Research on Coupled Human and Natural Systems (CHANS): Approach, Challenges, and Strategies

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Date
2011Author
McConnell, William J.
Millington, James D. A.
Reo, Nicholas J.
Alberti, Marina
Asbjornsen, Heidi
Baker, Lawrence A.
Brozovi?, Nicholas
Drinkwater, Laurie E.
Drzyzga, Scott A.
Fragoso, Jos?
Holland, Daniel S.
Jantz, Claire A.
Kohler, Timothy A.
Maschner, Herbert D. G.
Monticino, Michael
Podest?, Guillermo
Pontius, Robert Gilmore, Jr.
Redman, Charles L.
Sailor, David
Urquhart, Gerald
Liu, Jianguo
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Understanding the complexity of human–nature interactions is central to the quest for both human well-being and global sustainability. To build an understanding of these interactions, scientists, planners, resource managers, policy makers, and communities increasingly are collaborating across wide-ranging disciplines and knowledge domains. Scientists and others are generating new integrated knowledge on top of their requisite specialized knowledge to understand complex systems in order to solve pressing environmental and social problems (e.g., Carpenter et al. 2009). One approach to this sort of integration, bringing together detailed knowledge of various disciplines (e.g., social, economic, biological, and geophysical), has become known as the study of Coupled Human and Natural Systems, or CHANS (Liu et al. 2007a, b). Read More: http://www.esajournals.org/doi/full/10.1890/0012-9623-92.2.218