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Dive into the research topics where Sergio Rosendo is active.

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Featured researches published by Sergio Rosendo.


Environment and Planning A | 2003

Governance for sustainability: towards a 'thick' analysis of environmental decisionmaking

W. Neil Adger; Katrina Brown; Jenny Fairbrass; Andrew Jordan; Jouni Paavola; Sergio Rosendo; Gill Seyfang

Environmental decisions made by individuals, civil society, and the state involve questions of economic efficiency, environmental effectiveness, equity, and political legitimacy. These four criteria are constitutive of the economic, social, and environmental dimensions of sustainable development, which has become the dominant rhetorical device of environmental governance. We discuss the tendency for disciplinary research to focus on particular subsets of the four criteria, and argue that such a practice promotes solutions that do not acknowledge the dynamics of scale and the heterogeneity of institutional contexts. We advocate an interdisciplinary framework for the analysis of environmental decisionmaking that seeks to identify legitimate and context-sensitive institutional solutions producing equitable, efficient, and effective outcomes. We demonstrate the usefulness of our approach by using it to examine decisions concerning contested nature conservation and multiple-use commons in the management of Hickling Broad in Norfolk in the United Kingdom. We conclude that interdisciplinary approaches enable the generalisation and transfer of lessons in a way that respects the specifics and context of the issue at hand.


Ecology and Society | 2016

Elasticity in ecosystem services : exploring the variable relationship between ecosystems and human well-being

Christina C. Hicks; Katrina Brown; Tomas Chaigneau; Fraser A. Januchowski-Hartley; William W. L. Cheung; Sergio Rosendo; Beatrice Crona; Sarah Coulthard; Chris Sandbrook; Chris T. Perry; Salomão Bandeira; Nyawira A. Muthiga; Björn Schulte-Herbrüggen; Jared O. Bosire; Tim R. McClanahan

Although ecosystem services are increasingly recognized as benefits people obtain from nature, we still have a poor understanding of how they actually enhance multidimensional human well-being, and how well-being is affected by ecosystem change. We develop a concept of “ecosystem service elasticity” (ES elasticity) that describes the sensitivity of human well-being to changes in ecosystems. ES Elasticity is a result of complex social and ecological dynamics and is context dependent, individually variable, and likely to demonstrate nonlinear dynamics such as thresholds and hysteresis. We present a conceptual framework that unpacks the chain of causality from ecosystem stocks through flows, goods, value, and shares to contribute to the well-being of different people. This framework builds on previous conceptualizations, but places multidimensional well-being of different people as the final element. This ultimately disaggregated approach emphasizes how different people access benefits and how benefits match their needs or aspirations. Applying this framework to case studies of individual coastal ecosystem services in East Africa illustrates a wide range of social and ecological factors that can affect ES elasticity. For example, food web and habitat dynamics affect the sensitivity of different fisheries ecosystem services to ecological change. Meanwhile high cultural significance, or lack of alternatives enhance ES elasticity, while social mechanisms that prevent access can reduce elasticity. Mapping out how chains are interlinked illustrates how different types of value and the well-being of different people are linked to each other and to common ecological stocks. We suggest that examining chains for individual ecosystem services can suggest potential interventions aimed at poverty alleviation and sustainable ecosystems while mapping out of interlinkages between chains can help to identify possible ecosystem service trade-offs and winners and losers. We discuss conceptual and practical challenges of applying such a framework and conclude on its utility as a heuristic for structuring interdisciplinary analysis of ecosystem services and human well-being.


Ecology and Society | 2018

Stories in social-ecological knowledge cocreation

Diego Galafassi; Matilda Thyresson; Sergio Rosendo; Tomas Chaigneau; Salomão Bandeira; Lydiah Munyi; Ida Gabrielsson; Katrina Brown

Transformations in social-ecological systems to overturn poverty and ecosystem degradation require approaches to knowledge synthesis that are inclusive and open to creative innovation. In this pape ...


Earth’s Future | 2017

Assessment of Coastal Governance for Climate Change Adaptation in Kenya

Lenice Ojwang; Sergio Rosendo; Louis Celliers; David Obura; Anastasia Muiti; James Kamula; Maina Mwangi

The coastline of Kenya already experiences effects of climate change, adding to existing pressures such as urbanization. Integrated coastal management (ICM) is increasingly recognized as a key policy response to deal with the multiple challenges facing coastal zones, including climate change. It can create an enabling governance environment for effective local action on climate change by facilitating a structured approach to dealing with coastal issues. It encompasses the actions of a wide range of actors, including local governments close to people and their activities affected by climate change. Functioning ICM also offers opportunities for reducing risks and building resilience. This article applied a modified capitals approach framework (CAF), consisting of five “capitals,” to assess the status of county government capacity to respond to climate change within the context of coastal governance in three county governments in Kenya. The baseline was defined in terms of governance relating to the implementation of the interrelated policy systems of ICM and coastal climate change adaptation (CCA). The CAF framework provided a systematic approach to building a governance baseline against which to assess the progress of county governments in responding to climate change. It identified gaps in human capacity, financial resource allocation to adaptation and access to climate change information. Furthermore, it showed that having well-developed institutions, including regulatory frameworks at the national level can facilitate but does not automatically enable adaptation at the county level.


Science | 2002

Economic reasons for conserving wild nature

Andrew Balmford; Aaron Bruner; Philip Cooper; Robert Costanza; Stephen Farber; Rhys E. Green; Martin Jenkins; Paul Jefferiss; Valma Jessamy; Joah R. Madden; Kat Munro; Norman Myers; Shahid Naeem; Jouni Paavola; Matthew Rayment; Sergio Rosendo; Joan Roughgarden; Kate Trumper; R. Kerry Turner


Environmental Conservation | 2011

Applying the Ecosystem Services Concept to Poverty Alleviation: The Need to Disaggregate Human Well-Being

Katrina Brown; Sergio Rosendo; Robert S. Pomeroy


Environmental Science & Policy | 2010

Policy misfits, climate change and cross-scale vulnerability in coastal Africa: how development projects undermine resilience

Matthew Bunce; Katrina Brown; Sergio Rosendo


Forest Ecology and Management | 2008

Forest-related partnerships in Brazilian Amazonia : There is more to sustainable forest management than reduced impact logging

M.A.F. Ros-Tonen; Tinde van Andel; Carla Morsello; Kei Otsuki; Sergio Rosendo; Imme Scholz


Environment, Development and Sustainability | 2010

Perceptions of climate change, multiple stressors and livelihoods on marginal African coasts

Matthew Bunce; Sergio Rosendo; Katrina Brown


The Geographical Journal | 2000

The institutional architecture of extractive reserves in Rondonia, Brazil

Katrina Brown; Sergio Rosendo

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Salomão Bandeira

Eduardo Mondlane University

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Andrew Jordan

University of East Anglia

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Gill Seyfang

University of East Anglia

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Jenny Fairbrass

University of East Anglia

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