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Urgenson, Lauren S; School of Forest Resources, University of Washington; lsu@u.washington.edu; Hagmann, R. Keala; School of Forest Resources, University of Washington ; hokulea@u.washington.edu; Henck, Amanda C; Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington; achenck@u.washington.edu; Harrell, Stevan; Anthropology, University of Washington; stevehar@u.washington.edu; Hinckley, Thomas M; School of Forest Resources, University of Washington ; hinckley@u.washington.edu; Shepler, Sara Jo; School of Forest Resources, University of Washington; coffee-punk@hotmail.com; Grub, Barbara L.; Anthropology, University of Washington; blg@u.washington.edu; Chi, Philip M; ; philmcuw@yahoo.com. |
Farmers of the Nuosu Yi ethnic group in the Upper Baiwu watershed report reductions in the availability of local forest resources. A team of interdisciplinary scientists worked in partnership with this community to assess the type and extent of social-ecological change in the watershed and to identify key drivers of those changes. Here, we combine a framework for institutional analysis with resilience concepts to assess system dynamics and interactions among resource users, resources, and institutions over the past century. The current state of this system reflects a legacy of past responses to institutional disturbances initiated at the larger, national system scale. Beginning with the Communist Revolution in 1957 and continuing through the next two... |
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports |
Palavras-chave: China; Forests; Institutions; Nuosu; Resilience; Sichuan; Yi. |
Ano: 2010 |
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