Recreation as a Social-Ecological Complex Adaptive System

The environment and society are both the context for and product of human actions and interactions. Outdoor recreation is the primary interaction many people have with the environment and it is an interaction that greatly contributes to human well-being. To sustainably manage the social and ecologic...

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Main Author: Wayde C. Morse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-01-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/3/753
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spelling doaj-796cef387c2b40af823c977f3cb2fc562020-11-25T01:30:41ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-01-0112375310.3390/su12030753su12030753Recreation as a Social-Ecological Complex Adaptive SystemWayde C. Morse0School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849, USAThe environment and society are both the context for and product of human actions and interactions. Outdoor recreation is the primary interaction many people have with the environment and it is an interaction that greatly contributes to human well-being. To sustainably manage the social and ecological components of outdoor recreation, an integrative and dynamic systems perspective is needed. Analyses that link recreation management and recreational experiences to both social and ecological outcomes across multiple sales and over time are not developed. This article will outline how a number of fragmented recreation management frameworks such as the recreation experience model, beneficial outcomes, the recreation opportunity spectrum, limits of acceptable change, and constraints theory can be organized within a larger social-ecological framework. The outdoor recreation meta-framework presented here links structuration theory from the social sciences with theories of complex adaptive systems and hierarchical patch dynamics from ecology to understand the human and ecological drivers for and responses to outdoor recreation.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/3/753recreationtheoryscalestructurationhierarchypatch dynamics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wayde C. Morse
spellingShingle Wayde C. Morse
Recreation as a Social-Ecological Complex Adaptive System
Sustainability
recreation
theory
scale
structuration
hierarchy
patch dynamics
author_facet Wayde C. Morse
author_sort Wayde C. Morse
title Recreation as a Social-Ecological Complex Adaptive System
title_short Recreation as a Social-Ecological Complex Adaptive System
title_full Recreation as a Social-Ecological Complex Adaptive System
title_fullStr Recreation as a Social-Ecological Complex Adaptive System
title_full_unstemmed Recreation as a Social-Ecological Complex Adaptive System
title_sort recreation as a social-ecological complex adaptive system
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The environment and society are both the context for and product of human actions and interactions. Outdoor recreation is the primary interaction many people have with the environment and it is an interaction that greatly contributes to human well-being. To sustainably manage the social and ecological components of outdoor recreation, an integrative and dynamic systems perspective is needed. Analyses that link recreation management and recreational experiences to both social and ecological outcomes across multiple sales and over time are not developed. This article will outline how a number of fragmented recreation management frameworks such as the recreation experience model, beneficial outcomes, the recreation opportunity spectrum, limits of acceptable change, and constraints theory can be organized within a larger social-ecological framework. The outdoor recreation meta-framework presented here links structuration theory from the social sciences with theories of complex adaptive systems and hierarchical patch dynamics from ecology to understand the human and ecological drivers for and responses to outdoor recreation.
topic recreation
theory
scale
structuration
hierarchy
patch dynamics
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/3/753
work_keys_str_mv AT waydecmorse recreationasasocialecologicalcomplexadaptivesystem
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