Anne-Sophie Crépin
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anne-Sophie Crépin.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2011
Carl Folke; Åsa Jansson; Johan Rockström; Per Olsson; Stephen R. Carpenter; F. Stuart Chapin; Anne-Sophie Crépin; Gretchen C. Daily; Kjell Danell; Jonas Ebbesson; Thomas Elmqvist; Victor Galaz; Fredrik Moberg; Måns Nilsson; Henrik Österblom; Elinor Ostrom; Åsa Persson; Garry D. Peterson; Stephen Polasky; Will Steffen; Brian Walker; Frances Westley
Humanity has emerged as a major force in the operation of the biosphere, with a significant imprint on the Earth System, challenging social–ecological resilience. This new situation calls for a fundamental shift in perspectives, world views, and institutions. Human development and progress must be reconnected to the capacity of the biosphere and essential ecosystem services to be sustained. Governance challenges include a highly interconnected and faster world, cascading social–ecological interactions and planetary boundaries that create vulnerabilities but also opportunities for social–ecological change and transformation. Tipping points and thresholds highlight the importance of understanding and managing resilience. New modes of flexible governance are emerging. A central challenge is to reconnect these efforts to the changing preconditions for societal development as active stewards of the Earth System. We suggest that the Millennium Development Goals need to be reframed in such a planetary stewardship context combined with a call for a new social contract on global sustainability. The ongoing mind shift in human relations with Earth and its boundaries provides exciting opportunities for societal development in collaboration with the biosphere—a global sustainability agenda for humanity.
Environment and Development Economics | 2013
Simon A. Levin; Tasos Xepapadeas; Anne-Sophie Crépin; Jon Norberg; Aart de Zeeuw; Carl Folke; Terry P. Hughes; Kenneth J. Arrow; Scott Barrett; Gretchen C. Daily; Paul R. Ehrlich; Nils Kautsky; Karl Göran Mäler; Steve Polasky; Max Troell; Jeffrey R. Vincent; Brian Walker
Systems linking people and nature, known as social-ecological systems, are increasingly understood as complex adaptive systems. Essential features of these complex adaptive systems – such as nonlinear feedbacks, strategic interactions, individual and spatial heterogeneity, and varying time scales – pose substantial challenges for modeling. However, ignoring these characteristics can distort our picture of how these systems work, causing policies to be less effective or even counterproductive. In this paper we present recent developments in modeling social-ecological systems, illustrate some of these challenges with examples related to coral reefs and grasslands, and identify the implications for economic and policy analysis.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Max Troell; Rosamond L. Naylor; Marc Metian; M. C. M. Beveridge; Peter Tyedmers; Carl Folke; Kenneth J. Arrow; Scott Barrett; Anne-Sophie Crépin; Paul R. Ehrlich; Åsa Gren; Nils Kautsky; Simon A. Levin; Karine Nyborg; Henrik Österblom; Stephen Polasky; Marten Scheffer; Brian Walker; Tasos Xepapadeas; Aart de Zeeuw
Aquaculture is the fastest growing food sector and continues to expand alongside terrestrial crop and livestock production. Using portfolio theory as a conceptual framework, we explore how current interconnections between the aquaculture, crop, livestock, and fisheries sectors act as an impediment to, or an opportunity for, enhanced resilience in the global food system given increased resource scarcity and climate change. Aquaculture can potentially enhance resilience through improved resource use efficiencies and increased diversification of farmed species, locales of production, and feeding strategies. However, aquaculture’s reliance on terrestrial crops and wild fish for feeds, its dependence on freshwater and land for culture sites, and its broad array of environmental impacts diminishes its ability to add resilience. Feeds for livestock and farmed fish that are fed rely largely on the same crops, although the fraction destined for aquaculture is presently small (∼4%). As demand for high-value fed aquaculture products grows, competition for these crops will also rise, as will the demand for wild fish as feed inputs. Many of these crops and forage fish are also consumed directly by humans and provide essential nutrition for low-income households. Their rising use in aquafeeds has the potential to increase price levels and volatility, worsening food insecurity among the most vulnerable populations. Although the diversification of global food production systems that includes aquaculture offers promise for enhanced resilience, such promise will not be realized if government policies fail to provide adequate incentives for resource efficiency, equity, and environmental protection.