Resilience defines the ability of a system to retain control of function and structure despite changing conditions. In human-natural systems this is related to the capabilities of social institutions. This paper presents insights into institutional and ethical dimensions of resilience, focusing on case studies in the Pacific Northwest that involve cooperative management of Pacific salmon by tribal, state and federal governments. Several characteristics enhance resilience, including institutional nesting and linkages, responsiveness, flexibility, adaptive capacity, opportunities for cross-cutting cleavages, collaborative problem definition, routinization of conflict, knowledge generation, dissemination and feedback loops, and ethical underpi...
Understanding how social resilience influences resource users' responses to policy change is importa...
Historically, communities persisted in remote, isolated areas of Alaska in large part because of the...
By acknowledging a world of continuous change and reduced human control over nature, resilience theo...
Resilience thinking has generated much interest among scientific communities, yet most resilience co...
Management approaches that focus on social–ecological systems—systems comprised of ecosystems, lands...
In a changing climate, there is an imperative to build coupled social-ecological systems—including f...
Salmon are inherently resilient species. However, this resiliency has been undermined in British Col...
Management approaches that focus on social–ecological systems—systems comprised of ecosystems, lands...
2017Commercial fishing is deeply embedded in the economy and culture of many coastal communities. Re...
Understanding the resilience of social-ecological systems can advance our ability to transform envir...
Resource-protection policies are frequently implemented without prior knowledge of the likely social...
Salmon are inherently resilient species. However, this resiliency has been undermined in British Col...
The aim of this paper is to provide insights into how implementation of co-management systems can be...
The 1964 Columbia River Treaty between the United States and Canada is currently under review. Under...
If, like other ecosystems, the variable and dynamic ecosystems of the Pacific Northwest exhibited cy...
Understanding how social resilience influences resource users' responses to policy change is importa...
Historically, communities persisted in remote, isolated areas of Alaska in large part because of the...
By acknowledging a world of continuous change and reduced human control over nature, resilience theo...
Resilience thinking has generated much interest among scientific communities, yet most resilience co...
Management approaches that focus on social–ecological systems—systems comprised of ecosystems, lands...
In a changing climate, there is an imperative to build coupled social-ecological systems—including f...
Salmon are inherently resilient species. However, this resiliency has been undermined in British Col...
Management approaches that focus on social–ecological systems—systems comprised of ecosystems, lands...
2017Commercial fishing is deeply embedded in the economy and culture of many coastal communities. Re...
Understanding the resilience of social-ecological systems can advance our ability to transform envir...
Resource-protection policies are frequently implemented without prior knowledge of the likely social...
Salmon are inherently resilient species. However, this resiliency has been undermined in British Col...
The aim of this paper is to provide insights into how implementation of co-management systems can be...
The 1964 Columbia River Treaty between the United States and Canada is currently under review. Under...
If, like other ecosystems, the variable and dynamic ecosystems of the Pacific Northwest exhibited cy...
Understanding how social resilience influences resource users' responses to policy change is importa...
Historically, communities persisted in remote, isolated areas of Alaska in large part because of the...
By acknowledging a world of continuous change and reduced human control over nature, resilience theo...