Governing Renewable Natural Resources
Theories and Frameworks
Herausgeber: Nunan, Fiona
Governing Renewable Natural Resources
Theories and Frameworks
Herausgeber: Nunan, Fiona
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In one volume, this book brings together a diversity of approaches, theory and frameworks that can be used to analyse the governance of renewable natural resources
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In one volume, this book brings together a diversity of approaches, theory and frameworks that can be used to analyse the governance of renewable natural resources
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 252
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 232mm x 155mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 416g
- ISBN-13: 9780367146702
- ISBN-10: 0367146703
- Artikelnr.: 58441923
- Verlag: Jenny Stanford Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 252
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Dezember 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 232mm x 155mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 416g
- ISBN-13: 9780367146702
- ISBN-10: 0367146703
- Artikelnr.: 58441923
Fiona Nunan is Professor of Environment and Development in the International Development Department, University of Birmingham, UK.
1. Introduction: governing renewable natural resources 2. Management in the
guise of governance? Rethinking the Ends and the means of natural resource
governance 3. Networked participation: how social network analysis can
inform participatory processes in environmental governance 4. Analyzing
natural resource governance with the social-ecological systems framework 5.
Analysing institutions to explain the practice and outcomes of fisheries
co-management 6. Community governance of common-pool resources: exploring
institutional interfaces 7. Indigenous polycentric and nested customary
sea-tenure (CST) Institutions: a Solomon Islands case study 8. Political
ecologies of resource governance: ontologies, agency and practice 9. The
state as a person: the role of interface bureaucrats in everyday natural
resource governance 10. Institutional recognition politics in forestry:
when the plurality of state law undermines local democracy 11. In search of
new modes of governance: the potential of conservation incentive payment
policies to promote human-wildlife co-existence 12. Conclusion: working
towards diverse, flexible and inclusive natural resource governance
guise of governance? Rethinking the Ends and the means of natural resource
governance 3. Networked participation: how social network analysis can
inform participatory processes in environmental governance 4. Analyzing
natural resource governance with the social-ecological systems framework 5.
Analysing institutions to explain the practice and outcomes of fisheries
co-management 6. Community governance of common-pool resources: exploring
institutional interfaces 7. Indigenous polycentric and nested customary
sea-tenure (CST) Institutions: a Solomon Islands case study 8. Political
ecologies of resource governance: ontologies, agency and practice 9. The
state as a person: the role of interface bureaucrats in everyday natural
resource governance 10. Institutional recognition politics in forestry:
when the plurality of state law undermines local democracy 11. In search of
new modes of governance: the potential of conservation incentive payment
policies to promote human-wildlife co-existence 12. Conclusion: working
towards diverse, flexible and inclusive natural resource governance
1. Introduction: governing renewable natural resources 2. Management in the
guise of governance? Rethinking the Ends and the means of natural resource
governance 3. Networked participation: how social network analysis can
inform participatory processes in environmental governance 4. Analyzing
natural resource governance with the social-ecological systems framework 5.
Analysing institutions to explain the practice and outcomes of fisheries
co-management 6. Community governance of common-pool resources: exploring
institutional interfaces 7. Indigenous polycentric and nested customary
sea-tenure (CST) Institutions: a Solomon Islands case study 8. Political
ecologies of resource governance: ontologies, agency and practice 9. The
state as a person: the role of interface bureaucrats in everyday natural
resource governance 10. Institutional recognition politics in forestry:
when the plurality of state law undermines local democracy 11. In search of
new modes of governance: the potential of conservation incentive payment
policies to promote human-wildlife co-existence 12. Conclusion: working
towards diverse, flexible and inclusive natural resource governance
guise of governance? Rethinking the Ends and the means of natural resource
governance 3. Networked participation: how social network analysis can
inform participatory processes in environmental governance 4. Analyzing
natural resource governance with the social-ecological systems framework 5.
Analysing institutions to explain the practice and outcomes of fisheries
co-management 6. Community governance of common-pool resources: exploring
institutional interfaces 7. Indigenous polycentric and nested customary
sea-tenure (CST) Institutions: a Solomon Islands case study 8. Political
ecologies of resource governance: ontologies, agency and practice 9. The
state as a person: the role of interface bureaucrats in everyday natural
resource governance 10. Institutional recognition politics in forestry:
when the plurality of state law undermines local democracy 11. In search of
new modes of governance: the potential of conservation incentive payment
policies to promote human-wildlife co-existence 12. Conclusion: working
towards diverse, flexible and inclusive natural resource governance