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Navigating the perfect storm: Research strategies for social-ecological systems in a rapidly evolving world

Navigating the perfect storm: Research strategies for social-ecological systems in a rapidly evolving world
Navigating the perfect storm: Research strategies for social-ecological systems in a rapidly evolving world
The ‘Perfect Storm’ metaphor describes a combination of events that causes a surprising or dramatic impact. It lends an evolutionary perspective to how social-ecological interactions change. Thus, we argue that an improved understanding of how social-ecological systems have evolved up to the present is necessary for the modelling, understanding and anticipation of current and future social-ecological systems. Here we consider the implications of an evolutionary perspective for designing research approaches. One desirable approach is the creation of multidecadal records produced by integrating palaeoenvironmental, instrument and documentary sources at multiple spatial scales. We also consider the potential for improved analytical and modelling approaches by developing system dynamical, cellular and agent-based models, observing complex behaviour in social-ecological systems against which to test systems dynamical theory, and drawing better lessons from history. Alongside these is the need to find more appropriate ways to communicate complex systems, risk and uncertainty to the public and to policy-makers.
1432-1009
Dearing, John
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Bullock, Seth
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Costanza, Robert
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Dawson, Terry
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Edwards, Mary
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Poppy, Guy
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Smith, Graham
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Dearing, John
b9859a91-6020-4dae-a9e2-d50ba28175c5
Bullock, Seth
2ad576e4-56b8-4f31-84e0-51bd0b7a1cd3
Costanza, Robert
7849b985-597f-43d3-905e-9c2b894221e6
Dawson, Terry
276dbcfe-27df-48ae-a044-961156873852
Edwards, Mary
34afb8c7-ec56-4023-8a74-46867c1ac7ae
Poppy, Guy
6fe5b395-81ff-463e-8565-5c00da1cd581
Smith, Graham
f490019c-fdee-473a-bf9b-62be5505a206

Dearing, John, Bullock, Seth, Costanza, Robert, Dawson, Terry, Edwards, Mary, Poppy, Guy and Smith, Graham (2012) Navigating the perfect storm: Research strategies for social-ecological systems in a rapidly evolving world. Environmental Management.

Record type: Article

Abstract

The ‘Perfect Storm’ metaphor describes a combination of events that causes a surprising or dramatic impact. It lends an evolutionary perspective to how social-ecological interactions change. Thus, we argue that an improved understanding of how social-ecological systems have evolved up to the present is necessary for the modelling, understanding and anticipation of current and future social-ecological systems. Here we consider the implications of an evolutionary perspective for designing research approaches. One desirable approach is the creation of multidecadal records produced by integrating palaeoenvironmental, instrument and documentary sources at multiple spatial scales. We also consider the potential for improved analytical and modelling approaches by developing system dynamical, cellular and agent-based models, observing complex behaviour in social-ecological systems against which to test systems dynamical theory, and drawing better lessons from history. Alongside these is the need to find more appropriate ways to communicate complex systems, risk and uncertainty to the public and to policy-makers.

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More information

Published date: 2012
Organisations: Agents, Interactions & Complexity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 273225
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/273225
ISSN: 1432-1009
PURE UUID: f591d831-77e8-406e-b4c6-f4062b4b9d10

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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2012 18:32
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 10:22

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Contributors

Author: John Dearing
Author: Seth Bullock
Author: Robert Costanza
Author: Terry Dawson
Author: Mary Edwards
Author: Guy Poppy
Author: Graham Smith

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