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Panarchy:

Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems
Front Cover
5 Reviews
Island Press, Dec 1, 2001 - Political Science - 536 pages
Creating institutions to meet the challenge of sustainability is arguably the most important task confronting society; it is also dauntingly complex. Ecological, economic, and social elements all play a role, but despite ongoing efforts, researchers have yet to succeed in integrating the various disciplines in a way that gives adequate representation to the insights of each.Panarchy, a term devised to describe evolving hierarchical systems with multiple interrelated elements, offers an important new framework for understanding and resolving this dilemma. Panarchy is the structure in which systems, including those of nature (e.g., forests) and of humans (e.g., capitalism), as well as combined human-natural systems (e.g., institutions that govern natural resource use such as the Forest Service), are interlinked in continual adaptive cycles of growth, accumulation, restructuring, and renewal. These transformational cycles take place at scales ranging from a drop of water to the biosphere, over periods from days to geologic epochs. By understanding these cycles and their scales, researchers can identify the points at which a system is capable of accepting positive change, and can use those leverage points to foster resilience and sustainability within the system.This volume brings together leading thinkers on the subject -- including Fikret Berkes, Buz Brock, Steve Carpenter, Carl Folke, Lance Gunderson, C.S. Holling, Don Ludwig, Karl-Goran Maler, Charles Perrings, Marten Scheffer, Brian Walker, and Frances Westley -- to develop and examine the concept of panarchy and to consider how it can be applied to human, natural, and human-natural systems. Throughout, contributors seek to identify adaptive approaches to management that recognize uncertainty and encourage innovation while fostering resilience.The book is a fundamental new development in a widely acclaimed line of inquiry. It represents the first step in integrating disciplinary knowledge for the adaptive management of human-natural systems across widely divergent scales, and offers an important base of knowledge from which institutions for adaptive management can be developed. It will be an invaluable source of ideas and understanding for students, researchers, and professionals involved with ecology, conservation biology, ecological economics, environmental policy, or related fields.
  

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Review: Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems

User Review - Goodreads

I heard co-author Gunderson speak at the Quivira Coalition meeting in Albuquerque and I was sold on this concept of panarchy and dynamic systems theory. Not a quick read, but a deep one, and the insights apply everywhere.

Review: Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems

User Review  - Jason Pitre - Goodreads

This is one of the pre-eminent books in my academic library, one of the highest quality both within ecology and countless other fields. Each chapters is presented by different authors, meaning that ... Read full review

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Contents

In Quest of a Theory of Adaptive Change
3
Resilience and Adaptive Cycles
25
Sustainability and Panarchies
63
Why Systems of People and Nature
103
Ecosystem Dynamics
121
The Dynamics of Political Discourse
147
Collapse Learning and Renewal
173
The
180
The Economic
261
Resilient RangelandsAdaptation
293
Scenarios
361
Discoveries for Sustainable Futures
395
Toward an Integrative Synthesis
419
Appendix A A Model for Ecosystems with
439
Appendix B Optimizing Social Utility from Lake Use
441
References
449

Dynamic Interaction of Societies
195
A Future of Surprises
241
List of Contributors
489
Copyright

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References from web pages

Panarchy
See below to download Chapter 1 of the book "Panarchy: Understanding transformations in Human and Natural Systems". The purpose for writing the book ...
www.resalliance.org/ 593.php

Ecological Economics : Panarchy: understanding transformations in ...
Panarchy: understanding transformations in human and natural systems. Lance H. Gunderson and cs Holling (Eds.), Island Press, Washington, DC, 2002, ...
linkinghub.elsevier.com/ retrieve/ pii/ S0921800904000357

Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems
Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems. Journal article by Diana Laughlin; Journal of the Community Development Society, Vol. ...
www.questia.com/ PM.qst?a=o& se=gglsc& d=5009545136

Panarchy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: navigation, search. Panarchy is a conceptual term first coined by the Belgian political economist Paul Emile ...
en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/ Panarchy

Panarchy
Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems. Washington: Island Press, 2002. "Resilience Alliance Home page. ...
www.sustainablescale.org/ ConceptualFramework/ UnderstandingScale/ MeasuringScale/ Panarchy.aspx

Gunderson studies Panarchy of natural systems
Two years ago Gunderson coedited Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems (Island Press, 2001), which presents theories and ...
www.emory.edu/ EMORY_REPORT/ erarchive/ 2003/ September/ September8/ 9_8_03gunderson.html

GBN: Panarchy
AT THE HEART of this book is the desire to link theory, policy, and practice in resolving issues that emerge from the interaction of people and nature
www.gbn.com/ BookClubSelectionDisplayServlet.srv?si=191

Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural ...
Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems. (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2002, 507 pp.). The Resilience Network is responsib...
www.accessmylibrary.com/ coms2/ summary_0286-8308074_ITM

Panarchy: Complexity and Regime Change in Human Societies
Published in the Santa Fe Institute Complex Systems Summer School Proceedings - August 2004, CSSS04. Panarchy: Complexity and Regime Change in Human ...
www.cse.ucsc.edu/ ~okram/ papers/ adaptive-csss2004.pdf

Ecology and Society: Resilience, Panarchy, and World-Systems Analysis
Panarchy: understanding transformations in human and natural systems. Island Press, Washington, dc, USA. Hall, td, editor. 2000. A world-systems reader: new ...
www.ecologyandsociety.org/ vol12/ iss1/ art24/

About the author (2001)

L. H. Gunderson is professor in the Department of Environmental Studies at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. C. S. Holling is emeritus eminent scholar in the Department of Zoology at the University of Florida in Gainesville.

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