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Article
Explaining through causal mechanisms: resilience and governance of social–ecological systems
Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability
  • Robbert Biesbroek, Wageningen University
  • Johann Dupuis, University of Lausanne
  • Adam Wellstead, Michigan Technological University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2017
Abstract

This paper synthesizes and builds on recent critiques of the resilience literature; namely that the field has largely been unsuccessful in capturing the complexity of governance processes, in particular cause–effects relationships. We demonstrate that absence of a causal model is reflected in the black-boxing of governance processes which is problematic for resilience studies with explanatory ambitions. We introduce mechanism-based thinking as alternative research perspective that offers more analytical rigour and elaborate the key principles of this approach. Mechanism-based approaches are aligned to the ways of thinking in systems theory and complexity sciences and can be used to advance scientific inquiry and policy practice to govern complex sustainability issues.

Publisher's Statement

© 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Version
Preprint
Citation Information
Robbert Biesbroek, Johann Dupuis and Adam Wellstead. "Explaining through causal mechanisms: resilience and governance of social–ecological systems" Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability Vol. 28 (2017) p. 64 - 70
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/adam-wellstead/78/