Prompted by a series of increasingly destructive, expensive, and highly visible wildfire crises in human communities across the globe, a robust body of scholarship has emerged to theorize, conceptualize, and measure community-level resilience to wildfires. To date, however, insufficient consideration has been given to wildfire resilience as a process of adaptive governance mediated by institutions at multiple scales. Here we explore the possibilities for addressing this gap through an analysis of wildfire resilience among wildland-urban interface communities in the western region of the United States. We re-engage important but overlooked components of social-ecological system resilience by situating rural communities within their stateto national-level institutional contexts; we then analyze two communities in Nevada and New Mexico in terms of their institutional settings and responses to recent wildfire events. We frame our analysis around the concepts of scale matching, linking within and across scales, and institutional flexibility.
Re-Envisioning Community-Wildfire Relations in the U.S. West as Adaptive Governance
J. Abrams,M. Knapp,T. Paveglio,A. Ellison,C. Moseley,Max Nielsen-Pincus,M. Carroll
Published 2015 in Ecology and Society
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- Publication year
2015
- Venue
Ecology and Society
- Publication date
2015-09-16
- Fields of study
Sociology, Economics, Environmental Science
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