Adaptive dancing: interactions between social resilience and ecological crises
IntroductionSystems of people and nature co-evolve in an adaptive dance (Walters, 1986). Resource systems change as people seek ecosystem services, such as the harvest of stocks, manipulation of key structuring processes, removal of geophysical assets or abation of pollutant concentrations. Meanwhil...
Saved in:
Published in | Navigating Social-Ecological Systems pp. 33 - 52 |
---|---|
Main Author | |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
Cambridge University Press
01.01.2001
|
Online Access | Get full text |
ISBN | 0521061849 9780521815925 9780521061841 0521815924 |
DOI | 10.1017/CBO9780511541957.005 |
Cover
Abstract | IntroductionSystems of people and nature co-evolve in an adaptive dance (Walters, 1986). Resource systems change as people seek ecosystem services, such as the harvest of stocks, manipulation of key structuring processes, removal of geophysical assets or abation of pollutant concentrations. Meanwhile, as humans are becoming more dependent on these ecosystem services, the ecosystems become more vulnerable to unexpected events. This process that signals a loss of ecological resilience has been described as a pathology of resource development (Holling, 1995).Complex resource systems are not easily tractable or understood, much less predictable. Nonlinear interactions among multiple variables, scale invariant processes, emergent properties from self-organization and other factors all contribute to unpredictability. Yet, even with these inherent difficulties, we continue attempts at making sense for management and other purposes. Due to a growing empirical base of observation, emergent patterns of these systems, including periods of stability and instability, as well as unexpected behavior due to internal and external changes have been revealed (Gunderson, Holling, and Light, 1995; Berkes and Folke, 1998; Johnson et al., 1999).This paper builds on earlier work (Holling, 1978; Walters, 1986, 1997; Gunderson et al., 1995; Gunderson, 1999a) to explore these unexpected behaviors in managed ecological systems – perceived as surprises and crises. To begin with, the conceptual basis for understanding these nonlinearities, ecological properties of resilience and adaptive capacity, and analogous properties in institutions are presented. |
---|---|
AbstractList | IntroductionSystems of people and nature co-evolve in an adaptive dance (Walters, 1986). Resource systems change as people seek ecosystem services, such as the harvest of stocks, manipulation of key structuring processes, removal of geophysical assets or abation of pollutant concentrations. Meanwhile, as humans are becoming more dependent on these ecosystem services, the ecosystems become more vulnerable to unexpected events. This process that signals a loss of ecological resilience has been described as a pathology of resource development (Holling, 1995).Complex resource systems are not easily tractable or understood, much less predictable. Nonlinear interactions among multiple variables, scale invariant processes, emergent properties from self-organization and other factors all contribute to unpredictability. Yet, even with these inherent difficulties, we continue attempts at making sense for management and other purposes. Due to a growing empirical base of observation, emergent patterns of these systems, including periods of stability and instability, as well as unexpected behavior due to internal and external changes have been revealed (Gunderson, Holling, and Light, 1995; Berkes and Folke, 1998; Johnson et al., 1999).This paper builds on earlier work (Holling, 1978; Walters, 1986, 1997; Gunderson et al., 1995; Gunderson, 1999a) to explore these unexpected behaviors in managed ecological systems – perceived as surprises and crises. To begin with, the conceptual basis for understanding these nonlinearities, ecological properties of resilience and adaptive capacity, and analogous properties in institutions are presented. Complex resource systems are not easily tractable or understood, much less predictable. Nonlinear interactions among multiple variables, scale invariant processes, emergent properties from self-organization and other factors all contribute to unpredictability. Yet, even with these inherent difficulties, we continue attempts at making sense for management and other purposes. Due to a growing empirical base of observation, emergent patterns of these systems, including periods of stability and instability, as well as unexpected behavior due to internal and external changes have been revealed. |
Author | Gunderson, Lance H. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Lance H. surname: Gunderson fullname: Gunderson, Lance H. organization: Department of Environmental Studies, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA |
BookMark | eNqNkD9PwzAQxY0ACVr6DRg8sbX4nNixYQoR_6SKLjBHjn2tDKld4hT4-EQqS2Hhlju9e_fT6Y3IUYgBCTkHNgMGxWV1s9CFYgJA5KBFMWNMHJDJnnZIRkxwYBJUrk_IJKVXNhRnSmfqlDyVzmx6_4HUmWB9WF1RH3rsjO19DIk22H8iBpqi9aalHSbfegwWqQmOoo1tXHk7bGznE6Yzcrw0bcLJTx-Tl7vb5-phOl_cP1blfGph-GoKSmaKI7qcqWxpGiNt0YCUrNEwTMiF0y5XUmuzdOBkzrEwIJl1kAlULhuTix1308X3Laa-XvtksW1NwLhNNWjNucz0YCx3RmvWTefdCmsbO2xifEv1XlD117qtfydaMsgGxvUfRhP_e_0N-3B60w |
