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Dive into the research topics where Damon M. Hall is active.

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Featured researches published by Damon M. Hall.


Conservation Biology | 2010

Obscuring ecosystem function with application of the ecosystem services concept.

Markus J. Peterson; Damon M. Hall; Andrea M. Feldpausch-Parker; Tarla Rai Peterson

Conservationists commonly have framed ecological concerns in economic terms to garner political support for conservation and to increase public interest in preserving global biodiversity. Beginning in the early 1980s, conservation biologists adapted neoliberal economics to reframe ecosystem functions and related biodiversity as ecosystem services to humanity. Despite the economic success of programs such as the Catskill/Delaware watershed management plan in the United States and the creation of global carbon exchanges, todays marketplace often fails to adequately protect biodiversity. We used a Marxist critique to explain one reason for this failure and to suggest a possible, if partial, response. Reframing ecosystem functions as economic services does not address the political problem of commodification. Just as it obscures the labor of human workers, commodification obscures the importance of the biota (ecosystem workers) and related abiotic factors that contribute to ecosystem functions. This erasure of work done by ecosystems impedes public understanding of biodiversity. Odum and Odums radical suggestion to use the language of ecosystems (i.e., emergy or energy memory) to describe economies, rather than using the language of economics (i.e., services) to describe ecosystems, reverses this erasure of the ecosystem worker. Considering the current dominance of economic forces, however, implementing such solutions would require social changes similar in magnitude to those that occurred during the 1960s. Niklas Luhmann argues that such substantive, yet rapid, social change requires synergy among multiple societal function systems (i.e., economy, education, law, politics, religion, science), rather than reliance on a single social sphere, such as the economy. Explicitly presenting ecosystem services as discreet and incomplete aspects of ecosystem functions not only allows potential economic and environmental benefits associated with ecosystem services, but also enables the social and political changes required to ensure valuation of ecosystem functions and related biodiversity in ways beyond their measurement on an economic scale.


Environmental Communication-a Journal of Nature and Culture | 2012

Creating a Place for Environmental Communication Research in Sustainability Science

Laura Lindenfeld; Damon M. Hall; Bridie McGreavy; Linda Silka; David D. Hart

Environmental communication scholarship is critical to the success of sustainability science. This essay outlines three pressing areas of intersection between the two fields. First, environmental communication scholarship on public participation processes is essential for sustainability sciences efforts to link knowledge with action. Second, sustainability science requires collaborations across diverse institutional and disciplinary boundaries. Environmental communication can play a vital role in reorganizing the production and application of disciplinary knowledge. Third, science communication bridges environmental communication and sustainability science and can move communication processes away from one-way transmission models toward engaged approaches. The essay draws on Maines Sustainability Solutions Initiative to illustrate key outcomes of a large project that has integrated environmental communication into sustainability science.


Environmental Communication-a Journal of Nature and Culture | 2013

Spreading the News on Carbon Capture and Storage: A State-Level Comparison of US Media

Andrea M. Feldpausch-Parker; Chara J. Ragland; Leah L. Melnick; Rumika Chaudhry; Damon M. Hall; Tarla Rai Peterson; Jennie C. Stephens; Elizabeth J. Wilson

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) has received abundant federal support in the USA as an energy technology to mitigate climate change, yet its position within the energy system remains uncertain. Because media play a significant role in shaping public conversations about science and technology, we analyzed media portrayal of CCS in newspapers from four strategically selected states. We grounded the analysis in Luhmanns theory of social functions, operationalized through the socio-political evaluation of energy deployment (SPEED) framework. Coverage emphasized economic, political/legal, and technical functions and focused on benefits, rather than risks of adoption. Although news coverage connected CCS with climate change, the connection was constrained by political/legal functions. Media responses to this constraint indicate how communication across multiple social functions may influence deployment of energy technologies.


Environmental Politics | 2016

Defending dissensus: participatory governance and the politics of water measurement in Montana’s Yellowstone River Basin

Matthew B. Anderson; Damon M. Hall; Jamie McEvoy; Susan J. Gilbertz; Lucas Ward; Alyson Rode

ABSTRACT The role of a particular aspect of collaboration, dissensus, in stimulating critical reconsideration of ‘prior appropriation’, a historically hegemonic condition related to water rights in the western United States, is examined via a collaborative planning effort in Montana. Consensual support for a water-use measuring proposal was undermined by strong libertarian resistance to governmental regulation, and an unwavering embrace of the status quo. However, based on insights from scholars engaged in the ‘post-political’ dimensions of contemporary forms of rule – dissensus – understood as the manifestation of consensus-forestalling disagreement articulated between oppositional voices – is revealed as a condition to be actively nurtured, rather than purged. This case reveals how dissensus can open discursive spaces for hegemony-disrupting modes of inquiry, alternative perspectives, and innovative possibilities, even among sanctioned participant voices operating within otherwise established, depoliticized governing arenas. The study thus deepens our understanding of the complex political dynamics of participatory water planning.


Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning | 2017

Prior appropriation and water planning reform in Montana’s Yellowstone River Basin: path dependency or boundary object?

