented in their sessions. 

Abstracts of papers and posters presented during the Congress will be 
published in a special volume of the International Forestry Review, as 
was done for the 2014 Congress in Salt Lake City. As formal Congress 
proceedings with full papers will not be published, session organizers 
should explore alternative publication options (books, special issues of 
journals, etc.) for their sessions. 

We look forward to hearing from you and for your active participation in 
the design of an excellent scientific program for the 2019 IUFRO 
Congress in Curitiba, Brazil. 
 
Timeline Summary 

1 August 2018 – Deadline for the submission of Session Proposals 
31 August 2018 – Decision advised on Session Proposals 
15 September 2018 – Call for abstracts 
15 December 2018– Deadline for the submission of abstracts 
28 February 2019 – Authors advised of decisions on their abstracts 
31 May 2019 – Registration deadline for early-bird registrations and 
presenting authors 
29 September 2019 – Congress begins 

2019 Congress themes (based on IUFRO 2015-2019 Strategy) 
 
Forests and trees provide a wide range of environmental, economic, 
social and cultural benefits to people in rural communities and urban 
centers worldwide. Their conservation and sustainable management are 
closely linked to globally important societal challenges related to 
environmental protection, sustainable economic development, food 
security, human health, water and energy resource provision, and climate 
change. The best available scientific knowledge is needed to effectively 
address these issues at multiple scales (locally, regionally and 
globally) and provide a strong basis for forest, agroforest and forest 
landscape management practices and policy decisions. The scientific 
program for the IUFRO 2019 World Congress will bring together scientists 
of all ages, from throughout the world, across the full range of 
forest‐
related disciplines, who are engaged in research, education and 
application of science‐based knowledge to address these challenges and 
meet the changing needs of our increasingly globalized society. The 
program will be organized along the following five themes: Forests for 
People; Forests and Climate Change; Forests and Forest Products for a 
Greener Future; Biodiversity, Ecosystem Services and Biological 
Invasions; and Forests, Soil and Water Interactions. 
 
Forests for People 
Forests, woodlands and agroforests play a vital role in the lives of 
people in both rural and urban communities, supporting livelihoods, food 
and energy security, and human health and wellbeing. This theme, which 
focusses on social, cultural and economic aspects of the management and 
use of forest resources, covers a broad set of topics such as nature‐
based recreation and tourism, landscape planning and management, nature 
protection, indigenous people and community forest management, forest 
work, human health and wellbeing, agroforestry, integration of forestry 
in other land uses, urban forestry, forest ethics, forest history and 
culture, gender issues in forestry, rural development and community 
wellbeing. Congress sessions within this theme will explore the linkages 
between human well‐ being and quality of life related to the 
environmental, economic and social goods and services provided by 
forests both for urban and rural populations. They will also examine the 
roles of policy, planning, forest governance, formal and traditional 
knowledge, communication, education and training in the maintenance, 
enhancement, valuation and optimization of benefits derived from forest 
ecosystems and forest products and services to people at local, regional 
and broader spatial scales. 
 
Forests and Climate Change 
Understanding and anticipating the impacts of climate change on forest 
ecosystems and the services they provide to people are critical to 
efforts to develop and implement effective policies and management 
strategies for climate change mitigation and adaptation. Sessions within 
this theme will consider climate change effects on forest ecosystem 
structure and function; interactions with other natural disturbance and 
forest management regimes; monitoring and modelling of climate‐change 
related impacts on forest ecosystems, landscapes, and communities; 
environmental, social and economic implications of  forest‐based climate 
change adaptation strategies and mitigation opportunities (such as 
REDD+); silvicultural, planning and policy options for managing and 
restoring natural and planted forests to enhance carbon storage and 
other ecosystem services, as well as adapting natural and planted 
forests to climate change; the role of sustainable production and use of 
wood‐based products in climate change mitigation (including 
wood‐based 
substitutes for less ”climate friendly” materials); and the 
contributions of forest genetics, restoration ecology and landscape 
ecology in climate change mitigation and adaptation, including 
incentives and issues of trans‐ boundary emission trading schemes.

Forests and Forest Products for a Greener Future 
The future of sustainable forest management in the face of forest loss 
and ever‐increasing demands for food, timber and wood fiber, water and 
other ecosystem services, and uncertainties posed by globalization and 
economic, social and environmental uncertainty, is a fundamental 
challenge for the forest research community. Innovation in the field of 
forest products, goods and services together with sustainable and 
environmentally responsible wood production systems and forest 
operations will play an important role to meet these challenges. 
Sessions within this theme will explore: trends in the demand for 
traditional and innovative forest products, ecosystem goods and 
services; increased use of wood in construction; managing conflicting 
needs of forest stakeholders; changing societal values, and institutions 
and forest governance structures under different socio‐cultural 
conditions and their role in sustainable management and use of natural 
and planted forests in the future. Other topics include development of 
new forest management approaches and processing techniques for 
environmentally and socially acceptable products and services; emerging 
landscape management (i.e., green infrastructure) approaches; valuation 
of benefits derived from non‐wood forest products and ecosystem 
services; bioenergy and the bioeconomy; and forestry education, research 
and training to meet future needs. 
 
Biodiversity, Ecosystem Services and Biological Invasions 
The conservation and sustainable use of forest biodiversity (at genetic, 
species and ecosystem levels) is fundamental to the maintenance of 
habitats responsible for providing environmental, economic, social and 
cultural goods and services on which people in both rural and urban 
communities depend. Addressing the threats to forest biodiversity – 
including deforestation, forest fragmentation and degradation, 
unsustainable use, alien invasive species, and climate change ‐ requires 
a more profound scientific understanding of the role of biodiversity in 
the provision of ecosystem services, and the impacts of biodiversity 
loss on responses and resilience of forest ecosystems, habitats and 
species at different spatial and temporal scales to natural and human‐
induced disturbances. Sessions within this theme will explore these 
issues as well as such topics as the impacts and efficacy of different 
forest management practices on biodiversity in protected areas, 
community management, and more intensively managed forests for timber, 
non‐timber forest products and agroforestry systems; landscape level 
strategies for forest biodiversity conservation and restoration; and 
challenges in achieving a balance between biodiversity conservation and 
sustainable utilization of forest resources. 
 
Forests, Soil and Water Interactions 
Forests and forest cover play a crucial role with regard to sustaining 
the availability and quality of water critical for human well‐being. The 
linkages between water, wetlands and forests show the importance of 
managing ecosystems at watershed or landscape scales in order to protect 
these vital services. There is an urgent need for improved understanding 
of the interactions between forests, trees, soil and water (including 
riparian and coastal ecosystems) as affected by large‐scale natural and 
human‐induced disturbance, including climate change, as well as effects 
of land‐use, land‐cover change and forest management on watershed 
hydrology and provision of water‐related ecosystem services. Sessions 
within this theme will consider these broad issues as well as more 
specific questions such as: water consumption of growing tree crops 
compared to other land uses; region‐specific interactions of forests and 
water; water consumption of forest plantations and forest bioenergy 
systems; and governance and institutional arrangements related to 
management of forested watersheds.

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