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      Why resilience is unappealing to social science: Theoretical and empirical investigations of the scientific use of resilience

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          Abstract

          Pluralism drawing on core social scientific concepts would facilitate integrated sustainability research.

          Abstract

          Resilience is often promoted as a boundary concept to integrate the social and natural dimensions of sustainability. However, it is a troubled dialogue from which social scientists may feel detached. To explain this, we first scrutinize the meanings, attributes, and uses of resilience in ecology and elsewhere to construct a typology of definitions. Second, we analyze core concepts and principles in resilience theory that cause disciplinary tensions between the social and natural sciences (system ontology, system boundary, equilibria and thresholds, feedback mechanisms, self-organization, and function). Third, we provide empirical evidence of the asymmetry in the use of resilience theory in ecology and environmental sciences compared to five relevant social science disciplines. Fourth, we contrast the unification ambition in resilience theory with methodological pluralism. Throughout, we develop the argument that incommensurability and unification constrain the interdisciplinary dialogue, whereas pluralism drawing on core social scientific concepts would better facilitate integrated sustainability research.

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          A general framework for analyzing sustainability of social-ecological systems.

          A major problem worldwide is the potential loss of fisheries, forests, and water resources. Understanding of the processes that lead to improvements in or deterioration of natural resources is limited, because scientific disciplines use different concepts and languages to describe and explain complex social-ecological systems (SESs). Without a common framework to organize findings, isolated knowledge does not cumulate. Until recently, accepted theory has assumed that resource users will never self-organize to maintain their resources and that governments must impose solutions. Research in multiple disciplines, however, has found that some government policies accelerate resource destruction, whereas some resource users have invested their time and energy to achieve sustainability. A general framework is used to identify 10 subsystem variables that affect the likelihood of self-organization in efforts to achieve a sustainable SES.
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            Emergence of scaling in random networks

            Systems as diverse as genetic networks or the World Wide Web are best described as networks with complex topology. A common property of many large networks is that the vertex connectivities follow a scale-free power-law distribution. This feature was found to be a consequence of two generic mechanisms: (i) networks expand continuously by the addition of new vertices, and (ii) new vertices attach preferentially to sites that are already well connected. A model based on these two ingredients reproduces the observed stationary scale-free distributions, which indicates that the development of large networks is governed by robust self-organizing phenomena that go beyond the particulars of the individual systems.
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              A Handful of Heuristics and Some Propositions for Understanding Resilience in Social-Ecological Systems

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Sci Adv
                Sci Adv
                SciAdv
                advances
                Science Advances
                American Association for the Advancement of Science
                2375-2548
                May 2015
                22 May 2015
                : 1
                : 4
                : e1400217
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies (LUCSUS), 22100 Lund, Sweden.
                [2 ]Department of Philosophy, Lund University, 22100 Lund, Sweden.
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. E-mail: Lennart.Olsson@ 123456lucsus.lu.se
                Article
                1400217
                10.1126/sciadv.1400217
                4640643
                26601176
                9b245e2d-b18b-48e0-bba9-c9134aebae7a
                Copyright © 2015, The Authors

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, so long as the resultant use is not for commercial advantage and provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 15 December 2014
                : 12 April 2015
                Funding
                Funded by: Swedish Research Council Formas;
                Award ID: ID0EJ4AG1137
                Award ID: 259-2008-1718
                Award Recipient :
                Funded by: Rockefeller Foundation;
                Award ID: ID0E14AG1138
                Award ID: 2012 RLC 304
                Award Recipient :
                Categories
                Research Article
                Research Articles
                SciAdv r-articles
                Sociology

                boundary concept,functionalism,incommensurability,integrated research,methodological pluralism,resilience theory,system thinking,unification

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