Matthew B. Anderson; Lucas Ward; Susan J. Gilbertz; Jamie McEvoy; Damon M. Hall

ABSTRACT This study deepens our understanding of the institutional limitations of participatory water planning. Based on an analysis of a participatory planning effort in Montana, U.S.A., we examine the ways in which prior appropriation (PA), an established legal doctrine based on privatized water rights, both constrains and enables the effective functioning of this mode of governance to enhance water conservation practices. In one situation, a state-led proposal to require water-use measuring was undermined by strong libertarian resistance to governmental regulation. As an expression of path dependency, PA redirected the deliberations back to the status-quo. Yet, in another state-led proposal, PA functioned as a boundary object that helped garner consensual support for what is effectively an alternative water sharing plan based on ‘shared sacrifice.’ In this second case, PA functioned as a pragmatic means to facilitate conservation practices to address future projections of growing water scarcity and drought. The study empirically examines the discursive framework of both policy recommendations and the mechanisms that led to their seemingly divergent receptions from planning participants. Evidence is drawn from a systematic content analysis of video recording transcriptions, ethnographic notes taken during meetings, and key interactions observed among planning participants and the research team.


Environmental Communication-a Journal of Nature and Culture | 2017

Voice as Entry to Agriculturalists’ Conservationist Identity: A Cultural Inventory of the Yellowstone River

Cristi C. Horton; Damon M. Hall; Susan J. Gilbertz; Tarla Rai Peterson

ABSTRACT We explored the communicative construction of a conservationist identity among primary producers by excavating voices of agriculturalists operating along the Yellowstone River (Montana, USA). We used a cultural inventory approach to discover and then listen to informants’ voices as they constructed their conservation identity. Those who self-identified as conservationists talked about their ecological and social responsibilities, and described challenges they faced in protecting individual resources and system processes of the watershed. For these agriculturalists, conservation and production are inextricably linked, and enable them to provide a sustainable resource base for future generations. Insight from these voices enhances understanding of what sustainability could mean to those who self-identify as both conservationists and primary producers.


Sustainability Science | 2017

Social-ecological system resonance: a theoretical framework for brokering sustainable solutions

Damon M. Hall; Andrea M. Feldpausch-Parker; Tarla Rai Peterson; Jennie C. Stephens; Elizabeth J. Wilson

Sustainability science is a solution-oriented discipline. Yet, there are few theory-rich discussions about how this orientation structures the efforts of sustainability science. We argue that Niklas Luhmann’s social system theory, which explains how societies communicate problems, conceptualize solutions, and identify pathways towards implementation of solutions, is valuable in explaining the general structure of sustainability science. From Luhmann, we focus on two key concepts. First, his notion of resonance offers us a way to account for how sustainability science has attended and responded to environmental risks. As a product of resonance, we reveal solution-oriented research as the strategic coordination of capacities, resources, and information. Second, Luhmann’s interests in self-organizing processes explain how sustainability science can simultaneously advance multiple innovations. The value logic that supports this multiplicity of self-organizing activities as a recognition that human and natural systems are complex coupled and mutually influencing. To give form to this theoretical framework, we offer case evidence of renewable energy policy formation in Texas. Although the state’s wealth is rooted in a fossil-fuel heritage, Texas generates more electricity from wind than any US state. It is politically antagonistic towards climate-change policy, yet the state’s reception of wind energy technology illustrates how social and environmental systems can be strategically aligned to generate solutions that address diverse needs simultaneously. This case demonstrates that isolating climate change—as politicians do as a separate and discrete problem—is incapable of achieving sustainable solutions, and resonance offers researchers a framework for conceptualizing, designing, and communicating meaningfully integrated actions.


Energy Policy | 2010

Policy stakeholders and deployment of wind power in the sub-national context: A comparison of four U.S. states

Miriam Fischlein; Joel Larson; Damon M. Hall; Rumika Chaudhry; Tarla Rai Peterson; Jennie C. Stephens; Elizabeth J. Wilson


Conservation Biology | 2017

The city as a refuge for insect pollinators

Damon M. Hall; Gerardo R. Camilo; Rebecca K. Tonietto; Jeff Ollerton; Karin Ahrné; Mike Arduser; John S. Ascher; Katherine C. R. Baldock; Robert A Fowler; Gordon W. Frankie; Dave Goulson; Bengt Gunnarsson; Mick E. Hanley; Janet Jackson; Gail A. Langellotto; David Lowenstein; Emily S. Minor; Stacy M. Philpott; Simon G. Potts; Muzafar Hussain Sirohi; Edward M. Spevak; Graham N. Stone; Caragh G. Threlfall


Geomorphology | 2016

An evolving research agenda for human–coastal systems

Eli Dalton Lazarus; Michael A. Ellis; A. Brad Murray; Damon M. Hall

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Susan J. Gilbertz

Montana State University Billings

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Lucas Ward

Rocky Mountain College

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Matthew B. Anderson

Eastern Washington University

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Andrea M. Feldpausch-Parker

State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry

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Jamie McEvoy

Montana State University

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