Abstract
This paper explores the relationship between resilience and globalization. We are concerned,
most importantly, with whether resilience is a suitable conceptual framework for natural resource management in the context of the rapid changes and disruptions that globalization causes in social-ecological systems. Although theoretical in scope, we ground this analysis using our experiences in two Asian coastal areas: Junagadh District in Gujarat State, India and Banawa Selatan, in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. We present the histories of resource exploitation in the two areas, and we attempt to combine a resilience perspective with close attention to the impact of globalization. Our efforts serve as a basis from which to
examine the conceptual and practical compatibility of resilience with globalization. The first challenge weaddress is epistemological: given that resilience and globalization have roots in different disciplines, do they share a sufficiently common perception of change and human action to be compatible? Second, we address the issue of how resilience can be a viable management objective in the rapidly changing context of globalization. We identify scale as particularly important in this regard
Original language | English |
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Article number | 2 |
Number of pages | 19 |
Journal | Ecology and Society |
Volume | 11 |
Issue number | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 2006 |
Keywords
- ecological resilience
- political ecology
- global change
- ecosystems
- management
- fisheries
- dynamics
- context
- systems