The resilience of natural resource management (NRM) institutions are largely contingent on the capacities of the people and organizations within those institutions to learn, innovate, and adapt, both individually and collectively. These capacities may be powerfully constrained or catalyzed by the nature of the relationships between the various entities involved. Trust, in particular, has been identified repeatedly as a key component of institutional relationships that supports adaptive governance and successful NRM outcomes. We apply an ecological lens to a pre-existing framework to examine how different types of trust may interact to drive institutional resilience in NRM contexts. We present the broad contours of what we term "trust ecolog...
Trust has been identified as a central characteristic of successful natural resource management (NRM...
The purpose of most community-based natural resource management (NRM)groups in Australia is to impro...
As the human population grows and natural resources decline, there is pressure to apply increasing l...
Trust has been identified as a central characteristic of successful natural resource management (NRM...
The role of trust and risk tolerance has received renewed attention in the field of environmental co...
This dissertation investigates the role of trust in predicting cooperation with a natural resources ...
This paper reviews the architecture of collaboration that exists within inter-organizational natural...
Adaptive co-management of natural resources is generally thought to confer greater resilience on soc...
In an increasingly complex, rapidly changing world, the capacity to cope with, adapt to, and shape c...
Ecologists have made great strides in developing criteria for describing the resilience of an ecolog...
The sustainability of regional development can be usefully explored through several different lenses...
Approaches to natural resource management are often based on a presumed ability to predict probabili...
Social-ecological resilience theory is part of a new paradigm for understanding and managing complex...
The aim of this paper is to provide insights into how the implementation of co-management systems ca...
The purpose of most community-based natural resource management (NRM) groups in Australia is to impr...
Trust has been identified as a central characteristic of successful natural resource management (NRM...
The purpose of most community-based natural resource management (NRM)groups in Australia is to impro...
As the human population grows and natural resources decline, there is pressure to apply increasing l...
Trust has been identified as a central characteristic of successful natural resource management (NRM...
The role of trust and risk tolerance has received renewed attention in the field of environmental co...
This dissertation investigates the role of trust in predicting cooperation with a natural resources ...
This paper reviews the architecture of collaboration that exists within inter-organizational natural...
Adaptive co-management of natural resources is generally thought to confer greater resilience on soc...
In an increasingly complex, rapidly changing world, the capacity to cope with, adapt to, and shape c...
Ecologists have made great strides in developing criteria for describing the resilience of an ecolog...
The sustainability of regional development can be usefully explored through several different lenses...
Approaches to natural resource management are often based on a presumed ability to predict probabili...
Social-ecological resilience theory is part of a new paradigm for understanding and managing complex...
The aim of this paper is to provide insights into how the implementation of co-management systems ca...
The purpose of most community-based natural resource management (NRM) groups in Australia is to impr...
Trust has been identified as a central characteristic of successful natural resource management (NRM...
The purpose of most community-based natural resource management (NRM)groups in Australia is to impro...
As the human population grows and natural resources decline, there is pressure to apply increasing l...