Shaping social-ecological systems towards sustainable, desirable and equitable futures is often hampered by complex human-natural feedbacks, emergence and nonlinearities. Consequently, the future of systems vulnerable to collapse is uncertain under plausible trajectories of environmental change, socioeconomic development and decision-making. We develop a modelling approach that incorporates driver interactions and feedbacks to operationalise future "safe and just operating spaces" for sustainable development. Monte Carlo simulations of fish catch from India's Chilika lagoon are compared to conditions that are ecologically and socioeconomically desirable as per today's norms. Akin to a satellite-navigation system, the model identifies multid...
As we move further into the Anthropocene, numerous challenges to sustainable development present the...
The increasing burden exerted by human activities on natural capitals is expected to seriously jeopa...
The idea that human impacts on natural systems might trigger large‐scale, social–ecological ‘crises’...
Shaping social-ecological systems towards sustainable, desirable and equitable futures is often hamp...
This study makes a first attempt to operationalize the safe operating space concept at a regional sc...
C1 - Journal Articles RefereedConventional approaches to natural resource management are increasingl...
Sustainable management of social-ecological systems requires an understanding of how anthropogenic c...
The concept of a safe and just operating space (SJOS) provided through combining the safe operating ...
Humanity faces a major global challenge in achieving wellbeing for all, while simultaneously ensurin...
The need for developing socially just living conditions for the world’s growing population whilst ke...
Where ecosystem processes and human livelihoods are intimately linked, within a social-ecological sy...
Computational models provide intelligent environmental decision support systems to understand how hu...
Social-ecological systems (SES) are nested, multilevel systems in which ecological and social elemen...
The need for developing socially just living conditions for the world's growing population whilst ke...
This paper explores the dynamic properties of organisms and ecosystems that make them so resilient a...
As we move further into the Anthropocene, numerous challenges to sustainable development present the...
The increasing burden exerted by human activities on natural capitals is expected to seriously jeopa...
The idea that human impacts on natural systems might trigger large‐scale, social–ecological ‘crises’...
Shaping social-ecological systems towards sustainable, desirable and equitable futures is often hamp...
This study makes a first attempt to operationalize the safe operating space concept at a regional sc...
C1 - Journal Articles RefereedConventional approaches to natural resource management are increasingl...
Sustainable management of social-ecological systems requires an understanding of how anthropogenic c...
The concept of a safe and just operating space (SJOS) provided through combining the safe operating ...
Humanity faces a major global challenge in achieving wellbeing for all, while simultaneously ensurin...
The need for developing socially just living conditions for the world’s growing population whilst ke...
Where ecosystem processes and human livelihoods are intimately linked, within a social-ecological sy...
Computational models provide intelligent environmental decision support systems to understand how hu...
Social-ecological systems (SES) are nested, multilevel systems in which ecological and social elemen...
The need for developing socially just living conditions for the world's growing population whilst ke...
This paper explores the dynamic properties of organisms and ecosystems that make them so resilient a...
As we move further into the Anthropocene, numerous challenges to sustainable development present the...
The increasing burden exerted by human activities on natural capitals is expected to seriously jeopa...
The idea that human impacts on natural systems might trigger large‐scale, social–ecological ‘crises’...