2014
DOI: 10.5751/es-06915-190432
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A holistic approach to studying social-ecological systems and its application to southern Transylvania

Abstract: . 2014. A holistic approach to studying social-ecological systems and its application to southern Transylvania. Ecology and Society 19(4): 32. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES- ABSTRACT. Global change presents risks and opportunities for social-ecological systems worldwide. Key challenges for sustainability science are to identify plausible future changes in social-ecological systems and find ways to reach socially and environmentally desirable conditions. In this context, regional-scale studies are important, b… Show more

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Cited by 108 publications
(109 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
(69 reference statements)
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“…Value judgments clearly have a role in generating the vivid and distinct choices that Carpenter et al (2006) advocate, and our analysis suggests that it would be helpful to more explicitly discuss and present these value-choices in the scenario generation. This is particularly important because most scenarios conducted here were funded and conducted as sustainability science projects that are explicitly not value neutral but prosustainability, and consequently have specific normative frameworks that are assumed rather than articulated (Abson et al 2014). Articulating values is important because it enables them to be discussed and used in deliberation or comparison of alternatives.…”
Section: Challenges and Opportunitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Value judgments clearly have a role in generating the vivid and distinct choices that Carpenter et al (2006) advocate, and our analysis suggests that it would be helpful to more explicitly discuss and present these value-choices in the scenario generation. This is particularly important because most scenarios conducted here were funded and conducted as sustainability science projects that are explicitly not value neutral but prosustainability, and consequently have specific normative frameworks that are assumed rather than articulated (Abson et al 2014). Articulating values is important because it enables them to be discussed and used in deliberation or comparison of alternatives.…”
Section: Challenges and Opportunitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, understanding how this social-ecological coproduction of multiple services occurs in specific landscapes is poorly understood. Social-ecological interactions often produce distinct patterns of ecosystem services across landscapes, in the form of coherent sets of ecosystem service bundles (Bennett et al 2009, Raudsepp-Hearne et al 2010, Hanspach et al 2014. Management or policy measures that aim to enhance a single, particular service will miss this complexity and can lead to perverse effects caused by hidden trade-offs among services such as those between crop yield and water quality (Tilman et al 2002, Zhang et al 2007, and timber extraction and carbon storage in forests (Putz andRomero 2001, Nelson et al 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As highlighted by several papers in this special feature (Hanspach et al 2014, Carpenter et al 2015, Mitchell et al 2015) participatory scenario planning is an increasingly popular tool in place-based environmental research for evaluating alternative futures of social-ecological systems. Oteros-Rozas et al (2015) review 23 cases of participatory scenario planning in a wide range of case-studies affiliated to PECS.…”
Section: Comparisons Across Cases and Social-ecological Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors recognize that scenarios are difficult to replicate as a research method, but highlight how useful they can be in exploring how different drivers, such as climate change, could play out in the watershed and conclude that scenarios will continue to be a useful tool for future social-ecological research. Hanspach et al (2014) use participatory scenarios to explore, identify, and analyze alternative social-ecological futures in Southern Transylvania. They first apply a holistic approach to combine the local socialecological conditions throughout the study area with a description of the regional system dynamics and a spatially explicit understanding of current development trends for eight different variables (e.g., land use intensification, forest exploitation, emigration).…”
Section: This Special Featurementioning
confidence: 99%