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Registros recuperados: 3
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A Synthesis of Current Approaches to Traps Is Useful But Needs Rethinking for Indigenous Disadvantage and Poverty Research Ecology and Society
Maru, Yiheyis T; CSIRO; yiheyis.maru@csiro.au; Fletcher, Cameron S; CSIRO; Cameron.Fletcher@csiro.au; Chewings, Vanessa H; CSIRO; vanessa.chewings@csiro.au.
Indigenous disadvantage and poverty have persisted and are set to continue into the future. Although a large amount of work describes the extent and nature of indigenous disadvantage and poverty, there is little evidence-based systems understanding of the mechanisms that keep many indigenous people in their current dire state. In such a vacuum, policy makers are left to make assumptions about the causal mechanisms. The persistence of inequality and poverty suffered by indigenous people is broadly consistent with the existence of dynamical traps as described in both the resilience and development literature. We reviewed and synthesized these bodies of literature on traps and found that although they give a good lead to a systemic and parsimonious way of...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Developments; Indigenous disadvantage; Poverty traps; Resilience; Rigidity traps.
Ano: 2012
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Factors Influencing Adaptive Capacity in the Reorganization of Forest Management in Alaska Ecology and Society
Beier, Colin; SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry; cbeier@esf.edu.
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports Palavras-chave: Forest management; Inertia; Organizational change; Rigidity traps; Timber sale planning; Tongass National Forest.
Ano: 2011
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Growth and Collapse of a Resource System: an Adaptive Cycle of Change in Public Lands Governance and Forest Management in Alaska Ecology and Society
Beier, Colin M.; University of Alaska-Fairbanks; SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry; cbeier@esf.edu; Lovecraft, Amy Lauren; University of Alaska-Fairbanks; ffall@uaf.edu; Chapin, III, F. Stuart; University of Alaska-Fairbanks; terry.chapin@uaf.edu.
Large-scale government efforts to develop resources for societal benefit have often experienced cycles of growth and decline that leave behind difficult social and ecological legacies. To understand the origins and outcomes of these failures of resource governance, scholars have applied the framework of the adaptive cycle. In this study, we used the adaptive cycle as a diagnostic approach to trace the drivers and dynamics of forest governance surrounding a boom–bust sequence of industrial forest management in one of the largest-scale resource systems in U.S. history: the Tongass National Forest in southeastern Alaska. Our application of the adaptive cycle combined a historical narrative tracing dynamics in political, institutional, and economic...
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Synthesis Palavras-chave: Adaptive cycle; Alaska; Forest management; Resource governance; Rigidity traps; U.S. National Forests.
Ano: 2009
Registros recuperados: 3
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