Peter

Søgaard Jørgensen

Associate professor, PhD

Research theme leader

+46 8-16 4252

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Profile summary

  • Anthropocene
  • Evolution
  • Polycrisis
  • Transitions
  • Antibiotic resistance
  • Biodiveristy and health
  • Emerging infectous diseases

Peter Søgaard Jørgensen combines evolutionary and sustainability science to understand crisis and transformations in the Anthropocene and their implications for human health and wellbeing.

Søgaard Jørgensen studies the evolution and sustainability of of the Anthropocene. His questions include, how we got here, the dynamics characterizing the present polycrisis, and the ongoing mobilizations and future pathways toward a more sustainable future.

Søgaard Jørgensen led a team identifying a set of 14 crisis generating dynamics that should be navigated to manage the polycrisis (Anthropocene traps). He is part of a team documenting and quantifying the global mobilization of action towards a new more sustainable relationship with the living planet (Empirics of Hope). He is currently writing a book on the topic of evolution and sustainability in the Anthropocene.

A major focus of his work is the intersection between global health and the living environment, specifically in the context of antibiotic resistance, emerging infectious diseases, and agricultural pests and pathogens. He leads the ERC project, INFLUX focusing on the cascading impacts of new diseases and agricultural problem species on society and the environment. He is a contributing author to the second EAT-Lancet commission.

Søgaard Jørgensen is an ecologist and evolutionary scientist turned sustainability scientist. He came to sustainability science to study the integrated dynamics of how humans interact and coevolve with their living environment. He has a PhD from 2014 in ecology and evolutionary biology from the University of Copenhagen. During this time he also spent two years at University of California, Davis and University of California, Berkeley.

Søgaard Jørgensen is deputy director of the Global Economic Dynamics and the Biosphere programme at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, leading the work on global health and biosphere stewardship. He is a mentor at the Anthropocene laboratory, also at at the academy.

Søgaard Jørgensen works with a variety of actors at the science-policy interface. These include the Geneva Science and Diplomacy Anticipator, the Action for antibiotic resistance (ReAct), the World Bank Group, and the Swedish Ambassador for Antibiotic Resistance.

Søgaard Jørgensen is an elected member of the Swedish Young Academy (2024-2029) where he engages in questions relating to the role of science in a world of increasing turbulence, including outreach, research politics, internationalization and interdisciplinarity.

He is a member of the board of the Wübben Stiftung which funds tenure track positions in the German university system and has chaired research evaluation committees for tenure track positions in Austria via the Vienna Science and Technology Fund.

Søgaard Jørgensen has been involved in international organisations and learned societies, especially working to get the voice of early career scientists represented. These include the International Association for Ecology, the Early Career Network of Networks, and Future Earth.

Awards and achievements

  • Member of the Swedish Young Academy
  • ERC starting grant 2021
  • JPIAMR consortium grant PI
  • SESYNC pursuit PI
  • Lead-author publications in Nature and Science magazines
  • EAT-Lancet 2nd comission – contributing author
  • Research board Wübben Stiftung

Supervision

Kathryn Bjorklund

PhD

Main supervisor

Melissa Barton

PhD

Main supervisor

Daniel Avila Ortega

PhD

Main supervisor

Luong Nguyen Thanh

PhD

Main supervisor

Ariadna Sala Roca

MSc

Main supervisor

Elissa Dickson

PhD

Co-supervisor

Diana Luna Gonzalez

PhD

Co-supervisor

Sofia Maniatakou

PhD

Co-supervisor

News articles with Søgaard Jørgensen, Peter

Publications by Søgaard Jørgensen, Peter

The EAT–Lancet Commission on healthy, sustainable, and just food systems

Journal / article | 2025

Johan Rockström, Shakuntala Haraksingh Thilsted, Walter C Willett, Line J Gordon, Mario Herrero, Christina C Hicks, Daniel Mason-D'Croz, Nitya Rao, Marco Springmann, Ellen Cecilie Wright, Rina Agustina, Sumati Bajaj, Anne Charlotte Bunge, Bianca Carducci, Costanza Conti, Namukolo Covic, Jessica Fanzo, Nita G Forouhi, Matthew F Gibson, Xiao Gu, Ermias Kebreab, Claire Kremen, Amar Laila, Ramanan Laxminarayan, Theresa M Marteau, Carlos A Monteiro, Anna Norberg, Jemimah Njuki, Thais Diniz Oliveira, Wen-Harn Pan, Juan A Rivera, James P W Robinson, Marina Sundiang, Sofie te Wierik, Detlef P van Vuuren, Sonja Vermeulen, Patrick Webb, Lujain Alqodmani, Ramya Ambikapathi, Anne Barnhill, Isabel Baudish, Felicitas Beier, Damien Beillouin, Arthur H W Beusen, Jannes Breier, Charlotte Chemarin, Maksym Chepeliev, Jennifer Clapp, Wim de Vries, Ignacio Pérez-Domínguez, Natalia Estrada-Carmona. 2025. The EAT–Lancet Commission on healthy, sustainable, and just food systems. The Lancet. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(25)01201-2

The 2025 EAT- Lancet Commission on healthy, sustainable, and just food systems presents new evidence-based insights on nutrition and human health, within safe and just planetary boundaries. New to this Commission are updates to the planetary health diet, measurement and assessment of the impact food systems have in driving transgressions of planetary boundaries, an exploration of multi-dimensional and underlying issues of fo...