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Panarchy Synopsis:

Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems
  • ISBN-13: 9781559633307
  • Publisher: ISLAND PRESS
    Imprint: ISLAND PRESS
  • By Lance H. Gunderson, Edited by C. S. Holling
  • Price: AUD $36.99
  • Stock: 5 in stock
  • Availability: Order will be despatched as soon as possible.
  • Local release date: 14/10/2002
  • Format: Paperback (225.00mm X 150.00mm) 64 pages Weight: 120g
  • Categories: Politics & government [JP]
Description
Table of
Contents
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'Panarchy' is a new term coined from the name of the Greek god Pan, a symbol of universal nature and associated with unpredictable change. It represents an alternative framework for managing the issues that emerge from the interaction between people and nature. That interaction generates countless surprises, often the result of slow changes that can accumulate and unexpectedly flip an ecosystem or an economy into a qualitatively different state. That state may be not only impoverished, but also effectively irreversible. Thus, understanding how such change occurs is critical to achieving a sustainable society.  Developed from the work of the Resilience Alliance, a worldwide group of leading organizations and individuals involved in ecological and economic research, Panarchy provides a framework to understand the cycles of change in complex systems and to gauge if, when, and how they can be influenced. This synopsis introduces lay readers and decision makers to this widely acclaimed line of inquiry and to the basic concept behind Panarchy, published by Island Press.
Preface
Introduction: Why Panarchy?
 
Chapter 1. The Adaptive Cycle: Surprise and Renewal
Chapter 2. The Pathology of Resource Management
Chapter 3. Resilience
Chapter 4. Connectedness
Chapter 5. Matters of Scale
Chapter 6. Natural Congregations
Chapter 7. Cascading Change
Chapter 8. Remember
Chapter 9. The Adaptive Cycle and Local Knowledge
Chapter 10. How Do Human and Natural Systems Differ?
Chapter 11. Challenges of Adaptive Management
Chapter 12. Panarchy and the Economics of Natural Resources
Chapter 13. Learning: An End and a Beginning
 
Notes
"This is a book that should be read, or at least dipped into, by anyone concerned with the sustainable management of ecosystems—whether for conservation or other goals—through teaching, study, or active practice. It will make any reader think and, hopefully, reconsider how he or she understands the diverse systems within which 'nature' and people interact at many different scales."
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