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Our research is regularly published in top-ranked scientific journals. Search for specific publications below
Journal / article | 2014
Bodin, B., B. Crona, M. Thyresson, A.-L. Golz, M. Tengö 2014. Conservation Success as a Function of Good Alignment of Social and Ecological Structures and Processes. Conservation Biology, online, DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12306
How to create and adjust governing institutions so that they align (fit) with complex ecosystem processes and structures across scales is an issue of increasing concern in conservation. It is argued that lack of such social-ecological fit makes governance and conservation difficult, yet progress in explicitly defining and rigorously testing what constitutes a good fit has been limited. We used a novel modeling approach and d...
Galaz, V., Österblom, H., Bodin, Ö., Crona, B. 2014. Global networks and global change-induced tipping points. International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics, 1573-1553, 10.1007/s10784-014-9253-6
The existence of “tipping points” in human–environmental systems at multiple scales—such as abrupt negative changes in coral reef ecosystems, “runaway” climate change, and interacting nonlinear “planetary boundaries”—is often viewed as a substantial challenge for governance due to their inherent uncertainty, potential for rapid and large system change, and possible cascading effects on human well-being. Despite an i...
Journal / article | 2013
Sandström, A., B. Crona, Ö. Bodin. 2013. Legitimacy in Co-Management: The Impact of Preexisting Structures, Social Networks and Governance Strategies, Environmental Policy and Governance :n/a-n/a, doi:10.1002/eet.1633
With the ambition to contribute to the endeavour of co-management, this paper focuses on the critical aspect of legitimacy and sets out to explain stakeholder acceptance in natural resource governance. A comparative study of five coastal and marine areas in Sweden is conducted. The empirical results demonstrate, first, how the past and the present institutional landscape set the underlying conditions and affect stakeholders' a...
Westley, F. R., O. Tjornbo, L. Schultz, P. Olsson, C. Folke, B. Crona and Ö. Bodin. 2013. A theory of transformative agency in linked social-ecological systems. Ecology and Society 18(3): 27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-05072-180327
We reviewed the literature on leadership in linked social-ecological systems and combined it with the literature on institutional entrepreneurship in complex adaptive systems to develop a new theory of transformative agency in linked social-ecological systems. Although there is evidence of the importance of strategic agency in introducing innovation and transforming approaches to management and governance of such systems, ther...
Crona, B.I, Wutich, A., Brewis, A., Gartin, M. 2013. Perceptions of climate change: Linking local and global perceptions through a cultural knowledge approach. Climatic Change XX:xx-xx doi: 10.1007/s10584-013-0708-5
Understanding public perceptions of climate change is fundamental to both climate science and policy because it defines local and global socio-political contexts within which policy makers and scientists operate. To date, most studies addressing climate change perceptions have been place-based. While such research is informative, comparative studies across sites are important for building generalized theory around why and how ...
Journal / article | 2012
Thyresson, M., Crona, B., Nyström, M., de la Torre-Castro, M., Jiddawi, N. 2012. Tracing value chains to understand effects of trade on coral reef fish in Zanzibar, Tanzania. Marine Policy, 38, 246-256
Coral reef fish are an important source of food security and income for human coastal populations. They also underpin ecosystem processes vital for the future ability of coral reefs to generate ecological goods and services. Identifying socio-economic drivers behind the exploitation of fish that uphold these key ecosystem processes and the scales at which they operate is therefore critical for successful management. This stu...
Crona, B.I., Parker, J.N. 2012. Learning in support of governance: theories, methods and a framework to assess how bridging organizations contribute to adaptive resource governance. Ecology and Society, 17(1), 32
Humanity faces increasingly intractable environmental problems characterized by high uncertainty, complexity, and swift change. Natural resource governance must therefore involve continuous production and use of new knowledge to adapt to highly complex, rapidly changing social-ecological systems to ensure long-term sustainable development. Bridging and boundary organizations have been proposed as potentially powerful means o...
Parker, J. and Crona, B.I (2012) On Being All Things to All People: Boundary Organizations & the Contemporary Research University. Social Studies of Science April 2012 vol. 42 no. 2 262-289. doi:10.1177/0306312711435833
This article examines the challenges and tensions that inhere in university-based boundary organizations. We begin by reconceptualizing the theory of boundary organizations, bringing it into greater alignment with the realities of the current university environment. Using in-depth interviews, documentary analysis and ethnographic field work, this framework is applied to a university-based boundary organization attempting to ...
Galaz, V. et.al. Planetary boundaries – exploring the challenges for global environmental governance. Curr. Opin. Environ. Sustain (2012), doi: 10.1016/j.cosust.2012.01.006
Publication review A range of studies from Earth system scientists argue that human activities drive multiple, interacting effects that cascade through the Earth system. Recent contributions state and quantify nine, interacting 'planetary boundaries' with possible threshold effects. This article provides an overview of the global governance challenges that follow from this notion of multiple, interacting and possibly non-li...
Parker, J. and Crona, B.I (2012) On Being All Things to All People: Boundary Organizations & the Contemporary Research University. Social Studies of Science XX:xx-xx. doi:10.1177/0306312711435833
This article examines the challenges and tensions that inhere in university-based boundary organizations. We begin by reconceptualizing the theory of boundary organizations, bringing it into greater alignment with the realities of the current university environment. Using in-depth interviews, documentary analysis and ethnographic field work, this framework is applied to a university-based boundary organization attempting t...
Stockholm Resilience Centre is a collaboration between Stockholm University and the Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
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