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2004
F. S. Chapin; Garry D. Peterson; Fikret Berkes; Terry V. Callaghan; Per Angelstam; Mike Apps; Colin M. Beier; Yves Bergeron; Anne-Sophie Crépin; Kjell Danell; Thomas Elmqvist; Carl Folke; Bruce C. Forbes; Nancy Fresco; Glenn P. Juday; Jari Niemelä; A. Shvidenko; Gail Whiteman
Abstract The arctic tundra and boreal forest were once considered the last frontiers on earth because of their vast expanses remote from agricultural land-use change and industrial development. These regions are now, however, experiencing environmental and social changes that are as rapid as those occurring anywhere on earth. This paper summarizes the role of northern regions in the global system and provides a blueprint for assessing the factors that govern their sensitivity to social and environmental change.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2006
F. Stuart Chapin; Michael Hoel; Steven R Carpenter; Jane Lubchenco; Brian Walker; Terry V. Callaghan; Carl Folke; Simon A. Levin; Karl-Göran Mäler; Christer Nilsson; Scott Barrett; Fikret Berkes; Anne-Sophie Crépin; Kjell Danell; Thomas Rosswall; David A. Starrett; Anastasios Xepapadeas; Sergey Zimov
Abstract Unprecedented global changes caused by human actions challenge societys ability to sustain the desirable features of our planet. This requires proactive management of change to foster both resilience (sustaining those attributes that are important to society in the face of change) and adaptation (developing new socioecological configurations that function effectively under new conditions). The Arctic may be one of the last remaining opportunities to plan for change in a spatially extensive region where many of the ancestral ecological and social processes and feedbacks are still intact. If the feasibility of this strategy can be demonstrated in the Arctic, our improved understanding of the dynamics of change can be applied to regions with greater human modification. Conditions may now be ideal to implement policies to manage Arctic change because recent studies provide the essential scientific understanding, appropriate international institutions are in place, and Arctic nations have the wealth to institute necessary changes, if they choose to do so.
Science | 2016
Karine Nyborg; John M. Anderies; Astrid Dannenberg; Therese Lindahl; Caroline Schill; Maja Schlüter; W. Neil Adger; Kenneth J. Arrow; Scott Barrett; Stephen R. Carpenter; F. Stuart Chapin; Anne-Sophie Crépin; Gretchen C. Daily; Paul R. Ehrlich; Carl Folke; Wander Jager; Nils Kautsky; Simon A. Levin; Ole Jacob Madsen; Stephen Polasky; Marten Scheffer; Brian Walker; Elke U. Weber; James E. Wilen; Anastasios Xepapadeas; Aart de Zeeuw
Policies may influence large-scale behavioral tipping Climate change, biodiversity loss, antibiotic resistance, and other global challenges pose major collective action problems: A group benefits from a certain action, but no individual has sufficient incentive to act alone. Formal institutions, e.g., laws and treaties, have helped address issues like ozone depletion, lead pollution, and acid rain. However, formal institutions are not always able to enforce collectively desirable outcomes. In such cases, informal institutions, such as social norms, can be important. If conditions are right, policy can support social norm changes, helping address even global problems. To judge when this is realistic, and what role policy can play, we discuss three crucial questions: Is a tipping point likely to exist, such that vicious cycles of socially damaging behavior can potentially be turned into virtuous ones? Can policy create tipping points where none exist? Can policy push the system past the tipping point?
