Sustainability Learning in Natural Resource Use and Management

We contribute to the normative discussion on sustainability learning and provide a theoretical integrative framework intended to underlie the main components and interrelations of what learning is required for social learning to become sustainability learning. We demonstrate how this framework has b...

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Main Authors: J. David Tàbara, Claudia Pahl-Wostl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2007-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol12/iss2/art3/
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spelling doaj-0f106317805144438b691b914b324a6f2020-11-25T00:04:51ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872007-12-01122310.5751/ES-02063-1202032063Sustainability Learning in Natural Resource Use and ManagementJ. David Tàbara0Claudia Pahl-Wostl1Autonomous University of BarcelonaUniversity of OsnabrückWe contribute to the normative discussion on sustainability learning and provide a theoretical integrative framework intended to underlie the main components and interrelations of what learning is required for social learning to become sustainability learning. We demonstrate how this framework has been operationalized in a participatory modeling interface to support processes of natural resource integrated assessment and management. The key modeling components of our view are: structure (S), energy and resources (E), information and knowledge (I), social-ecological change (C), and the size, thresholds, and connections of different social-ecological systems. Our approach attempts to overcome many of the cultural dualisms that exist in the way social and ecological systems are perceived and affect many of the most common definitions of sustainability. Our approach also emphasizes the issue of limits within a total social-ecological system and takes a multiscale, agent-based perspective. Sustainability learning is different from social learning insofar as not all of the outcomes of social learning processes necessarily improve what we consider as essential for the long-term sustainability of social-ecological systems, namely, the co-adaptive systemic capacity of agents to anticipate and deal with the unintended, undesired, and irreversible negative effects of development. Hence, the main difference of sustainability learning from social learning is the content of what is learned and the criteria used to assess such content; these are necessarily related to increasing the capacity of agents to manage, in an integrative and organic way, the total social-ecological system of which they form a part. The concept of sustainability learning and the SEIC social-ecological framework can be useful to assess and communicate the effectiveness of multiple agents to halt or reverse the destructive trends affecting the life-support systems upon which all humans depend.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol12/iss2/art3/modelling social-ecological systemssocial learningsustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. David Tàbara
Claudia Pahl-Wostl
spellingShingle J. David Tàbara
Claudia Pahl-Wostl
Sustainability Learning in Natural Resource Use and Management
Ecology and Society
modelling social-ecological systems
social learning
sustainability
author_facet J. David Tàbara
Claudia Pahl-Wostl
author_sort J. David Tàbara
title Sustainability Learning in Natural Resource Use and Management
title_short Sustainability Learning in Natural Resource Use and Management
title_full Sustainability Learning in Natural Resource Use and Management
title_fullStr Sustainability Learning in Natural Resource Use and Management
title_full_unstemmed Sustainability Learning in Natural Resource Use and Management
title_sort sustainability learning in natural resource use and management
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2007-12-01
description We contribute to the normative discussion on sustainability learning and provide a theoretical integrative framework intended to underlie the main components and interrelations of what learning is required for social learning to become sustainability learning. We demonstrate how this framework has been operationalized in a participatory modeling interface to support processes of natural resource integrated assessment and management. The key modeling components of our view are: structure (S), energy and resources (E), information and knowledge (I), social-ecological change (C), and the size, thresholds, and connections of different social-ecological systems. Our approach attempts to overcome many of the cultural dualisms that exist in the way social and ecological systems are perceived and affect many of the most common definitions of sustainability. Our approach also emphasizes the issue of limits within a total social-ecological system and takes a multiscale, agent-based perspective. Sustainability learning is different from social learning insofar as not all of the outcomes of social learning processes necessarily improve what we consider as essential for the long-term sustainability of social-ecological systems, namely, the co-adaptive systemic capacity of agents to anticipate and deal with the unintended, undesired, and irreversible negative effects of development. Hence, the main difference of sustainability learning from social learning is the content of what is learned and the criteria used to assess such content; these are necessarily related to increasing the capacity of agents to manage, in an integrative and organic way, the total social-ecological system of which they form a part. The concept of sustainability learning and the SEIC social-ecological framework can be useful to assess and communicate the effectiveness of multiple agents to halt or reverse the destructive trends affecting the life-support systems upon which all humans depend.
topic modelling social-ecological systems
social learning
sustainability
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol12/iss2/art3/
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