All U.S. federal agencies administering environmental laws purport to practice adaptive management (AM), but little is known about how they actually implement this conservation tool. A gap between the theory and practice of AM is revealed in judicial decisions reviewing agency adaptive management plans. We analyzed all U.S. federal court opinions published through 1 January 2015 to identify the agency AM practices courts found most deficient. The shortcomings included lack of clear objectives and processes, monitoring thresholds, and defined actions triggered by thresholds. This trio of agency shortcuts around critical, iterative steps characterizes what we call AM-lite. Passive AM differs from active AM in its relative lack of management i...
Over the last two decades, natural resource scientists, managers, and policymakers have increasingly...
Adaptive management has been considered a valuable approach for managing social-ecological systems i...
Adaptive management has been considered a valuable approach for managing social-ecological systems i...
All U.S. federal agencies administering environmental laws purport to practice adaptive management (...
Adaptive management has become the tonic of natural resources policy. With its core idea of learnin...
article published in law reviewAdministrative law needs to adapt to adaptive management. Adaptive ma...
For years, public lands scholars lamented the limited success that federal agencies had in applying ...
Today's voluminous literature on adaptive management traces its roots to Professor C.S. Holling's se...
When Congress creates administrative agencies to address social problems, it cannot envision all of ...
Adaptive management is the new paradigm in environmental law. It is omnipresent in scholarship and m...
Adaptive management (AM) is widely promoted to improve management of natural resources, yet its impl...
Discretion is the root source of administrative agency power and influence, but exercising discretio...
Adaptive management (AM) is widely promoted to improve management of natural resources, yet its impl...
Over the last two decades, natural resource scientists, managers, and policymakers have increasingly...
Adaptive management has been considered a valuable approach for managing social-ecological systems i...
Adaptive management has been considered a valuable approach for managing social-ecological systems i...
All U.S. federal agencies administering environmental laws purport to practice adaptive management (...
Adaptive management has become the tonic of natural resources policy. With its core idea of learnin...
article published in law reviewAdministrative law needs to adapt to adaptive management. Adaptive ma...
For years, public lands scholars lamented the limited success that federal agencies had in applying ...
Today's voluminous literature on adaptive management traces its roots to Professor C.S. Holling's se...
When Congress creates administrative agencies to address social problems, it cannot envision all of ...
Adaptive management is the new paradigm in environmental law. It is omnipresent in scholarship and m...
Adaptive management (AM) is widely promoted to improve management of natural resources, yet its impl...
Discretion is the root source of administrative agency power and influence, but exercising discretio...
Adaptive management (AM) is widely promoted to improve management of natural resources, yet its impl...
Over the last two decades, natural resource scientists, managers, and policymakers have increasingly...
Adaptive management has been considered a valuable approach for managing social-ecological systems i...
Adaptive management has been considered a valuable approach for managing social-ecological systems i...