Coder,Authors,Book Authors,Book Editors,Book Group Authors,Author Full Names,Book Author Full Names,Group Authors,Article Title,Source Title,Book Series Title,Book Series Subtitle,Language,Document Type,Conference Title,Conference Date,Conference Location,Conference Sponsor,Conference Host,Author Keywords,Keywords Plus,Abstract,Addresses,Affiliations,Reprint Addresses,Email Addresses,Researcher Ids,ORCIDs,Funding Orgs,Funding Name Preferred,Funding Text,Cited References,Cited Reference Count,"Times Cited, WoS Core","Times Cited, All Databases",180 Day Usage Count,Since 2013 Usage Count,Publisher,Publisher City,Publisher Address,ISSN,eISSN,ISBN,Journal Abbreviation,Journal ISO Abbreviation,Publication Date,Publication Year,Volume,Issue,Part Number,Supplement,Special Issue,Meeting Abstract,Start Page,End Page,Article Number,DOI,DOI Link,Book DOI,Early Access Date,Number of Pages,WoS Categories,Web of Science Index,Research Areas,IDS Number,Pubmed Id,Open Access Designations,Highly Cited Status,Hot Paper Status,Date of Export,UT (Unique WOS ID),Web of Science Record,multiple,Single or multiple vision,Visions,Nature,Transformation,Include (y/no),Comments - screeners Sandra,"Abrams, J; Bliss, JC",,,,"Abrams, Jesse; Bliss, John C.",,,"Amenity Landownership, Land Use Change, and the Re-Creation of Working Landscapes",SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES,,,,,,,,,,,,"In recent years the working landscape concept has risen to prominence in popular, academic, and policy discourse surrounding conservation of both natural and cultural values in inhabited landscapes. Despite its implied reconciliation of commodity production and environmental protection, this concept remains contested terrain, masking tensions over land use practices and understandings of human-nature relations. Here we draw on a case study of landownership and land use change in remote, rural Wallowa County, Oregon to explore how working landscapes are envisioned and enacted by various actors. The arrival of landowning amenity migrants, many of whom actively endorsed a working landscape vision, resulted in subtle but significant transformations in land use practices and altered opportunities for local producers. The working landscape ideal, while replete with tensions and contradictions, nevertheless functioned as an important alternative vision to the rural gentrification characteristic of other scenic Western environs.",,,,,"Abrams, Jesse/N-3937-2017","Abrams, Jesse/0000-0002-1937-4606",,,,,,,,,,,,,0894-1920,1521-0723,,,,1-Jul,2013,26,7,,,,,845,859,,10.1080/08941920.2012.719587,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000320081400007,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Sandra,"Aitken, R; Watkins, L; Kemp, S",,,,"Aitken, Rob; Watkins, Leah; Kemp, Sophie",,,Envisioning a sustainable consumption future,YOUNG CONSUMERS,,,,,,,,,,,,"Purpose The purpose of this study is to understand what a sustainable future would look like and the nature of the changes needed to achieve it. Continued reliance on economic growth to meet the demands of a growing population is unsustainable and comes at an unacceptable social and environmental cost. Given these increasing demands, radical changes to present practices of production and consumption are needed to enable a sustainable future. Design/methodology/approach To address this the projective technique of backcasting was used in a pilot study to explore student visions of a sustainable future. An integrative framework comprising housing, clothing, travel, leisure and food provided the structure for six focus group discussions. Findings Thematic analysis identified three key characteristics of a sustainable consumption future, namely, efficiency, sharing and community and three critical elements, namely, the role of government, education and technology, necessary for its achievement. Research limitations/implications - Demonstrating the usefulness of backcasting will encourage its application in a wider range of consumption contexts with a broader range of participants. The vision of a sustainable future provides a blueprint that identifies its nature, and the basis upon which decisions to achieve it can be made. Originality/value The research introduces the technique of backcasting and demonstrates its usefulness when dealing with complex problems, where there is a need for radical change and when the status quo is not sustainable. Unexpectedly, results suggest a commitment to prosocial values, collaborative experience, collective action and the importance of community. Research and social implications demonstrating the usefulness of backcasting will encourage its application in a wider range of consumption contexts with a broader range of participants. The vision of a sustainable future provides a blueprint that identifies its nature, and the basis upon which decisions to achieve it can be made.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1758-7212,1747-3616,,,,15-Nov,2019,20,4,,,SI,,299,313,,10.1108/YC-12-2018-0905,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000497526800005,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Sandra,"Albrechts, L",,"Concilio, G; Rizzo, F",,"Albrechts, Louis",,,Strategic Planning as Governance of Long-Lasting Transformative Practices,HUMAN SMART CITIES: RETHINKING THE INTERPLAY BETWEEN DESIGN AND PLANNING,Urban and Landscape Perspectives,,,,,,,,,,,"This chapter argues that new conceptual infrastructures and transformative practices are needed to cope with contemporary environmental and societal challenges. It reflects first on the nature and characteristics of transformative practices that construct images/visions of a preferred innovative structural outcome and opportunities for their implementation. The chapter then deals with the political-economic context and proposes envisioning as a learning process, discussing (among other things) transformative triggers and the power of visions in complex planning contexts. This is followed by a brief description of two cases, Hasselt and Antwerp, which are relevant in terms of transformative actions and visions. Finally, it provides ingredients for more radical strategic planning as the governance of collective affairs, which requires planners to cultivate activist modes of planning and to be more than navigators keeping the ship on course.