Ecology and Society | 2015
Thomas Homer-Dixon; Brian Walker; Reinette Biggs; Anne-Sophie Crépin; Carl Folke; Eric F. Lambin; Garry D. Peterson; Johan Rockström; Marten Scheffer; Will Steffen; Max Troell
Recent global crises reveal an emerging pattern of causation that could increasingly characterize the birth and progress of future global crises. A conceptual framework identifies this patterns deep causes, intermediate processes, and ultimate outcomes. The framework shows how multiple stresses can interact within a single social-ecological system to cause a shift in that systems behavior, how simultaneous shifts of this kind in several largely discrete social-ecological systems can interact to cause a far larger intersystemic crisis, and how such a larger crisis can then rapidly propagate across multiple system boundaries to the global scale. Case studies of the 2008-2009 financial-energy and food-energy crises illustrate the framework. Suggestions are offered for future research to explore further the frameworks propositions.
Environmental and Resource Economics | 2003
Anne-Sophie Crépin
Recent research in natural sciences shows that the dynamics in boreal forests are much more complex than what many models traditionally used in forestry economics reflect. This essay analyzes some challenges of accounting for such complexity. It shows that the optimal harvesting strategy for forest owners is history dependent and for some states of the forest, more than one strategy may be optimal. This paper confirms earlier literature on shallow lakes and coral reefs and shows that this kind of phenomena seem much more common than previously thought. They are valid for a wide range of ecosystems that cover large surfaces and they do not depend on the choice of some specific function to model the non-linearity. There are also indications that theses results could be obtained even for resources with concave growth if at least one species with non-linear growth affects their dynamics.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2004
Thomas Elmqvist; Fikret Berkes; Carl Folke; Per Angelstam; Anne-Sophie Crépin; Jari Niemelä
Abstract Ecosystems at high latitudes are highly dynamic, influenced by a multitude of large-scale disturbances. Due to global change processes these systems may be expected to be particularly vulnerable, affecting the sustained production of renewable wood resources and abundance of plants and animals on which local cultures depend. In this paper, we assess the implications of new understandings of high northern latitude ecosystems and what must be done to manage systems for resilience. We suggest that the focus of land management should shift from recovery from local disturbance to sustaining ecosystem functions in the face of change and disruption. The role of biodiversity as insurance for allowing a system to reorganize and develop during the disturbance and reorganization phases needs to be addressed in management and policy. We emphasize that the current concepts of ecological reserves and protected areas need to be reconsidered to developp dynamic tools for sustainable management of ecosystems in face of change. Characteristics of what may be considered as customary reserves at high latitudes are often consistent with a more dynamic view of reserves. We suggest new directions for addressing biodiversity management in dynamic landscapes at high latitudes, and provide empirical examples of insights from unconventional perspectives that may help improve the potential for sustainable management of biodiversity and the generation of ecosystem services.
Ecology and Society | 2015
Caroline Schill; Therese Lindahl; Anne-Sophie Crépin
Ecosystems can undergo regime shifts that potentially lead to a substantial decrease in the availability of provisioning ecosystem services. Recent research suggests that the frequency and intensity of regime shifts increase with growing anthropogenic pressure, so understanding the underlying social-ecological dynamics is crucial, particularly in contexts where livelihoods depend heavily on local ecosystem services. In such settings, ecosystem services are often derived from common-pool resources. The limited capacity to predict regime shifts is a major challenge for common-pool resource management, as well as for systematic empirical analysis of individual and group behavior, because of the need for extensive preshift and postshift data. Unsurprisingly, current knowledge is mostly based on theoretical models. We examine behavioral group responses to a latent endogenously driven regime shift in a laboratory experiment. If the group exploited the common-pool resource beyond a certain threshold level, its renewal rate dropped drastically. To determine how the risk of such a latent shift affects resource management and collective action, we compared four experimental treatments in which groups were faced with a latent shift with different probability levels (0.1, 0.5, 0.9, 1.0). Our results suggest that different probability levels do not make people more or less likely to exploit the resource beyond its critical potential threshold. However, when the likelihood of the latent shift is certain or high, people appear more prone to agree initially on a common exploitation strategy, which in turn is a predictor for averting the latent shift. Moreover, risk appears to have a positive effect on collective action, but the magnitude of this effect is influenced by how risk and probabilities are communicated and perceived.
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