2013
DOI: 10.1007/s13280-012-0367-1
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Knowledge Production and Learning for Sustainable Landscapes: Seven Steps Using Social–Ecological Systems as Laboratories

Abstract: There are multiple challenges regarding use and governance of landscapes’ goods, functions and intangible values for ecosystem health and human well-being. One group of challenges is to measure and assess principal sustainability dimensions through performance targets, so stakeholders have transparent information about states and trends. Another group is to develop adaptive governance at multiple levels, and management of larger geographical areas across scales. Addressing these challenges, we present a framew… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…The concept of landscapes has a multitude of definitions and interpretations and has arisen as a spatial focus across a wide range of fields and disciplines [17,20,[46][47][48]. Angelstam et al [16] (p. 131) suggest that the various interpretations of the term 'landscape' can be analysed according to four distinct categories of meaning:…”
Section: What Are Landscapes?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The concept of landscapes has a multitude of definitions and interpretations and has arisen as a spatial focus across a wide range of fields and disciplines [17,20,[46][47][48]. Angelstam et al [16] (p. 131) suggest that the various interpretations of the term 'landscape' can be analysed according to four distinct categories of meaning:…”
Section: What Are Landscapes?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, sufficiently large areas with different habitat quality in a broad sense need to be compared. We thus use entire landscapes, and not only the wet grassland patches, as case studies [68,69]. The wader landscape of Kristianstad (approx.…”
Section: Study Areasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, wetland management and habitat restoration efforts cannot just focus on the wet grasslands patches, but need to expand into the surrounding landscape and include both pattern and process. This complexity of wader conservation thus requires taking a landscape approach perspective [3,69,[113][114][115]. This implies the inclusion of both entire ecological systems at multiple spatial scales, and social systems in terms of managers and governors of land use at multiple levels [116].…”
Section: Towards Governance Of Wet Grasslands As a Green Infrastructurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Linkages need to develop both horizontally, between actors and institutions at the same system level, and vertically across system levels and scales, for creating knowledge networks that capacitate governance actors with access to wide-ranging sources of information and knowledge in ways that improve learning and coordination (Young et al, 2007;Newig et al, 2010). Collaborative research and learning processes are thus being increasingly sought to identify and treat complex (or "wicked") problems and the root causes of collective choices that foster (un)sustainable outcomes and (mal)adaptive practices (e.g., Jentoft and Chuenpagdee, 2009;Hermans et al, 2011;Angelstam et al, 2013;Fox et al, 2013;Davies et al, 2015).…”
Section: Transdisciplinary Knowledge For Achieving Transformative Agencymentioning
confidence: 99%