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,978-3-319-33024-2; 978-3-319-33022-8,,,,2016,,,,,,,3,20,,10.1007/978-3-319-33024-2_1,0,10.1007/978-3-319-33024-2,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000398098700002,0,,,1,1,1,yes,"no access, it is a book chapter that reflects on he nature and characteristics of transformative practices that construct images/visions of a preferred innovative structural outcome and opportunities for their implementation and transformative triggers and the power of visions in complex planning contexts. Give two cases elevant in terms of transformative actions and visions - but unable to access these" Sandra,"Arkema, KK; Rogers, LA; Toft, J; Mesher, A; Wyatt, KH; Albury-Smith, S; Moultrie, S; Ruckelshaus, MH; Samhouri, J",,,,"Arkema, Katie K.; Rogers, Lauren A.; Toft, Jodie; Mesher, Alex; Wyatt, Katherine H.; Albury-Smith, Shenique; Moultrie, Stacey; Ruckelshaus, Mary H.; Samhouri, Jameal",,,Integrating fisheries management into sustainable development planning,ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Scientific understanding of coupled social-ecological systems has grown considerably in recent years, especially for fisheries and ocean management. However, few studies test the utility of approaches that capture multiple interactions between people and ecosystems within a real-world planning process. We developed a set of quantitative models that estimate catch and revenue from the Caribbean spiny lobster (Panulirus argus) fishery as a function of coastal habitat extent and quality. We applied the models iteratively, with input from stakeholders, to assess fisheries outcomes of alternative scenarios for integrated coastal zone management in Belize and sustainable development planning in The Bahamas. We found that integrated management reduces risk to nursery habitats from multiple coastal and marine activities and increases lobster catch and revenue by large margins. In Belize, siting activities such as marine transportation and tourism development to explicitly reduce risk to nursery and adult habitats enhanced returns from the lobster fishery. In The Bahamas, strategic investments in economic development that focused on updating existing infrastructure, such as roads, rather than expanding the footprint of development, increased the catch of lobster by approximately half again as much relative to a business as usual scenario. Our findings show how models that link spatial information about coastal habitats and the dynamics of a key fishery can inform expected change in catch and revenue as a result of coastal management. In addition to strengthening stakeholder understanding of social-ecological relationships and highlighting national-scale outcomes of regional development decisions, modeled results allowed us to transparently and effectively improve coastal plans to achieve the goals of the citizens and governments of Belize and The Bahamas. These cases illustrate how models that account for relationships between development, nursery habitats, and fishing catch and revenue can elevate the importance of fisheries management in national development decisions.",,,,,,"Rogers, Lauren/0000-0003-3305-6441",,,,,,,,,,,,,1708-3087,,,,,JUL,2019,24,2,,,,,,,1,10.5751/ES-10630-240201,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000482712400002,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Sandra,"Ashley, R; Lundy, L; Ward, S; Shaffer, P; Walker, L; Morgan, C; Saul, A; Wong, T; Moore, S",,,,"Ashley, Richard; Lundy, Lian; Ward, Sarah; Shaffer, Paul; Walker, Louise; Morgan, Celeste; Saul, Adrian; Wong, Tony; Moore, Sarah",,,Water-sensitive urban design: opportunities for the UK,PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS-MUNICIPAL ENGINEER,,,,,,,,,,,,"Water-sensitive urban design (WSUD) is a concept that is gaining support as a means to manage urban water systems in an integrated way through the better positioning of the topic of water in urban planning and design processes. Water-sensitive urban design is emerging in the UK and this paper sets the scene and identifies the opportunities and constraints from a UK perspective. Recent developments in integrated water management, ecosystem services and multifunctional land use provide new opportunities for getting more for less'. These can range from seeing all forms of water as a resource, exploiting opportunities to contribute to the green and blue infrastructure agendas, resilience to climate and other changes. This paper draws on international experience as to how water-sensitive urban design can deliver opportunities; mitigate the urban development challenges; implement and support institutional, regulatory and practical opportunities and demonstrate the benefits of taking a water-sensitive urban design approach in the UK. The key requirements for delivery are highlighted and a proposed vision for water-sensitive urban design in the UK outlined.",,,,,"Ward, Sarah/AAK-5052-2020; Ward, Sarah/Q-2728-2015; Walker, Louise/K-5423-2015","Ward, Sarah/0000-0002-1432-4204; Ward, Sarah/0000-0002-1432-4204; Walker, Anne Louise/0000-0001-8312-7987",,,,,,,,,,,,,0965-0903,1751-7699,,,,JUN,2013,166,2,,,,,65,76,,10.1680/muen.12.00046,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000322063100002,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Sandra,"Attolico, A; Smaldone, R",,,,"Attolico, Alessandro; Smaldone, Rosalia",,,The #weResilient strategy for downscaling local resilience and sustainable development: the Potenza province and municipalities of Potenza and Pignola case,DISASTER PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT,,,,,,,,,,,,"Purpose The purpose of this paper is to assess the progresses made by the Potenza province in implementing #weResilient strategy, a risk-informed sustainable development policy-making action at territorial/local levels based on a structural combination of environmental sustainability, territorial safety and climate change contrasting policies; results obtained in supporting and coordinating the municipalities of the provincial territory for creating local conditions to manage risks and sustainable development with a multiscale and multilevel holistic approach based on a wide-area outlook and so contributing directly to the SFDRR Target E, SDGs 11 and 13 and to other goals and targets; The effectiveness of the accountability system on which the approach is based. Design/methodology/approach The conceptual basis: A strong governance based on multi-stakeholder and community engagement; The interdisciplinary nature of risk; Enhancing local resilience is an essential pre-condition for achieving all of the SDGs; Downscaling the experience of Potenza Province to the urban context; 10;The design: Description of #weResilient, the multiscale and multilevel approach in Local Resilience and sustainable development adopted by the Province of Potenza: the Vision and institutional commitment; the accountability; the multi-stakeholder engagement; community and people-centered iaction; the achieved results; the critical points. Description and analysis of the performed supportive actions to the municipalities with a subsidiary and wide-area approach. Findings A significant progress in establishing the basis for a risk-informed decision-making at local level; Further significant progresses in promoting inclusive Resilience across the provincial territory; Progress in Implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction and disaster risk-informed Sustainable Development at local level, including in support of the 2030 Agenda, the Paris Agreement and the New Urban Agenda. Achievements and progresses made in local communities engagement; Achievements in performing actions for including communities and people in relevant institutional decision making processes, building capacities, developing capabilities, raising awareness, increasing political will and public support in local disaster risk reduction and achievement of the