2015
DOI: 10.3390/land4010157
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Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper

Abstract: Abstract:The environment of the mountain-steppe-taiga of northern Mongolia is often characterized as marginal because of the high altitude, highly variable precipitation levels, low winter temperatures, and periodic droughts coupled with severe winter storms (known as dzuds). Despite these conditions, herders have inhabited this landscape for thousands of years, and hunter-gatherer-fishers before that. One way in which the risks associated with such a challenging and variable landscape are mitigated is through… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Naturally, no one typology is unlikely to hold across all examples and scales, and the extensive analytical and empirical work continuing in this area points to that diversity. 23,26,27,33,[40][41][42][43] Still, although there are multiple classification schemes, typically there is significant overlap between these categorizations. For example, Sahlins's balanced reciprocity closely mirrors Polanyi's pre-market ''reciprocity'' and Fiske's ''equality matching.''…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Naturally, no one typology is unlikely to hold across all examples and scales, and the extensive analytical and empirical work continuing in this area points to that diversity. 23,26,27,33,[40][41][42][43] Still, although there are multiple classification schemes, typically there is significant overlap between these categorizations. For example, Sahlins's balanced reciprocity closely mirrors Polanyi's pre-market ''reciprocity'' and Fiske's ''equality matching.''…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the social domain, the ability to change group size and composition is often an important part of resilience. For example, pastoralists in northern Mongolia re-group every 5 to 10 years after facing extreme winter storms, and later disperse again (Clark and Crabtree 2015). Similar "multilevel" or "fusion and fission" patterns have been described for many pastoralist and forager societies and play an important role in adapting to seasonal change (Kelly 2013, Thomas et al 2015, Dyble et al 2016, Bird et al 2019.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…There is now a need to find a balance between the well-documented overuse of land incentivized by marketoriented tradable rights and the land consolidation achievable with more sustainable cooperative-based grassland management (Li et al 2018). Privatization might disrupt other significant adaptation mechanisms such as resource pooling in times of need (Clark and Crabtree 2015) and sharing of expenses, labor, and infrastructure (Cao et al 2018;Chen and Zhu 2015;Vij and Narain 2016), reducing the capacity of formal and informal mechanisms to adapt and respond sustainably to a changing environment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%