Navigating Ecological Transformation: Resist–Accept–Direct as a Path to a New Resource Management Paradigm

Author:

Schuurman Gregor W1ORCID,Cole David N2,Cravens Amanda E3,Covington Scott4,Crausbay Shelley D56ORCID,Hoffman Cat Hawkins7,Lawrence David J1,Magness Dawn R8ORCID,Morton John M9,Nelson Elizabeth A10,O'Malley Robin11

Affiliation:

1. US National Park Service Climate Change Response Program, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States

2. US Forest Service, Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute, Missoula, Montana, United States

3. US Geological Survey's Social and Economic Analysis Branch, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States

4. US Fish and Wildlife Service's National Wildlife Refuge System, Falls Church, Virginia, United States

5. Conservation Science Partners, Inc, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States

6. US Geological Survey North Central Climate Adaptation Science Center, Boulder, Colorado, United States

7. Supervisory natural resource specialist and program manager, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States

8. US Fish and Wildlife Service, Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, Soldotna, Alaska, United States

9. Alaska Wildlife Alliance, Anchorage, Alaska, United States

10. Science advisor on conservation and climate change at Parks Canada, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

11. USGS North Central Climate Adaptation Science Center, and is based in Fort Collins, Colorado, United States

Abstract

Abstract Natural resource managers worldwide face a growing challenge: Intensifying global change increasingly propels ecosystems toward irreversible ecological transformations. This nonstationarity challenges traditional conservation goals and human well-being. It also confounds a longstanding management paradigm that assumes a future that reflects the past. As once-familiar ecological conditions disappear, managers need a new approach to guide decision-making. The resist–accept–direct (RAD) framework, designed for and by managers, identifies the options managers have for responding and helps them make informed, purposeful, and strategic choices in this context. Moving beyond the diversity and complexity of myriad emerging frameworks, RAD is a simple, flexible, decision-making tool that encompasses the entire decision space for stewarding transforming ecosystems. Through shared application of a common approach, the RAD framework can help the wider natural resource management and research community build the robust, shared habits of mind necessary for a new, twenty-first-century natural resource management paradigm.

Funder

The Wildlife Society

South Central Climate Adaptation Science Center

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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