SDGs. Research limitations/implications The paper is a field-testing of the implementation results of the #weResilient strategy, a risk-informed sustainable development policy-making action at territorial/local levels based on a structural combination of environmental sustainability, territorial safety and climate change contrasting policies; of the coherence of the multiscale and multilevel approach in integrating risk informed and sustainable development pathways; of the improved governance at urban level thanks to the downscaling of the strategy. Practical implications Transforming DRR and Resilience to disasters into real structural policy-making and actions to be implemented by coordinating territorial and urban development and land-use, with a wide area vision and holistic approach is crucial for the effectiveness of the territorial sustainable development. Moreover, participatory mechanisms can boost althe political will and consequently the related public support. The bottom-up approaches, especially when structured on well defined and clear strategies and supported by concrete actions, are a strategic tool for enhancing the institutional commitment and for enriching the implementation paths also with additional and innovative strategic solution. Social implications In the #weResilient strategy implementation most of the efforts have been devoted to setting-up a complex system of progressive engagement having the main purpose of entrusting and engaging key-actors and community in the institutional policy-making regarding territorial and urban sustainable and resilient development. Engaging community in decision-making processes allows governments to tap into wider perspectives and potential solutions to improve decisions, services and actions. At the same time, it provides the basis for productive relationships, improved dialogue, increased sense of belonging and, ultimately, concrete better democracy. Originality/value Multiscale and multilevel holistic approaches in downscaling local well defined Resilience and Sustainable Development integrated strategies (#weResilient) provide for the best approach in terms of future growth. Setting a vision, outlining a strategy and implementing actions on those elements with multiscale and holistic approaches is key- success of every local long-term development; various worldwide leading experiences demonstrated by particularly shining governments are a tangible proof of it. So, the value of this work is to illustrate a concrete example of translation of words into actions so to provide guidance and inspiration to other worldwide governments in performing similar path.",,,,,,"Attolico, Alessandro/0000-0001-6137-8179",,,,,,,,,,,,,0965-3562,1758-6100,,,,17-Jul,2020,29,5,,,SI,,793,810,,10.1108/DPM-04-2020-0130,0,,Oct-20,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000581851600001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Sandra,"Batisse, M",,,,"Batisse, M",,,Biosphere reserves and regional planning: A prospective vision,NATURE & RESOURCES,,,,,,,,,,,,"When looking broadly at the current picture of the world's land surface, it appears that three major types of land use can be recognized: urbanized areas, areas of intensive agricultural production, and areas that are more or less 'natural', with a low human density. At the present time, rapid changes in land occupation resulting from generalized urban growth and from contrasted trends in agricultural practices are taking place everywhere. The Mediterranean basin, with its different demographic and socio-economic conditions in the north and in the south and east is to a large extent representative of this world-wide trend. Using the experience of the Blue Plan, which combines systemic analysis and future-oriented approaches to study the interactions between demography, natural resources, environment and development, simple contrasted scenarios can be built to explore changes in the three types of land use around this entire basin. This exercise shows that in a 'sustainable development' scenario, the biosphere reserve type of approach provides a favourable counterpart to urbanization and to intensive agriculture, resulting in a more balanced use of land at the regional scale, and leading in particular to lower pressure towards urbanization and to higher standards of living in the more natural areas of the countries concerned.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,0028-0844,,,,,,1996,32,3,,,,,20,30,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:A1996XC97400005,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Sandra,"Bell, M; Evans, DM",,,,"Bell, M; Evans, DM",,,"Greeting ''the heart of England'' - Redemptive science, citizenship, and ''symbol of hope for the nation''",ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D-SOCIETY & SPACE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Within the context of contemporary global environmental concerns the National Forest builds upon culturally specific interpretations of nature to construct a new national landscape of unprecedented scale for the next millennium. As a creative rather than solely a conservationist strategy, its ambitious multipurpose ideals link closely with broader political, scientific, and popular debates on economic investment, social improvement, and environmental enhancement. In this ,paper we explore the nature - society relations which underpin the Forest vision. These are examined by reference to the planning design with its supposedly radical approach to environmental transformation; the distinctive environmental aesthetic including the ecological principles and cultural designs on which it is based; and the forms of participation on which this aesthetic depends, notably the emphasis placed upon partnership from international to local scales and, building on Agenda 21, the promotion of environmental citizenship. We examine the meanings of participation in practice and their links with flexibility, accountability, and control. The changing relations between participation, professional knowledge, and power are also explored, together with the implications for citizenship.