Title of article :
Anticipatory modeling of biocomplexity in the Tisza River Basin: First
steps to establish a participatory adaptive framework
Author/Authors :
J. Sendzimir، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , P. Magnuszewski، نويسنده , , b، نويسنده , , Michael P. Balogh، نويسنده , , A. Va´ri d، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Initial successes in flood control in the Tisza River Basin (TRB) have repeatedly given way to surprising and catastrophic reversals over the
past 130 years since implementation of the original Va´sa´rhelyi river engineering plan. Recurrent and parallel crises in economic, ecological and
socio-cultural domains of the TRB suggest systemic linkages far broader than imagined in the economic paradigms that drove the reshaping of
the TRB. Typical of ‘policy resistance’, these problems have ‘wickedly’ resisted repeated efforts to solve them. Future river basin management
needs conceptual and methodological tools to develop more comprehensive models that account for the complexity of the wider diversity of
these systemic linkages and the resultant non-linear dynamics. Biocomplexity is one attempt to elaborate a more comprehensive conceptual paradigm.
This paper describes how the authors applied a method, causal loop diagramming, as a means to graphically examine what aspects of
system structure might generate surprising and counter-intuitive policy reversals characteristic of wicked problems. We applied this method in
advance of collaboration with stakeholders as a means to deepen our intuition about the system’s complexity as a way to better prepare to facilitate
participatory modeling exercises within the Adaptive Management (AM) tradition.
Keywords :
Adaptive management , Feedback loops , Resilience , System dynamics , Conceptual models
Journal title :
Environmental Modelling and Software
Journal title :
Environmental Modelling and Software