Forecasting Resilience in arctic societies: Creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems

Arctic communities are increasingly faced with social-ecological changes that act at variable speeds and spatial scales. Such changes will affect vital resources, particularly water supplies. Currently, there are few computational tools that integrate multiple social and environmental processes in o...

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Main Authors: Altaweel, MR, Alessa, LN, Kliskey, AD
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1329424/
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1329424 2023-05-15T14:55:11+02:00 Forecasting Resilience in arctic societies: Creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems Altaweel, MR Alessa, LN Kliskey, AD 2009-12-01 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1329424/ unknown Journal of the American Water Resources Association , 45 (6) pp. 1379-1389. (2009) Article 2009 ftucl 2016-11-17T23:16:47Z Arctic communities are increasingly faced with social-ecological changes that act at variable speeds and spatial scales. Such changes will affect vital resources, particularly water supplies. Currently, there are few computational tools that integrate multiple social and environmental processes in order to aid communities' adaptation to change through decision support systems. This paper proposes a modeling and simulation approach that can integrate such processes at different spatiotemporal scales in order to address issues affecting community water supplies. In this paper, a modeling and simulation tool is developed and applied to a case study on the Seward Peninsula. Initial results, using both field observations and computation, show projected patterns of water use, perceptions of water availability, and long-term consumption trends. More broadly, the paper demonstrates the need for developing tools that address issues at the community level for better understanding human and hydrological interactions and policy decisions affecting water supplies. © 2009 American Water Resources Association. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Seward Peninsula University College London: UCL Discovery Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
description Arctic communities are increasingly faced with social-ecological changes that act at variable speeds and spatial scales. Such changes will affect vital resources, particularly water supplies. Currently, there are few computational tools that integrate multiple social and environmental processes in order to aid communities' adaptation to change through decision support systems. This paper proposes a modeling and simulation approach that can integrate such processes at different spatiotemporal scales in order to address issues affecting community water supplies. In this paper, a modeling and simulation tool is developed and applied to a case study on the Seward Peninsula. Initial results, using both field observations and computation, show projected patterns of water use, perceptions of water availability, and long-term consumption trends. More broadly, the paper demonstrates the need for developing tools that address issues at the community level for better understanding human and hydrological interactions and policy decisions affecting water supplies. © 2009 American Water Resources Association.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Altaweel, MR
Alessa, LN
Kliskey, AD
spellingShingle Altaweel, MR
Alessa, LN
Kliskey, AD
Forecasting Resilience in arctic societies: Creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems
author_facet Altaweel, MR
Alessa, LN
Kliskey, AD
author_sort Altaweel, MR
title Forecasting Resilience in arctic societies: Creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems
title_short Forecasting Resilience in arctic societies: Creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems
title_full Forecasting Resilience in arctic societies: Creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems
title_fullStr Forecasting Resilience in arctic societies: Creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems
title_full_unstemmed Forecasting Resilience in arctic societies: Creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems
title_sort forecasting resilience in arctic societies: creating tools for assessing social-hydrological systems
publishDate 2009
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1329424/
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Seward Peninsula
genre_facet Arctic
Seward Peninsula
op_source Journal of the American Water Resources Association , 45 (6) pp. 1379-1389. (2009)
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