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,0263-7758,,,,,JUN,1997,15,3,,,,,257,279,,10.1068/d150257,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:A1997XH12700002,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Sandra,"Beres, BL; Hatfield, JL; Kirkegaard, JA; Eigenbrode, SD; Pan, WL; Lollato, RP; Hunt, JR; Strydhorst, S; Porker, K; Lyon, D; Ransom, J; Wiersma, J",,,,"Beres, Brian L.; Hatfield, Jerry L.; Kirkegaard, John A.; Eigenbrode, Sanford D.; Pan, William L.; Lollato, Romulo P.; Hunt, James R.; Strydhorst, Sheri; Porker, Kenton; Lyon, Drew; Ransom, Joel; Wiersma, Jochum",,,Toward a Better Understanding of Genotype x Environment x Management Interactions-A Global Wheat Initiative Agronomic Research Strategy,FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE,,,,,,,,,,,,"The Wheat Initiative (WI) and the WI Expert Working Group (EWG) for Agronomy () were formed with a collective goal to coordinate global wheat research efforts to increase wheat production, quality, and sustainability to advance food security and safety under changing climate conditions. The Agronomy EWG is responsive to the WI's research need, A knowledge exchange strategy to ensure uptake of innovations on farm and to update scientists on changing field realities. The Agronomy EWG aims to consolidate global expertise for agronomy with a focus on wheat production systems. The overarching approach is to develop and adopt a systems-agronomy framework relevant to any wheat production system. It first establishes the scale of current yield gaps, identifies defensible benchmarks, and takes a holistic approach to understand and overcome exploitable yield gaps to complement genetic increases in potential yield. New opportunities to increase productivity will be sought by exploiting future Genotype x Environment x Management synergies in different wheat systems. To identify research gaps and opportunities for collaboration among different wheat producing regions, the EWG compiled a comprehensive database of currently funded wheat agronomy research (n= 782) in countries representing a large proportion of the wheat grown in the world. The yield gap analysis and research database positions the EWG to influence priorities for wheat agronomy research in member countries that would facilitate collaborations, minimize duplication, and maximize the global impact on wheat production systems. This paper outlines a vision for a global WI agronomic research strategy and discusses activities to date. The focus of the WI-EWG is to transform the agronomic research approach in wheat cropping systems, which will be applicable to other crop species.",,,,,"Strydhorst, Sheri/Z-5906-2019; Kirkegaard, John/A-1449-2010; Wiersma, Jochum/ABI-2516-2020","Kirkegaard, John/0000-0001-5982-9508; Wiersma, Jochum/0000-0001-8548-4937; Porker, Kenton/0000-0002-3538-8549; Lollato, Romulo/0000-0001-8615-0074; Hunt, James/0000-0003-2884-5622",,,,,,,,,,,,,1664-462X,,,,,16-Jun,2020,11,,,,,,,,828,10.3389/fpls.2020.00828,0,,,,,,,,32612624,,,,,WOS:000546100400001,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Sandra,"Bergeret, A; Lavorel, S",,,,"Bergeret, Agnes; Lavorel, Sandra",,,Stakeholder visions for trajectories of adaptation to climate change in the Drome catchment (French Alps),REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Analyzing actions of climate change adaptation as envisaged by stakeholders enables to draw a shared vision or, conversely, alternative pathways imagined for a territory; and to question their inclusion in governance. This article focuses on the adaptation levers devised by 170 local stakeholders (state services, elected officials, agriculture, forest and river technicians, farmers, inhabitants) in the French Drome Valley. Data was collected through a visioning process combining interviews and workshops designed around three collectively identified structuring issues: quality of life, agricultural production and tourist attractiveness. We characterized the 300 proposed actions according to: (1) stage of implementation, (2) the degree of socio-ecological transformation they imply, (3) the type of strategy for co-production of associated Nature's Contributions to Adaptation through: ecosystem management, mobilization, social appreciation, and associated social dynamics (socio-economic demand, governance, knowledge systems), (4) proponents' roles in governance of the socio-ecological system, (5) the repertoire of values to which they participate as part of collective visions for a desirable future. We identified three typical visions and associated normative goals: sustainable development, ecological and social transition, and ecosystem wealth and self-sufficiency. Each vision was characterized by the set of actions proposed by stakeholders as a pathway to the vision. We compare these three typical pathways with actions already implemented (the current trajectory), and with actions proposed according to the social roles of participants to discuss the cross-cutting nature of desired actions, and convergences or divergences across stakeholders according to their involvement and capacity to influence ecosystem management.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1436-3798,1436-378X,,,,MAR,2022,22,1,,,,,,,33,10.1007/s10113-022-01876-5,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000763411700004,0,yes,,1,1,1,yes, Sandra,"Bibri, SE",,,,"Bibri, Simon Elias",,,Backcasting in futures studies: a synthesized scholarly and planning approach to strategic smart sustainable city development,EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FUTURES RESEARCH,,,,,,,,,,,,"Backcasting as a scholarly and planning approach is increasingly used in futures studies in fields related to urban sustainability as an alternative to traditional planning approaches and a formal element of future strategic initiatives. It is viewed as a natural step in operationalizing sustainable development within different societal spheres. As a holistic urban development strategy, smart sustainable cities represent a manifestation of sustainable development as a process of change and a strategic approach to achieving the long-term goals of sustainability. Achieving smart sustainable cities represents an instance of urban sustainability, a concept that refers to a desired state in which a city strives to retain the balance of socio-ecological system through sustainable development as a desired trajectory. This long-term goal requires fostering linkages between scientific and social research, technological innovations, institutional practices, and policy design and planning in relevance to urban sustainability. It also requires a long-term vision, a transdisciplinary approach, and a system-oriented perspective on addressing environmental, economic, and social issues. These requirements are at the core of backcasting as an approach to futures studies. Backcasting is a special kind of scenario methodology to develop future models for smart sustainable city as a planning tool for urban sustainability. Goal-oriented backcasting approaches declare long-range targets that lie quite far in the future. Visionary images of a long-term future can stimulate an accelerated movement towards achieving the goals of urban sustainability. The backcasting approach is found to be well-suited for long-term urban sustainability solutions due to its normative, goal-oriented, and problem-solving character. Also, it is particularly useful when dealing with complex problems and transitions, the current trends are part of the problem, and different directions of development can be allowed given the wide scope and long time horizon considered. A number of recent futures studies using backcasting have underlined the efficacy of this scholarly and planning approach in terms of indicating policy pathway for sustainability transitions and thus supporting policymakers and facilitating and guiding their actions. However, as there are a number of backcasting approaches used in different domains, and the backcasting framework is adaptive and contextual in nature, it is deemed highly relevant and useful to devise a scholarly and planning approach to