Navigating Social–Ecological Systems: Synthesis: building resilience and adaptive capacity in social–ecological systems

Introduction A weekly magazine on business development issued an analysis of Madonna, the pop star, and raised the question ‘How come Madonna has been at the very top in pop music for more than 20 years, in a sector characterized by so much rapid change?’ A few decades ago, successful companies developed their brand around stability and security. To stay in business this is no longer sufficient, according to the magazine. You must add change, renewal, and variation as well. However, change, renewal, and variation by themselves will seldom lead to success and survival. To be effective, a context of experience, history, remembrance, and trust, to act within, is required. Changing, renewing, and diversifying within such a foundation of stability and maintaining high quality have been the recipe for success and survival of Madonna, and for rock stars such as Neil Young and U2. It requires an active adaptation to change, not only responding to change, but also creating and shaping it. In the same spirit, Sven-Goran Eriksson, coach of several soccer teams in Europe, claimed that it is the wrong strategy not to change a winning team. A winning team will always need a certain amount, but not too much, of renewal to be sustained as a winning team. Sustaining a winning team requires a context for renewal, or ‘framed creativity,’ borrowing from the language of the advertiser.

[1]  S. Carpenter,et al.  Catastrophic shifts in ecosystems , 2001, Nature.

[2]  Fikret Berkes,et al.  Contributions of traditional knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic , 2001, Polar Record.

[3]  Magnus Nyström,et al.  Spatial Resilience of Coral Reefs , 2001, Ecosystems.

[4]  C. S. Holling Understanding the Complexity of Economic, Ecological, and Social Systems , 2001, Ecosystems.

[5]  K. Bjorndal,et al.  Historical Overfishing and the Recent Collapse of Coastal Ecosystems , 2001, Science.

[6]  S. Carpenter,et al.  Coping with Collapse: Ecological and Social Dynamics in Ecosystem Management , 2001 .

[7]  C. Folke,et al.  SOCIAL TABOOS: “INVISIBLE” SYSTEMS OF LOCAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT AND BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION , 2001 .

[8]  K. Brown,et al.  Colonist farmers' perceptions of fertility and the frontier environment in eastern Amazonia , 2000 .

[9]  C. Fowler We live by them. Native knowledge of biodiversity in the Great Basin of western North America , 2000 .

[10]  C. Folke,et al.  REDISCOVERY OF TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE AS ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENT , 2000 .

[11]  C. Folke,et al.  Coral reef disturbance and resilience in a human-dominated environment. , 2000, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[12]  N. Turner,et al.  TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE AND WISDOM OF ABORIGINAL PEOPLES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA , 2000 .

[13]  E. Norland,et al.  Organizational Change as a Component of Ecosystem Management , 2000 .

[14]  W. Adger Social and ecological resilience: are they related? , 2000 .

[15]  David W. Cash,et al.  Linking global and local scales: designing dynamic assessment and management processes , 2000 .

[16]  N. Grimm,et al.  Integrated Approaches to Long-TermStudies of Urban Ecological Systems , 2000 .

[17]  N. T. Hobbs,et al.  Ecological Principles and Guidelines for Managing the Use of Land , 2000 .

[18]  J. Macmahon,et al.  Messages from a Mountain , 2000, Science.

[19]  E. Ostrom,et al.  The concept of scale and the human dimensions of global change: a survey , 2000, Ecological Economics.

[20]  H. Daly,et al.  Managing Our Environmental Portfolio , 2000 .

[21]  Ian Scoones,et al.  New Ecology and the Social Sciences: What Prospects for a Fruitful Engagement? , 1999 .

[22]  Stephen R. Carpenter,et al.  Management of eutrophication for lakes subject to potentially irreversible change , 1999 .

[23]  E. Ostrom,et al.  Revisiting the commons: local lessons, global challenges. , 1999, Science.

[24]  R. E. Johannes,et al.  The case for data-less marine resource management: examples from tropical nearshore finfisheries. , 1998, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[25]  Jane Lubchenco,et al.  MARINE RESERVES ARE NECESSARY BUT NOT SUFFICIENT FOR MARINE CONSERVATION , 1998 .

[26]  C. Holling,et al.  Command and Control and the Pathology of Natural Resource Management , 1996 .

[27]  R. Norgaard Development betrayed: the end of progress and a coevolutionary revisioning of the future. , 1994 .

[28]  Carl Folke,et al.  Indigenous Knowledge for Biodiversity Conservation , 1993 .

[29]  B. Walker Biodiversity and Ecological Redundancy , 1992 .

[30]  Carl Folke,et al.  A systems perspective on the interrelations between natural, human-made and cultural capital , 1992 .

[31]  R. Hinde,et al.  Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action Collective Action , 2010 .

[32]  B. Turner The Earth as Transformed by Human Action , 1988 .

[33]  J. Tainter,et al.  The Collapse of Complex Societies , 1988 .

[34]  Theresa A. Ferguson,et al.  Yards, corridors, and mosaics: How to burn a boreal forest , 1988 .

[35]  K. Ruddle Social Principles Underlying Traditional Inshore Fishery Management Systems in the Pacific Basin , 1988, Marine Resource Economics.

[36]  M. Gadgil Diversity: Cultural and biological. , 1987, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[37]  Robert Costanza,et al.  Social Traps and Environmental Policy , 1987 .

[38]  D. Posey Indigenous management of tropical forest ecosystems: the case of the Kayapó indians of the Brazilian Amazon , 1985, Agroforestry Systems.

[39]  C. S. Holling Resilience of ecosystems: local surprise and global change. , 1985 .

[40]  C. S. Holling Resilience and Stability of Ecological Systems , 1973 .

[41]  M. Polanyi Personal Knowledge: Towards a post-critical philosophy , 1959 .

[42]  Simon A. Levin,et al.  Fragile Dominion: Complexity and the Commons , 1999 .

[43]  N. Röling,et al.  Facilitating Sustainable Agriculture: Participatory Learning and Adaptive Management in Times of Environmental Uncertainty , 1999 .

[44]  C. S. Holling,et al.  Ecological Resilience, Biodiversity, and Scale , 1998, Ecosystems.

[45]  John H. Holland,et al.  Hidden Order: How Adaptation Builds Complexity , 1995 .

[46]  C. S. Holling,et al.  Biodiversity loss: Biodiversity in the functioning of ecosystems: an ecological synthesis , 1995 .

[47]  Carl Folke,et al.  Traditional Ecological Knowledge, Biodiversity, Resilience and Sustainability , 1995 .

[48]  J. G. Nelson,et al.  Assessing biodiversity : a human ecological approach , 1992 .

[49]  P. Dasgupta,et al.  The Environment and Emerging Development Issues , 1990 .

[50]  J. Denslow,et al.  Indigenous agroforestry in the Peruvian Amazon: Bora Indian management of swidden fallows , 1984 .