Ecology and Society (Dec 2009)

Making Sure you Solve the Right Problem

  • Kim Cartledge,
  • Claudia Dürrwächter,
  • Veronica Hernandez Jimenez,
  • Nick P. Winder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-02903-1402r03
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2
p. r3

Abstract

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Macleod et al. have given us an admirable case study and argued that "... there is an urgent need to create stronger and more transparent, integrated, and adaptive linkages between opening-up and closing down mechanisms at the science-policy interface." Two questions must be addressed: what sorts of managerial reform would be required to achieve this? and Is this likely to happen? A natural subsidiarity makes large institutions more inclined to "closing down" (specification) actions and smaller ones more inclined to open problems up. The method of boundary judgments developed in integrative research could be applied to the science-policy interface but there are political and sociological reasons why this is unlikely to happen. Receptiveness to opening up actions is a prerequisite of innovation. Innovations are suppressed in times of geopolitical and economic stress. The result is often an ill-structured, co-evolutionary dynamic in which the actions of one species or population reduce the fitness of another.

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