strategic smart sustainable city development This paper has a fourfold purpose. It aims (1) to provide a comparative account of the most commonly applied approaches in futures studies dealing with technology and sustainability (forecasting and backcasting); (2) to review the existing backcasting methodologies and discuss the relevance of their use in terms of their steps and guiding questions in analyzing strategic smart sustainable city development as an area that is at the intersection of city development, sustainable development, and technology development; (3) to synthesize a backcasting approach based on the outcome of the review and discussion; and (4) to examine backcasting as a scholarly methodology and planning approach by looking at its use in the Gothenburg 2050 Project, as well as to use this case to illustrate the core of the synthesized approach. The synthesized scholarly and planning approach serves to help researchers and scholars in analyzing strategic smart sustainable city development to assist planners, policymakers, and decision-makers in their endeavor to implement smart sustainable cities.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,2195-4194,2195-2248,,,,27-Jul,2018,6,1,,,,,,,13,10.1186/s40309-018-0142-z,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000440102600001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,"Paper about urban planning, but with linkages to nature" Sandra,"Borland, H",,,,"Borland, Helen",,,Conceptualising global strategic sustainability and corporate transformational change,INTERNATIONAL MARKETING REVIEW,,,,,,,,,,,,"Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to present the concept of global strategic sustainability, represented by a conceptual framework, the spheres of strategic sustainability. The paper examines routes, solutions and a vision for corporate strategic sustainability in the macro context of the global physical environment and the planet. This builds on previous research identifying key drivers and strategies for corporate sustainability. Design/methodology/approach - The paper is conceptual in nature and underpinned by Gaia theory, ecosystems theory and the laws of thermodynamics. These three offer specific foci for sustainability research including holism, integration and synthesis: without which, sustainability research would be difficult to achieve. Findings - The paper identifies two major domains - corporate and consumer strategic sustainability. It examines the corporate domain in which routes are identified through responses to existing globalisation, corporate strategy and corporate culture. Research limitations/implications - The paper provides insight and preliminary conceptual development towards a full theoretical model of corporate and consumer strategic sustainability. The framework will guide future conceptual and empirical investigations and broaden and deepen our understanding of how firm's can construct strategic business models that incorporate sustainability. Originality/value - The paper offers a conceptual framework that develops the concept of corporate strategic sustainability and provides positive, practical solutions to incorporating sustainability into business models. It also challenges the current dominant socio-economic paradigm and sets the scene for a more positive eco-paradigm that serves the present and future needs of the planet, environment, businesses and human society.",,,,,,"Borland, Helen M/0000-0002-8664-0302",,,,,,,,,,,,,0265-1335,1758-6763,,,,,2009,26,5-Apr,,,,,554,572,,10.1108/02651330910972039,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000270183800011,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,"not a coherent vision, but worth considering" Sandra,"Borland, H; Lindgreen, A",,,,"Borland, Helen; Lindgreen, Adam",,,"Sustainability, Epistemology, Ecocentric Business, and Marketing Strategy: Ideology, Reality, and Vision",JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS,,,,,,,,,,,,"This conceptual article examines the relationship between marketing and sustainability through the dual lenses of anthropocentric and ecocentric epistemology. Using the current anthropocentric epistemology and its associated dominant social paradigm, corporate ecological sustainability in commercial practice and business school research and teaching is difficult to achieve. However, adopting an ecocentric epistemology enables the development of an alternative business and marketing approach that places equal importance on nature, the planet, and ecological sustainability as the source of human and other species' well-being, as well as the source of all products and services. This article examines ecocentric, transformational business, and marketing strategies epistemologically, conceptually and practically and thereby proposes six ecocentric, transformational, strategic marketing universal premises as part of a vision of and solution to current global un-sustainability. Finally, this article outlines several opportunities for management practice and further research.",,,,,"Lindgreen, Adam/D-4103-2019","Lindgreen, Adam/0000-0001-7881-7350; Borland, Helen M/0000-0002-8664-0302",,,,,,,,,,,,,0167-4544,1573-0697,,,,SEP,2013,117,1,,,,,173,187,,10.1007/s10551-012-1519-8,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000325183800012,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,Ecocentric Strategic Marketing Vision is proposed Sandra,"Breyer, C; Heinonen, S; Ruotsalainen, J",,,,"Breyer, Christian; Heinonen, Sirkka; Ruotsalainen, Juho",,,New consciousness: A societal and energetic vision for rebalancing humankind within the limits of planet Earth,TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Humankind has reached a level of ongoing crises, which is mainly due to an unsustainable energy system and the non-acceptance of planetary boundaries. On a more fundamental level the crisis is caused by the prevailing worldview and values. Universally accepted values of today emphasize material wellbeing and growth, consider nature only as resources to be exploited by humans, and neglect the notion that humans are connected to each other and to nature on a very fundamental basis. Currently, 140% of the resource and absorption capacity of planet earth is required for human activities and the trend is against rebalancing. The dire consequence will be a collapse of the hosting capacity of our planet, as a simple matter of fundamental environmental facts. This article draws a world which is mentally and ethically aware of the fundamental limits and the requirement to live in harmony with planet Earth. This describes an evolutionary development of humans and can be called a 'New Consciousness' scenario, akin to the concept of the Global Brain. Growth in this kind of a world is called neogrowth: it is environmentally sustainable and emphasizes social, immaterial and spiritual growth. Such an environmentally, economically and socially sustainable society is sketched and on that basis a very first estimate is given on the requirements and consequence for a fully sustainable energy supply which needs to be initiated now and fully realised in the second half of the 21st century. The technologies required are already available and their respective economics are no obstacle. It remains unclear and from today's perspective even improbable whether humankind is able to go for that evolutionary transition in the future. However, nearly all other options might end in a collapse scenario in the dimension of geological history. