Significance of telecoupling for exploration of land use change
Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Bidrag til bog/antologi › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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Significance of telecoupling for exploration of land use change. / Eakin, Hallie; Defries, Ruth; Kerr, Suzi; Lambin, Eric F.; Liu, Jiangou; Marcotullio, Peter J.; Messerli, Peter; Reenberg, Anette; Rueda, Ximena; Swaffield, Simon R.; Wicke, Birka; Zimmerer, Karl.
Rethinking global land use in an urban era. red. / Karen C. Seto; Anette Reenberg. Cambridge, MA : MIT Press, 2014. s. 141-162 (Strungmann Forum reports, Bind 14).Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Bidrag til bog/antologi › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Significance of telecoupling for exploration of land use change
AU - Eakin, Hallie
AU - Defries, Ruth
AU - Kerr, Suzi
AU - Lambin, Eric F.
AU - Liu, Jiangou
AU - Marcotullio, Peter J.
AU - Messerli, Peter
AU - Reenberg, Anette
AU - Rueda, Ximena
AU - Swaffield, Simon R.
AU - Wicke, Birka
AU - Zimmerer, Karl
PY - 2014/4
Y1 - 2014/4
N2 - Land systems are increasingly infl uenced by distal connections: the externalities and unintended consequences of social and ecological processes which occur in distant locations, and the feedback mechanisms that lead to new institutional developments and governance arrangements. Economic globalization and urbanization accentuate these novel telecoupling relationships. The prevalence of telecoupling in land systems demands new approaches to research and analysis in land science. This chapter presents a working defi nition of a telecoupled system, emphasizing the role of governance and institutional change in telecoupled interactions. The social, institutional, and ecological processes and conditions through which telecoupling emerges are described. The analysis of these relationships in land science demands both integrative and diverse epistemological perspectives and methods. Such analyses require a focus on how the motivations and values of social actors relate to telecoupling processes, as well as on the mechanisms that produce unanticipated outcomes and feedback relationships among distal land systems.
AB - Land systems are increasingly infl uenced by distal connections: the externalities and unintended consequences of social and ecological processes which occur in distant locations, and the feedback mechanisms that lead to new institutional developments and governance arrangements. Economic globalization and urbanization accentuate these novel telecoupling relationships. The prevalence of telecoupling in land systems demands new approaches to research and analysis in land science. This chapter presents a working defi nition of a telecoupled system, emphasizing the role of governance and institutional change in telecoupled interactions. The social, institutional, and ecological processes and conditions through which telecoupling emerges are described. The analysis of these relationships in land science demands both integrative and diverse epistemological perspectives and methods. Such analyses require a focus on how the motivations and values of social actors relate to telecoupling processes, as well as on the mechanisms that produce unanticipated outcomes and feedback relationships among distal land systems.
U2 - 10.7551/mitpress/9780262026901.003.0008
DO - 10.7551/mitpress/9780262026901.003.0008
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 978-0-262-02690-1
T3 - Strungmann Forum reports
SP - 141
EP - 162
BT - Rethinking global land use in an urban era
A2 - Seto, Karen C.
A2 - Reenberg, Anette
PB - MIT Press
CY - Cambridge, MA
ER -
ID: 105510386