Ecology, Engineering, and the Paradox of Management is the first book that addresses and reconciles what many take to be the core paradox facing environmental decision-makers and stakeholders: How do they restore the environment while at the same time provide ever more services reliably from that environment, including clean air, water and energy for more and more people? The book provides a conceptual framework, empirical case analyses, and organizational proposals to resolve the paradox, be it in the US, Europe, or elsewhere. Thus, Ecology, Engineering, and the Paradox of Management has multiple audiences. First are the key professions involved in the protection and improvement of ecosystems and in the provision and delivery of services from those ecosystems. These include ecologists (and other natural scientists such as conservation biologists, climatologists, forest scientists, and toxicologists), engineers (as well as hydrologists, environmental engineers, civil engineers, and line operators), modeling and gaming experts, managers, planners, and power, agriculture, and recreation communities. Another audience includes university researchers in ecology, conservation biology, engineering, the policy sciences, and resource management. Those interested in interdisciplinary approaches in these fields will also find the book especially helpful. Finally, those interested in the Everglades, the Columbia River Basin, San Francisco Bay-Delta, and the Green Heart of western Netherlands will find new insights here, as the book provides a detailed examination of the paradox in each of these cases.
Author(s): Michel J. G. van Eeten, Emery Roe
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 270
Contents......Page 8
Acronyms......Page 10
1 The Paradox of the Rising Demand for Both a Better Environment and More Reliable Services......Page 14
2 The Paradox Introduced: Concepts and Cases......Page 24
3 Adaptive Management in a High Reliability Context: Hard Problems, Partial Responses......Page 62
4 Recasting the Paradox through a Framework of Ecosystem Management Regimes......Page 96
5 Ecosystems in Zones of Conflict: Partial Responses as an Emerging Management Regime......Page 140
6 Ecosystems in Zones of Conflict: The Case for Bandwidth Management......Page 180
7 The Paradox Resolved: A Different Case Study and the Argument Summarized......Page 228
Appendix: Modeling in the CALFED Program......Page 252
Notes......Page 256
References......Page 262
C......Page 274
E......Page 275
I......Page 276
P......Page 277
S......Page 278
Z......Page 279