Essays about: "adaptive resource co-management"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 9 essays containing the words adaptive resource co-management.
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1. Adaptive co-management for local water resilience: the case of community-led ecosystem-based adaptation in the Peruvian Andes
University essay from Stockholms universitet/Stockholm Resilience CentreAbstract : Ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) champions the use of biodiversity and ecosystem services to help people adapt to the adverse effects of climate change. Moreover, EbA presents an exemplary opportunity to confer social-ecological resilience. READ MORE
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2. Exploring Resilience of Water Management in Slovakia
University essay from Lunds universitet/HumanekologiAbstract : Water resource management in Slovakia is characterized by a ‘command-and-control’ paradigm. The main feature of this approach is in a view that is based on the predictability of the future water situation. People rarely think about water as an issue in Slovakia - the rivers flow, it rains, the taps run. READ MORE
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3. Natural resource management and participation in Doñana (SW Spain) : Elements of adaptive co-management and potential for change
University essay from Stockholms universitet/Stockholm Resilience CentreAbstract : Adaptive co-management is an approach to the management of social-ecological systems that deals with their complexity and unpredictability. Stakeholder participation is one of the central aspects of this approach. READ MORE
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4. Lokal samförvaltning i Tivedsbygden : en svårfångad vision om hållbar naturresurshantering
University essay from SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural DevelopmentAbstract : Föreliggande kandidatuppsats handlar om att söka beskriva samverkan och konflikt i samband med naturresurshantering. Undersökningens forskningsobjekt är ett försök till lokal samförvaltning som togs av lokala invånare i Tivedsbygden, en skogsbygd i gränslandet mellan Västergötland och Närke. READ MORE
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5. Volunteer motivations and long-term viability of volunteer-based adaptive co-management : a case study of the Noosa biosphere reserve, South East Queensland, Australia
University essay from Stockholms universitet/Stockholm Resilience CentreAbstract : Citizens worldwide are increasingly volunteering in natural resource management and governments as well as public and private environmental organizations rely heavily on unpaid volunteers to further their commitments. Another growing trend is adaptive and co-management approaches to ecosystem-based management. READ MORE