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PDF
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Type:
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Journal Article |
Author:
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Schuttenberg, H. Z.; Guth, Heidi K. |
Journal:
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Ecology and Society |
Volume:
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20 |
Page(s):
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Date:
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2015 |
URI:
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https://hdl.handle.net/10535/9752
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Sector:
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Social Organization |
Region:
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Subject(s):
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climate change coproduction coral reefs governance and politics management traditional knowledge
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Abstract:
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"The widespread disconnect between scientific projections of climate change and the implementation of responsive management actions has escalated calls for knowledge production processes able to exercise a stronger voice in decision making. Recently, the concept of coproduction has been championed as a potential answer. The term ‘knowledge coproduction’ is used loosely in the literature to describe an inclusive, iterative approach to creating new information; it is distinguished by its focus on facilitating interactions between stakeholders to develop an integrated or transformational understanding of a sustainability problem. Whether a coproduction process is successful in this integration of science and policy depends on a range of capabilities that should be understood as ‘coproductive capacities.’ We draw on the literature from sustainability science to propose a conceptual framework that specifies the sequential goals of knowledge coproduction and potential sources of coproductive capacity. We apply this framework to examine our experience facilitating the coproduction of a climate change action plan for Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument and World Heritage Site. This framework offers a structure for systematically investigating the capacities, mechanisms, and dynamics of knowledge coproduction and for guiding the design of coproduction processes."
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