Publications by authors named "Arika Virapongse"

Resilience has become a common goal for science-based natural resource management, particularly in the context of changing climate and disturbance regimes. Integrating varying perspectives and definitions of resilience is a complex and often unrecognized challenge to applying resilience concepts to social-ecological systems (SESs) management. Using wildfire as an example, we develop a framework to expose and separate two important dimensions of resilience: the inherent properties that maintain structure, function, or states of an SES and the human perceptions of desirable or valued components of an SES.

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Article Synopsis
  • Science institutions are having big problems like less money from the government and more part-time professors, making it hard for scientists to find good jobs.
  • People usually think we need to "fix the pipeline," which means creating a clear path for scientists from school to a permanent job and then up the career ladder.
  • The authors suggest using the idea of an "ecosystem" instead of a pipeline, focusing on teamwork and cooperation to improve how scientists are trained and work together.
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Urgent environmental issues are testing the limits of current management approaches and pushing demand for innovative approaches that integrate across traditional disciplinary boundaries. Practitioners, scholars, and policy-makers alike call for increased integration of natural and social sciences to develop new approaches that address the range of ecological and societal impacts of modern environmental issues. From a theoretical perspective, social-ecological systems (SES) science offers a compelling approach for improved environmental management through the application of transdisciplinary and resilience concepts.

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