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.",,,,,"SANT'ANA, MARCOS/ABF-5194-2020; Breyer, Christian/W-2106-2018","Breyer, Christian/0000-0002-7380-1816; Heinonen, Sirkka/0000-0002-7443-7390",,,,,,,,,,,,,0040-1625,1873-5509,,,,JAN,2017,114,,,,,,7,15,,10.1016/j.techfore.2016.06.029,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000390743900002,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Sandra,"Bruley, E; Locatelli, B; Colloff, MJ; Salliou, N; Metris, T; Lavorel, S",,,,"Bruley, Enora; Locatelli, Bruno; Colloff, Matt J.; Salliou, Nicolas; Metris, Thibault; Lavorel, Sandra",,,Actions and leverage points for ecosystem-based adaptation pathways in the Alps,ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Ecosystems support the adaptation of societies to global changes through their contributions to people's quality of life. Ecosystem-based adaptation (EBA) implementation remains a challenge and will require changes of practices, structures and processes underpinning human and nature interactions, also considered as coproduction of nature's contributions to adaptation (NCA). We analysed the levers required to implement EBA to reach a future desired by stakeholders of a mountain social-ecological system in the French Alps. Using a participatory backcasting scenario approach and a serious game, local stakeholders were invited to design a desired vision for their region in 2040 and reflect on strategies and levers for reaching it. We analysed coproduction actions required to achieve adaptation objectives aligned with the vision. We then assessed how local communities can leverage these actions to navigate a desired adaptation pathway. EBA and landscape multifunctionality are critical to achieve stakeholders' vision. EBA require substantial adjustments, transformations, or new co-production actions, but natural capital was not a limiting factor for adaptation. Synergies among multiple co-production actions create windows of opportunity for local communities to achieve their vision through the combination of social levers. However, most powerful levers, like collaborative decision making or common strategy design, appeared the most difficult to activate. EBA is mainly constrained here by social barriers reflecting the lack of collaboration and communication among stakeholders. Recognizing potential contributions of ecosystems to adaptation by maintaining and developing NCA supply can help communities to re-structure and re-think their local social-ecological system to achieve desired and sustainable pathways.",,,,,"Locatelli, Bruno/C-9957-2009; Salliou, Nicolas/AAS-8594-2020","Locatelli, Bruno/0000-0003-2983-1644; Salliou, Nicolas/0000-0003-3960-2175; Bruley, Enora/0000-0003-3416-1868",,,,,,,,,,,,,1462-9011,1873-6416,,,,OCT,2021,124,,,,,,567,579,,10.1016/j.envsci.2021.07.023,0,,Aug-21,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000691599800007,0,yes,multiple,1,1,1,yes, Iago,"Cettner, A; Ashley, R; Hedstrom, A; Viklander, M",,,,"Cettner, Annicka; Ashley, Richard; Hedstrom, Annelie; Viklander, Maria",,,Sustainable development and urban stormwater practice,URBAN WATER JOURNAL,,,,,,,,,,,,"The traditional use of piped systems for stormwater management is increasingly criticized as being unsustainable'. These systems are part of the water domain where much research has focused on sustainable development indicators to support decision-makers in selecting systems that are more sustainable. However, the interest in sustainable development indicators is low. This paper identifies conditions to engage the practitioners to inform their actions in regard to sustainable stormwater management. Empirical evidence has been obtained from interviews with water professionals from Swedish municipalities. The environmental-technical discourse of sustainable stormwater development is a strong barrier in the change process, to the neglect of the social aspects. In the interviews, reframing the discourse was possible in visions of future sustainable stormwater systems embracing green infrastructure. In action, primary conditions can support sustainable pathways in realizing this vision. The paper suggests further incentives for increased implementation of non-structural measures by developing the identified conditions.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1573-062X,1744-9006,,,,3-Apr,2014,11,3,,,,,185,197,,10.1080/1573062X.2013.768683,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000328466000002,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Chao, J; Kompatsiaris, P",,,,"Chao, Jenifer; Kompatsiaris, Panos",,,Curating climate change: The Taipei Biennial as an environmental problem solver,JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY CHINESE ART,,,,,,,,,,,,"This article analyses the curatorial practices behind the 2018 Taipei Biennial by considering its ethos of public engagement that fostered a merging of artistic means and civic aims. Entitled 'Post-Nature: A Museum as an Ecosystem', the biennial confronted the timely theme of environmental precarity and positioned itself as a substantive stakeholder in the public debate on climate change. It mobilized the biennial platform to marshal artists, community groups, conservationists and others to spur on new thinking and, perhaps more importantly, to create solutions. By adopting this new role as an environmental problem solver, the biennial expanded itself from the ensconced space of aesthetic inquiry and sought to generate new forms of institutional relations and to nurture in its audience an ecological consciousness. These exhibition strategies underscore many international biennials' self-assigned mandates to claim a socially relevant role and to adopt an interventionist posture. But while the biennial showcased multifaceted ecological visions of the present, it also delimited its range of critique and the possible modes of collective action. In this way, the exhibition becomes a valuable searchlight into the social and political relevance of global biennials, as well as their contention for legitimacy and significance as agents of social transformation.",,,,,,"Kompatsiaris, Panagiotis/0000-0002-2452-6109",,,,,,,,,,,,,2051-7041,2051-705X,,,,1-Aug,2020,7,1,,,,,7,26,,10.1386/jcca_00017_1,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000565872000002,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Chaves, M; Macintyre, T; Verschoor, G; Wals, AEJ",,,,"Chaves, Martha; Macintyre, Thomas; Verschoor, Gerard; Wals, Arjen E. J.",,,Radical ruralities in practice: Negotiating buen vivir in a Colombian network of sustainability,JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES,,,,,,,,,,,,"This paper explores the emerging concept of buen vivir interpreted as integrative and collective well-being as it is being envisioned