Sabiia Seb
PortuguêsEspañolEnglish
Embrapa
        Busca avançada

Botão Atualizar


Botão Atualizar

Ordenar por: 

RelevânciaAutorTítuloAnoImprime registros no formato resumido
Registros recuperados: 7
Primeira ... 1 ... Última
Imagem não selecionada

Imprime registro no formato completo
Introduction to exploring opportunities for advancing collaborative adaptive management (CAM): integrating experience and practice Ecology and Society
Galat, David L.; Department of Fisheries & Wildlife Sciences, University of Missouri; GalatD@missouri.edu; Berkley, Jim; U. S. Environmental Protection Agency; berkley.jim@epa.gov.
This Special Feature of Ecology and Society seeks to communicate a practitioner’s perspective on the application of collaborative adaptive management (CAM) to contemporary natural resource management problems. One goal is to create an ongoing mechanism for dialogue that can connect practitioners, researchers, and policy makers. The core 15 papers are grouped into 3 categories that: (1) describe lessons learned through the practice of applying CAM principles to a specific project or generalizing principles from outcomes of a specific project; (2) summarize lessons learned from the author’s extensive CAM experiences; and (3) seek to be instructive of one or more CAM principles through a survey, evaluation, or comparison of multiple...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed article Palavras-chave: Adaptive comanagement; Case studies; Collaborative adaptive management; Collaborative Adaptive Management Network; Experiential learning; Lessons learned; Natural resource practitioners; Science-policy dialogue.
Ano: 2014
Imagem não selecionada

Imprime registro no formato completo
Collaborative Adaptive Management: Challenges and Opportunities Ecology and Society
Scarlett, Lynn; Resources for the Future; lynnscarlett@comcast.net.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed article Palavras-chave: Adaptive management; Collaboration; Collaborative adaptive management; Conservation; Science and decision making.
Ano: 2013
Imagem não selecionada

Imprime registro no formato completo
Hot adaptation: what conflict can contribute to collaborative natural resource management Ecology and Society
Laws, David; University of Amsterdam; d.w.laws@uva.nl; Hogendoorn, Daniel; Technical University of Delft; daniel.hogendoorn@gmail.com; Karl, Herman; Visting Research Faculty, Antioch University New England, Keene, New Hampshire; Affiliate Associate Professor, University of New Hampshire; hkarl@comcast.net.
We analyze the impact of conflict on the adaptive comanagement of social-ecological systems. We survey the risks and the resources that conflict creates and review experiences with public policy mediation as a set of practical hypotheses about how to work collaboratively under conditions of conflict. We analyze the significance of these features in the context of an approach to adaptive comanagement that we call “hot adaptation.” Hot adaptation is organized to draw on the energy and engagement that conflict provides to enhance the capacity for deliberation and learning around the wicked problems that constitute the working terrain of adaptive comanagement.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Collaborative adaptive management; Conflict resolution; Emotion; Public policy mediation.
Ano: 2014
Imagem não selecionada

Imprime registro no formato completo
Opportunities for Collaborative Adaptive Management Progress: Integrating Stakeholder Assessments into Progress Measurement Ecology and Society
Berkley, Jim; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; jberkleyh2o@gmail.com.
Collaborative Adaptive Management (CAM) program stakeholders informally assess program progress through subjective assessments regularly. Each stakeholder does this by individually selecting objective progress indicators based on their needs, values, and preferences. They do this even though there may be a stakeholder group agreed-on set of progress objectives. Individual stakeholder indicators may be a subset of the group set or outside of the agreed-on set. This is because many factors influence behavior, and stakeholders may act differently in group settings as opposed to individual settings. These assessments can provide valuable information about stakeholder needs that are not being met, and potential motivations for stakeholders circumventing a CAM...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Adaptive management; Adaptive Management Working Group; AMP; AMWG; Attitudes; Behavior; Collaborative adaptive management; Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program; Missouri River Recovery Program; MRRP; Progress; Stakeholders.
Ano: 2013
Imagem não selecionada

Imprime registro no formato completo
Resilience design: toward a synthesis of cognition, learning, and collaboration for adaptive problem solving in conservation and natural resource stewardship Ecology and Society
Curtin, Charles G.; MIT-USGS Science Impact Collaborative, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Mora Watershed Alliance; ccurtin@earthlink.net.
Through the resilience design approach, I propose to extend the resilience paradigm by re-examining the components of adaptive decision-making and governance processes. The approach can be divided into three core components: (1) equity design, i.e., the integration of collaborative approaches to conservation and adaptive governance that generates effective self-organization and emergence in conservation and natural resource stewardship; (2) process design, i.e., the generation of more effective knowledge through strategic development of information inputs; and (3) outcome design, i.e., the pragmatic synthesis of the previous two approaches, generating a framework for developing durable and dynamic conservation and stewardship. The design of processes that...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Cognition; Collaborative adaptive management; Linked social-ecological systems; Resilience design; Wicked systems.
Ano: 2014
Imagem não selecionada

Imprime registro no formato completo
Summary: Addressing the Interactional Challenges of Moving Collaborative Adaptive Management From Theory to Practice Ecology and Society
Beratan, Kathi K.; North Carolina State University; kkberata@ncsu.edu.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Collaborative adaptive management; Institutional change; Leading indicators; Process design; Stakeholder participation.
Ano: 2014
Imagem não selecionada

Imprime registro no formato completo
Intermediate Collaborative Adaptive Management Strategies Build Stakeholder Capacity Ecology and Society
Monroe, Martha C.; School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida; mcmonroe@ufl.edu; Plate, Richard; School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida; richarp33@gmail.com; Oxarart, Annie; School of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida; oxarart@ufl.edu.
Efforts to implement collaborative adaptive management (CAM) often suffer from challenges, such as an unwillingness of managers to share power, unresolved conflicts between stakeholders, and lack of capacity among stakeholders. Some aspects considered essential to CAM, e.g., trust and stakeholder capacity, may be more usefully viewed as goals for intermediate strategies rather than a set of initial conditions. From this perspective, intermediate steps that focus on social learning and building experience could overcome commonly cited barriers to CAM. An exploration of Springs Basin Working Groups, organized around major clusters of freshwater springs in north Florida, provides a case study of how these intermediate steps enable participants to become more...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Collaborative adaptive management; Florida USA; Public participation; Reasonable Person Model; Social learning; Stakeholder capacity.
Ano: 2013
Registros recuperados: 7
Primeira ... 1 ... Última
 

Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária - Embrapa
Todos os direitos reservados, conforme Lei n° 9.610
Política de Privacidade
Área restrita

Embrapa
Parque Estação Biológica - PqEB s/n°
Brasília, DF - Brasil - CEP 70770-901
Fone: (61) 3448-4433 - Fax: (61) 3448-4890 / 3448-4891 SAC: https://www.embrapa.br/fale-conosco

Valid HTML 4.01 Transitional