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Lecture 3. Coastal Resilience 30 January 2013
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Leading Discussions Feb 6 th : Coastal Policy – Ian, Rose, Jaclyn Feb 13 th : Coastal Development, Recreation, Access – Chris W, Nichole Feb 20 th : Sea Level Rise – Julia, Anthony, Shayne Feb 27 th : Hazards – Kerry, Mitch March 13 th : Coastal Planning Case Studies – Evan, Nichole March 27 th : Fisheries Management, Commons, Four Fish – Kara, JJ, Andrew April 17 th : Community-based Management – Max, Liz
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Regime Shifts Folke et al. 2004 Regime Shifts, Resilience, and Biodiversity in Ecosystem Management
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Ecosystem Services “Ecosystem services are the benefits people obtain from ecosystems. These include provisioning services such as food and water; regulating services such as regulation of floods, drought, land degradation, and disease; supporting services such as soil formation and nutrient cycling; and cultural services such as recreational, spiritual, religious and other nonmaterial benefits.”
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RESLIENCE: A measure of the persistence of systems and of their capacity to absorb change and disturbance and still maintain the same relationships between populations or state variables. Holling Definition:
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http://www.resalliance.org
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Coastal Planning Dimensions Resilience of Land Use and Built Environment Ecological Resilience Social Resilience Economic Resilience
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http://www.resalliance.org http://coastalresilience.org/
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Qualities of a Resilient World (Walker and Salt 2006) 1.Diversity 2.Ecological Variability 3.Modularity 4.Acknowledging Slow Variables 5. Tight Feedbacks 6.Social Capital 7.Innovation 8.Overlap in Governance 9.Ecosystem Services
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