and practiced by a network of sustainability initiatives in Colombia. As an example of a transition narrative currently taking place in Latin America and beyond, buen vivir represents a turn towards a more biocentric, relational and collective means of understanding and being in the world. Yet despite the many discourses into buen vivir (many of which tout it as an alternative to neoliberal models of development), there is a general lack of research into its varied forms of application, especially in terms of lived experiences. Drawing on the new ruralities literature, this paper explores the extent to which buen vivir visions and practices represent radical new ruralities - so-called alternatives to development. Data were collected from individuals and ecological communities in predominantly rural areas who are members of the Council of Sustainable Settlements of the Americas (CASA), a network which promotes many of the principles of buen vivir. Through participatory methods, results demonstrate that CASA visions are based on constructing territorial relations through intercultural knowledge exchange and experimentation into alternative lifestyles. Despite the substantial challenges and contradictions of putting these visions into practice, we argue that lived experiences promote processes of self-reflection on what buen vivir really is or could be. We hold that the inclusive nature of buen vivir offers opportunities for diverse peoples to cohere around shared meanings of the 'good life,' while providing the freedom to live variations depending on social and ecological context. (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier Ltd.",,,,,"Wals, Arjen/J-6773-2015","Wals, Arjen/0000-0003-4735-1126; Macintyre, Thomas Kloster-Jensen/0000-0002-6604-1951",,,,,,,,,,,,,0743-0167,,,,,APR,2018,59,,,,,,153,162,,10.1016/j.jrurstud.2017.02.007,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000429756600016,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,"Visions are there, a bit transformative" Lelani,"Cortes-Capano, G; Toivonen, T; Soutullo, A; Fernandez, A; Dimitriadis, C; Garibotto-Carton, G; Minin, ED",,,,"Cortes-Capano, Gonzalo; Toivonen, Tuuli; Soutullo, Alvaro; Fernandez, Andres; Dimitriadis, Caterina; Garibotto-Carton, Gustavo; Minin, Enrico Di",,,"Exploring landowners' perceptions, motivations and needs for voluntary conservation in a cultural landscape",PEOPLE AND NATURE,,,,,,,,,,,,"1. While efforts to reverse the current global environmental crisis increase, we are still experiencing unprecedented rates of species' extinctions. Traditional cultural landscapes can potentially play an important role for biodiversity conservation globally. However, these landscapes are threatened by pressures from global to local socio-economic drivers of change. Many cultural landscapes across the world occur on private land where landowners' environmental stewardship can help support nature conservation. 2. In this study, we applied a place-based collaborative approach to understand the main aspects underlying landowners' relationship with nature, their perceptions of the local social-ecological context and their vision of a desired future to identify the constraints and opportunities to support voluntary private land conservation. The study was conducted in Uruguay, in a traditional cattle ranching cultural landscape, which is a national priority area for the conservation of biodiversity. In Uruguay, approximately 96% of the land is privately owned, while the National System of Protected Areas covers only similar to 1% of the land. 3. Our results revealed that landowners had a close relationship with nature and considered themselves and their neighbours as local environmental stewards. Landowners were well aware of the importance of nature contributions to their livelihood and lifestyle and were concerned that rural exodus to urban areas and shrubland encroachment would negatively impact the social-ecological context they value and depend upon. Main needs of landowners to support biodiversity conservation were not primarily motivated by economic interests, but more related to the need for support that could enhance land management and social cohesion. 4. Biodiversity conservation goals in this cultural landscape cannot be pursued in isolation from social and rural development goals. Addressing local needs based on already existing links between nature's contributions and people might help support biodiversity conservation in the area. Failing to understand the context and to recognize locally perceived problems could increase the risk of voluntary conservation failure. Our approach and lessons learned can provide insights to actionable research in other cultural landscapes globally.",,,,,"; Di Minin, Enrico/J-6904-2013","Toivonen, Tuuli/0000-0002-6625-4922; Soutullo, Alvaro/0000-0002-3198-7878; Cortes Capano, Gonzalo/0000-0002-6714-6560; Di Minin, Enrico/0000-0002-5562-318X",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2575-8314,,,,SEP,2020,2,3,,,,,840,855,,10.1002/pan3.10122,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000647696100022,0,y,,1,1,0,yes,Needs of landowners Lelani,"D'Amore, L",,,,"D'Amore, Louis",,,Peace through Tourism: The Birthing of a New Socio-Economic Order,JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS,,,,,,,,,,,,"Humankind is currently witnessing, and shaping, the most significant and rapid paradigm shift in human history - a paradigm shift of major demographic, economic, ecological, and geo-political dimensions. For the first time in human history-we are faced not with just one crisis-but a confluence of several crises; crises that are not related to a single tribe or community-a single nation-or a single region of the world-but are each global in scale. To meet the challenges of these global crises will require an equally historic paradigm shift; a paradigm shift with a strong environmental ethic that restores ecological balance and integrity to our failing ecosystems, and that addresses the critical issue of climate change; a paradigm shift toward an economic system that brings about an end to poverty-and a paradigm that brings an end to war as a means to solving conflict, as it is only through a global family in harmony and peace with itself, that we can solve the unprecedented global issues facing our one common home, planet earth-and our one common future as a global family. The travel and tourism industry has, and will continue to play a vital and leading role toward this paradigm shift, and as the world's largest industry involving virtually every nation in the world-will be the central pillar of a Peace through Commerce movement. The dramatic growth of tourism in the past 60 years is one of the most remarkable economic and social phenomena of our time. The industry has grown from a total of 25 million international arrivals in 1950 to a projected 1 billion international arrivals in 2010, and a further projection to 1.6 billion by 2020. Beginning with the emergence of Ecotourism'' in the late 1980's, there are an increasing number of tourism market segments which fall within a broad category that can be called Peace Tourism,'' and classified within a framework that includes peace within ourselves, peace with others, peace with nature, peace with past generations, peace with future generations, and peace with our Creator. Since its birth in 1986, the International Institute for Peace through Tourism (IIPT) has been promoting these values of tourism together with its vision of Travel and Tourism as the world's first Global Peace Industry'' - an industry that promotes and supports the belief that every traveler is potentially an Ambassador for Peace.'' This higher purpose of tourism'' includes the key role of tourism in promoting international understanding and collaboration among nations; environmental protection and preservation of biodiversity; enhancing cultures and valuing heritage; contributing to sustainable development and poverty reduction; and healing wounds of conflict.