ABSTRACT

Issues of sustainability and increased competition over coastal resources are changing practices of resource management. Societal concerns about environmental degradation and loss of coastal resources have steadily increased, while other issues like food security, biodiversity, and climate change, have emerged. A full set of social, ecological and economic objectives to address these issues are recognized, but there is no agreement on how to implement them. This interdisciplinary and "big picture book" – through a series of vivid case studies from environments throughout the world – suggests how to achieve these new resource management principles in practical, accessible ways.

chapter 1|22 pages

Introduction: The Ongoing Agenda

chapter 3|23 pages

Social–Ecological Systems

chapter 4|23 pages

Resilience: Health of Social–Ecological

chapter 5|25 pages

Can Commons Be Managed?

chapter 7|25 pages

Coastal Zone: Reconciling Multiple Uses

chapter 11|24 pages

Social–Ecological System-based Management

chapter 12|20 pages

An Interdisciplinary Science for the Coast