Scenarios in Social-Ecological Systems: Co-Producing Futures in Arctic Alaska

Scenarios are used to think ahead in rapidly changing, complex, and competitive environments, and make crucial decisions in absence of complete information about the future. Currently, at many regional scales of governance, there is a growing need for legitimate tools that enable the actors (e.g., g...

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Main Authors: Lovecraft, A. L., Eicken, H.
Format: Still Image
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11034
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/11034 2023-05-15T15:04:40+02:00 Scenarios in Social-Ecological Systems: Co-Producing Futures in Arctic Alaska Lovecraft, A. L. Eicken, H. 2016-12 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11034 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11034 Research Subject Categories::NATURAL SCIENCES Poster 2016 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:37:36Z Scenarios are used to think ahead in rapidly changing, complex, and competitive environments, and make crucial decisions in absence of complete information about the future. Currently, at many regional scales of governance, there is a growing need for legitimate tools that enable the actors (e.g., governments, corporations, organized interests) at local-scales to address pressing concerns in the midst of uncertainty. This is particularly true of areas experiencing rapidly changing environments (e.g., drought, floods, diminishing sea ice, erosion) and complex social problems (e.g., remote communities, resource extraction, threatened cultures). Scenario exercises produce neither forecasts of what is to come nor are they visions of what participants would like to happen. Rather, they produce pertinent evidence-based information related to questions of “what would happen if.” and thus provide the possibility of strategic decision- making to plan research that promotes community resilience. Financial support by the National Science Foundation (ArcSEES Program #1263850) is gratefully acknowledged. Still Image Arctic Sea ice Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
topic Research Subject Categories::NATURAL SCIENCES
spellingShingle Research Subject Categories::NATURAL SCIENCES
Lovecraft, A. L.
Eicken, H.
Scenarios in Social-Ecological Systems: Co-Producing Futures in Arctic Alaska
topic_facet Research Subject Categories::NATURAL SCIENCES
description Scenarios are used to think ahead in rapidly changing, complex, and competitive environments, and make crucial decisions in absence of complete information about the future. Currently, at many regional scales of governance, there is a growing need for legitimate tools that enable the actors (e.g., governments, corporations, organized interests) at local-scales to address pressing concerns in the midst of uncertainty. This is particularly true of areas experiencing rapidly changing environments (e.g., drought, floods, diminishing sea ice, erosion) and complex social problems (e.g., remote communities, resource extraction, threatened cultures). Scenario exercises produce neither forecasts of what is to come nor are they visions of what participants would like to happen. Rather, they produce pertinent evidence-based information related to questions of “what would happen if.” and thus provide the possibility of strategic decision- making to plan research that promotes community resilience. Financial support by the National Science Foundation (ArcSEES Program #1263850) is gratefully acknowledged.
format Still Image
author Lovecraft, A. L.
Eicken, H.
author_facet Lovecraft, A. L.
Eicken, H.
author_sort Lovecraft, A. L.
title Scenarios in Social-Ecological Systems: Co-Producing Futures in Arctic Alaska
title_short Scenarios in Social-Ecological Systems: Co-Producing Futures in Arctic Alaska
title_full Scenarios in Social-Ecological Systems: Co-Producing Futures in Arctic Alaska
title_fullStr Scenarios in Social-Ecological Systems: Co-Producing Futures in Arctic Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Scenarios in Social-Ecological Systems: Co-Producing Futures in Arctic Alaska
title_sort scenarios in social-ecological systems: co-producing futures in arctic alaska
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11034
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Sea ice
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Sea ice
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11034
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