ContentType | Book Chapter |
Copyright | Cambridge University Press 2003 |
Copyright_xml | – notice: Cambridge University Press 2003 |
DBID | 7SN 7ST 7T4 7U6 C1K |
DOI | 10.1017/CBO9780511541957.005 |
DatabaseName | Ecology Abstracts Environment Abstracts Human Population & Natural Resource Management Sustainability Science Abstracts Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management |
DatabaseTitle | Ecology Abstracts Environment Abstracts Sustainability Science Abstracts Human Population & Natural Resource Management Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management |
DatabaseTitleList | Ecology Abstracts |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Sociology & Social History |
EISBN | 9780511541957 0511541953 |
Editor | Folke, C (eds) Colding, J Berkes, E |
Editor_xml | – fullname: Berkes, E – fullname: Folke, C (eds) – fullname: Colding, J |
EndPage | 52 |
ExternalDocumentID | 9780511541957_xml_CBO9780511541957A013 |
Genre | Book |
GroupedDBID | -G2 -VQ -VX 089 20A 38. A4I A4J AAAAZ AABBV AAHFW AAQLY ABARN ABFFC ABZUC AC5 ACLGV ACNOG ADCGF ADQZK ADVEM ADWXY AEDFS AERYV AEWAL AEWQY AFTBM AGSJN AHAWV AHJKY AJFER AJPFC AJXXZ ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS AMJDZ ANGWU ASYWF AYSPE AZZ BBABE BFIBU BOIVQ BPBUR CCHSS COBLI COXPH CZZ DUGUG EBACC EBSCA EBZNK ECOWB EDVGL EUQYS FH2 GHDSN HF4 ICERG IDFYU IVL JJU KAJ MWOYL MYL NK1 NK2 OLDIN OTBUH OZASK OZBHS PP- PQQKQ S34 SACVX SN- SUPCW XI1 ZXKUE ABESS ACAEZ 7SN 7ST 7T4 7U6 ABMRC AHWGJ C1K |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c1419-186382eed4083faba6c7b1660b91c7be25d9d48699afd1d642e7a160cd135e8d3 |
ISBN | 0521061849 9780521815925 9780521061841 0521815924 |
IngestDate | Thu Jul 10 17:40:03 EDT 2025 Fri Feb 21 01:31:45 EST 2025 Mon Sep 16 05:26:45 EDT 2024 |
IsPeerReviewed | false |
IsScholarly | false |
Language | English |
LinkModel | OpenURL |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c1419-186382eed4083faba6c7b1660b91c7be25d9d48699afd1d642e7a160cd135e8d3 |
Notes | SourceType-Books-1 content type line 12 ObjectType-Book-1 |
PQID | 19922639 |
PQPubID | 23462 |
PageCount | 20 |
ParticipantIDs | proquest_miscellaneous_19922639 cambridge_corebooks_9780511541957_xml_CBO9780511541957A013 cambridge_cbo_9780511541957_xml_CBO9780511541957A013 |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 20010101 20020101 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2001-01-01 2002-01-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 01 year: 2001 text: 20010101 day: 01 |
PublicationDecade | 2000 |
PublicationSubtitle | Building Resilience for Complexity and Change |
PublicationTitle | Navigating Social-Ecological Systems |
PublicationYear | 2001 2002 |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Publisher_xml | – name: Cambridge University Press |
SSID | ssj0000208938 |
Score | 1.2566361 |
Snippet | IntroductionSystems of people and nature co-evolve in an adaptive dance (Walters, 1986). Resource systems change as people seek ecosystem services, such as the... Complex resource systems are not easily tractable or understood, much less predictable. Nonlinear interactions among multiple variables, scale invariant... |
SourceID | proquest cambridge |
SourceType | Aggregation Database Publisher |
StartPage | 33 |
Title | Adaptive dancing: interactions between social resilience and ecological crises |
URI | http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511541957.005 https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511541957.005?locatt=mode:legacy https://www.proquest.com/docview/19922639 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV07T8MwELagLIiFp3jjAbGgQJw4icMGqKhCAhaQ2CI7diUkaFEfCPj13NlukgIDjyVK0tqJ-6V358t9nwnZlyrOpDA8iGOF2SoZBirudoMMDHJmGLgcjWzkq-u0c8cv75P7enkwyy4ZqaPy_VteyV9QhXOAK7Jkf4Fs1SmcgH3AF7aAMGw_Bb_TaVbHmJUvVh4DFbVt4jtol5UlawqRY3XN2HJY3Bt2S3s-7Bw1n5ZTLZ9tEZFG_Q3HgUYliYHjPQyrei6fY4dJ-sOjswqYeTf1lcEKDc10MoE1kgmTOSWyeUNcBoY17JoTq_Ae0knOfrG9TrDp_OzGdoIyPyxPUCAyqX1NVQE49Z3i9emx-NzwNMTFiGczwVtkDnx0-6rKneHConksPPXY3mzuDwSEZxH3ykrVSOpj-3ky4VCy7Pi7-23qbHzx0TbwuF0kC0hGocgSgXEtkRnTWyabFcuIHlCHPXVyL28r5HoCJfVQntAmkNQDSR2QtAaSApC0BpI6IFfJ3UX79rwT-EUzgpLBAAImwKJGEPlwCK67Usm0zBRL01DlDPZMlOhcc5HmuexqpmH6aTLJ0rDULE6M0PEaafX6PbNOKDdpAvFyWRouUC1WCBUmKoukkDKFmfYG4dXPVJSqX_wM1A1y0mjWH9iqgOGPG-9N4CjAEOLbLdkz_fGwwDrqCOLtzf90v0Xm67_FNmmNBmOzA1HnSO36h_AD_41vyg |
linkProvider | ProQuest Ebooks |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=bookitem&rft.title=Navigating+Social-Ecological+Systems&rft.au=Gunderson%2C+Lance+H.&rft.atitle=Adaptive+dancing%3A+interactions+between+social+resilience+and+ecological+crises&rft.date=2001-01-01&rft.isbn=9780521061841&rft.spage=33&rft.epage=52&rft_id=info:doi/10.1017%2FCBO9780511541957.005&rft.externalDocID=9780511541957_xml_CBO9780511541957A013 |
thumbnail_m | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/image/custom?url=https%3A%2F%2Fassets.cambridge.org%2F97805210%2F61841%2Fcover%2F9780521061841.jpg |