How deserts shape their networks: lessons for arid businesses …the science of desert living Ryan McAllister, Mark Stafford Smith, and a host of others.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Improving safety of older road users Challenges and opportunities from a road infrastructure perspective Fred Wegman SWOV Institute for Road Safety Research.
Advertisements

J. David Tàbara Institute of Environmental Science and Technology Autonomous University of Barcelona Integrated Climate Governance.
Connecting the Australian desert to the rest of the world Mark Stafford Smith, CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems (DK-CRC Science of Desert Living project) Desert.
ICOPE 6 August 2014 Northern Arizona University.  Dana S. Dunn – Overview  Jacquelyn Cranney  Victor Karandashev  Maureen A. McCarthy - Discussant.
Social Science of the Energy-Environment-Food Nexus Network Plus Town Meeting.
Drivers of in-group and out-of-group electronic word-of-mouth (eWOM) Author: Jose´ Luı´s Abrantes and Cla´udia Seabra, Cristiana Raquel Lages, Chanaka.
Supply Chain Integrity in the Australian Food Industry Global drivers and Lessons from National Food Strategy Russel Rankin – Food Innovation Partners.
Linking Pastoralism and Landscape Ecology in Laikipia Ryan R. Unks Integrative Conservation in Forestry and Natural Resources University of Georgia July.
An Empirical Examination of Transaction- and Firm-Level Influences on the Vertical Boundaries of the Firm Leiblein, Michael and Miller, Douglas
Considering Levels of Analysis Criterion Theory and Performance Evaluation in Organizations.
Towards the ALF 10 Years annalindhfoundation.org.
Stimulating the cognitive development of young children Use concrete props and visual aids to illustrate lessons and help children understand what is being.
I.1 ii.2 iii.3 iv.4 1+1=. i.1 ii.2 iii.3 iv.4 1+1=
Data Assimilation Workshop Oct 22-24, 2007 Norman, OK Poster presented by Rich Lucas & Kiona Ogle  Figure 1. Distributions.
I.1 ii.2 iii.3 iv.4 1+1=. i.1 ii.2 iii.3 iv.4 1+1=
Adaptation and Resilience in Rangeland Social- Ecological Systems August 2004 Ryan McAllister, Yiheyis Maru, Nick Abel, Iain Gordon, *Art Langston CSIRO.
From National Government. To Transnationalized Governance.
Responding to health impacts of climate change in the Australian desert David Campbell, Mark Stafford Smith, Jocelyn Davies, Pim Kuipers, John Wakerman.
OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FOR LONG DISTANCE EDUCATION ON COMMERCIALIZING SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY: A CASE STUDY ON ESTABLISHING LEARNING NETWORKS Pedro.
1 Applying Sustainability Science Ian Lowe. 2 “Our present course is unsustainable - postponing action is no longer an option” - GEO 2000 [UNEP 1999]
Meaningful Social Studies & Meaningful Learning
A Presentation to the MAV Future Of Local Government Commission of Enquiry May 2014 Michael McAllum, © 2014 GLOBAL.
RESOURCE EFFICIENCY IN LATIN AMERICA: ECONOMICS AND OUTLOOK 1.
Investigation of Information Retrieval Accuracy from Knowledge Management Systems Ryan C. LaBrie Department of Information Systems W. P. Carey School of.
Supporting scholarship – C-SAP projects past and future Ian Fairweather and Darren Marsh, C-SAP.
Designing the Microbial Research Commons: An International Symposium Overview National Academy of Sciences Washington, DC October 8-9, 2009 Cathy H. Wu.
Modeling Forest Management Scenarios Under a Changing Climate in Northern Minnesota Matthew J. Duveneck, Robert M. Scheller, Mark A. White Stephen Handler.
From Culture to place Learning & researching in informal and environments.
Adopting innovations in agricultural industries Sally Marsh ABARE Outlook 2010: Productivity session.
Australian Curriculum Geography
What Is Ecology? What is Landscape? What is Landscape Ecology? A road to Landscape Ecological Planning.
Chapter 13 – Agricultural Production and the Environment.
Researches Relating Talent Mgt Feb 5, Why PS needs talent mgt From: Deloitte(2009) The Public Sector Talent Mgt Challenge: A conversation with Ian.
Recent Research on Industry Clusters ECON 4480 State and Local Economies 1.
The ties among the notes: The social capital of jazz musicians in three metro areas Timothy J. Dowd (Emory University ) and Diogo L. Pinheiro (Georgia.
Opportunities for Research in the Dynamics of Water Processes in the Environment at NSF Pam Stephens Directorate of Geosciences, NSF Directorate of Geosciences,
Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research an intergovernmental organization for global change research socio-economic implications international.
Introduction to Biology II (BIOL 202 ) Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Dr. Mark Kopeny, Dr. Michael Menaker, Dr. Leo Racich Integrated survey of the.
Gavin Sheath – AgResearch, Ruakura, Hamilton Frank Scrimgeour – University of Waikato, Hamilton Alan McDermott – ANZCO Foods, Christchurch Members of Agribusiness.
Overview of the IWB Research. The IWB Research Literature: Is overwhelmingly positive about their potential. Primarily based on the views of teachers.
Roles of Clusters of Excellence in Fostering Economic Growth Can New Products and New International and Domestic Marketing Channels Increase Rural Incomes?
Extreme Climates Revision. Key ideasDetailed content What are the challenges of extreme climates? Extreme climates are located in polar regions and hot.
~*Patricia Strunk*~. ~*What is desertification*~ Desertification is the degradation in arid, semi-arid areas due to human activities. – Changing usable.
Learning-oriented Organizational Improvement Processes Review of selected research with an emphasis on network perspectives.
Institute for Global Environmental Strategies Regional collaboration on drought early warning systems in Asia International Workshop on Drought Assessment.
15 March 2016 Putting university-industry interaction into perspective: a view from inside South African universities Glenda Kruss IndiaLICS Training Programme.
Proud To Care initiative 11 th March ‘It’s a journey and we’re not there yet’ ‘The story so far’ George Coxon of the Devon Dementia Care Kite Mark.
Climate and Change Extreme Climates Extreme Climates.
Adaptation and institutional reflexivity
Good teaching for diverse learners
Food and Nutrition Security and Agriculture
Managing the spatial economy: the view from Victoria and Australia
Strategic Plan Lund universitY 2017–2026.
Question 1: What is the baseline of high power?
Class:VII(introduction to networking & HTML)
Why do multiple business models co-exist in ‘servitized’ firms?
Concepts of Geography A Primer…..
What have you learned in Key Stage 3?
FROM STRATEGY TO TOTAL REDESIGN
Strategic Plan Lund universitY 2017–2026.
Evaluating agricultural value chain programs: How we mix our methods
CDBN.org >>> empowering SMEs
Page 34 Desertification in the drylands – regions that don’t get much rain, and rainfall evaporates due to high temperatures.
Geography What impact does geography have on history, culture, people, and places?
Network Neuroscience Theory of Human Intelligence
Human Geography.
Conserving the world's biological diversity
What is Range Management?
Table 2. SUMMARIZED OBSERVATIONS FROM MODEL ANALYSIS
Table 4. Value creation (Y2)
Presentation transcript:

How deserts shape their networks: lessons for arid businesses …the science of desert living Ryan McAllister, Mark Stafford Smith, and a host of others

Stafford Smith The 'dryland syndrome, Rangeland Journal 30(1)

Network – paths from deserts to consumers

Producers Processors & Wholesale Retail

Emergent networks Highly Variable Low Variability

I: Smallness drives individuals to have stronger links. Desert systems also tend to lack critical mass; this drives individuals to favor fewer but stronger links II: Uncertainty of resources drives individuals to have weaker, but more numerous links to others III: Where cooperative objectives drive networks, links are stronger but fewer IV: If one individual contains greater resources, than it can form a hub …theory modelling results

Jenny Cleary; Sarah Holcombe; Pascal Tremblay; Deb Rockstroh; Michael Laflamme; Alicia Boylea; Metta Young; Jocelyn Davies; Fay Rola-Rubzen; Mark Stafford Smith; Cathy Robinson …co-contributors

Need to promote networks that favour a diverse range of weak ties over a more selective range of stronger ties, This needs to be supported by a culture which allows for the effective and efficient activation of the ties in times of need. Many arid Australia networks already have such characteristics. Where they do not, they could be encouraged by actions to reduce the transactions costs associated with networking, and cultural and formal institutions that explicitly foster flexibility and cooperation. …generalised implications

Reynolds JF et al (2007). Global desertification: Building a science for dryland development, Science 316, McAllister RRJ et al (2008). Social networks in arid Australia: a review of concepts and evidence, The Rangeland Journal 30 Stafford Smith DM (2008). The 'dryland syndrome' a causal chain of factors characterising outback Australia, The Rangeland Journal 30 Stafford Smith DM, McAllister RRJ, (2008). Managing dryland natural resources for spatial and temporal variability - an approach from first principles, The Rangeland Journal 30 Stafford Smith DM et al (2008). The community-settlement nexus - drivers of 'viability' in remote areas, The Rangeland Journal 30 McAllister RRJ et al, Patterns of accessing variable resources across time and space: desert plants, animals and people, Journal of Arid Environments, doi: /j.jaridenv McAllister RRJ, Livestock mobility in arid and semi-arid Australia: escaping variability in space, Nomadic Peoples (in review) McAllister RRJ et al, Research impact within the international arid literature: an Australian perspective based on network theory Journal of Arid Environments (in review) Stafford Smith DM, Cribb J, Drytimes: blueprint for a red land. (in review) …the science of desert living