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Socialecological

Social-ecological refers to an interdisciplinary approach that treats human societies and natural ecosystems as interconnected and co-evolving. In this view, ecological and social processes influence each other across scales, with institutions, culture, and economic systems shaping how resources are used, and ecological conditions constraining social options.

Key concepts include resilience (the capacity of a system to absorb disturbance and reorganize while retaining

Origins trace to resilience thinking in ecology (notably C. S. Holling) and the development of the social-ecological

Critiques note challenges in operationalizing concepts, measuring resilience, and addressing complexity. Proponents argue that the social-ecological

function),
adaptive
governance
and
adaptive
co-management
(flexible,
participatory
institutions
that
respond
to
change),
ecosystem
services
(the
benefits
people
obtain
from
ecosystems),
and
cross-scale
coupling
(interactions
across
local
to
global
levels).
The
social-ecological
systems
framework
emphasizes
feedback
loops
between
social
and
ecological
components,
the
role
of
institutions
and
values,
and
the
importance
of
learning,
experimentation,
and
reflexivity.
systems
approach
within
sustainability
science,
particularly
in
studies
of
governance
and
common-pool
resources
(e.g.,
Elinor
Ostrom).
The
framework
is
applied
to
natural
resource
management,
climate
adaptation,
urban
sustainability,
and
disaster
risk
reduction,
often
employing
transdisciplinary
methods,
participatory
research,
system
mapping,
and
scenario
analysis.
lens
improves
policy
relevance
by
linking
governance,
equity,
and
ecological
integrity.