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,0167-4544,1573-0697,,,,MAR,2009,89,,,4,,,559,568,,10.1007/s10551-010-0407-3,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000278900900015,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"del Pulgar, CP; Anguelovski, I; Connolly, J",,,,"Perez del Pulgar, Carmen; Anguelovski, Isabelle; Connolly, James",,,Toward a green and playful city: Understanding the social and political production of children's relational wellbeing in Barcelona,CITIES,,,,,,,,,,,,"This paper examines recent urban green amenities directed toward children and families and develops a novel understanding of the ways in which children's socio-natures are made/unmade through such interventions. We employ ethnographic and archival analysis in two new parks - Poble Nou and Nou Barris - in Barcelona to examine how a particular type of children's wellbeing, what we call relational wellbeing is shaped through the production of green-playful-child-friendly amenities. We find that planning processes and visions, urban development goals, and neighbourhood socio-material structure moderate the effect of green-playful-child-friendly amenities on relational wellbeing by directing how these spaces are used. This finding points toward the importance - for equity concerns - of accounting for the social and political processes that generate relational wellbeing. These processes are often reflective of broader economic agendas of urban transformation designed to extract value, control space, and/or legitimize speculative urban development - while sometimes eroding local socio-material conditions - to the point of producing green spaces of privilege, exclusion and control. The connection between relational wellbeing and green-playful-child-friendly interventions highlights the importance, within the urban environmental equity literature, of reconceptualising pathways of wellbeing and health beyond questions of spatial distribution of natural areas and offers a new perspective for the development of future guidelines on green-playful-child-friendly space policies.",,,,,"Connolly, James J.T./AAZ-6161-2021","Perez del Pulgar Frowein, Carmen/0000-0001-8331-2365",,,,,,,,,,,,,0264-2751,1873-6084,,,,JAN,2020,96,,,,,,,,102438,10.1016/j.cities.2019.102438,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000502885500031,0,,,1,1,1,yes,see Table 1 Lelani,"Dupret, MA",,,,"Dupret, Marie-Astrid",,,The Left in the postmodern storm: The pitfalls of thinking about a policy of more social justice in the era of post-factualism,UNIVERSITAS-REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES Y HUMANAS,,,,,,,,,,,,"There is a strong political malaise in what refers to the Left. This feeling of confusion can be explained by the advent of postmodernity and the numerical disruption that have transformed society and subjectivities. The post-truth politics of the so-called post-tactical shows a loss of ethical values, replaced by discourses based on emotionality and imaginary identifications. The transhumanist vision of the world, supported by cybernetics and above all genetic engineering, promotes the idea of a quantified being, freed from the social bond. It points to a model of atomized and inequitable society, and to the accentuation of the ecological crisis. The Left has not reflected on these transformations and does not offer alternatives to counteract the societal destructuring due to neoliberalism. The struggle towards the collective reappropriation of human life and nature could open the way to a new ideal of the Common Good.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1390-3837,1390-8634,,,,SEP-FEB,2019,,31,,,,,79,95,,10.17163/uni.n31.2019.04,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000484348800004,0,,,1,0,1,yes,"no access to confirm, article in a Spanish paper, but speaks of the transhumanist vision of the world, that is supported by cybernetics and above all genetic engineering, and it promoting the idea of a quantified being, freed from the social bond. No link to nature, at least not from the abstract alone" Lelani,"Falardeau, M; Raudsepp-Hearne, C; Bennett, EM",,,,"Falardeau, Marianne; Raudsepp-Hearne, Ciara; Bennett, Elena M.",,,A novel approach for co-producing positive scenarios that explore agency: case study from the Canadian Arctic,SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE,,,,,,,,,,,,"The planet's social-ecological systems are expected to change in rapid and surprising ways in the coming decades, with consequences for ecosystems, ecosystem services, and human well-being. One way to support local communities and decision-makers at higher scales in addressing such surprising changes is to develop scenarios that are locally actionable and that can inform understanding of social-ecological dynamics across scales. This study focuses on three areas that require advances for developing globally relevant scenarios that support local action: (1) mobilizing Indigenous and local knowledge (ILK) in scenarios; (2) using scenarios to explore agency to affect the future; (3) probing a vast range of plausible positive futures. For scenarios to be relevant to communities in supporting positive change, approaches that engage with ILK to explore how human action, or agency, can shape the future are needed, as well as positive scenarios that feature a wide range of good outcomes for nature and people to inspire and guide action. We propose a novel set of methods for participatory scenario planningdeveloped and tested through a case study in the Canadian Arcticdesigned to carefully explore what positive futures' could mean to different populations faced with growing impacts from environmental and social change, and how positive outcomes can be achieved even in light of these changing dynamics. This scenario approach provides direction to engage multiple ways of knowing in developing knowledge about future changes that can direct sustainable action.",,,,,"Bennett, Elena M/A-9553-2008","Falardeau, Marianne/0000-0002-4428-0695; Bennett, Elena/0000-0003-3944-2925",,,,,,,,,,,,,1862-4065,1862-4057,,,,JAN,2019,14,1,,,,,205,220,,10.1007/s11625-018-0620-z,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000456977800016,0,yes,,1,1,1,yes,"unclear visions, more about the methods" Lelani,"Fliervoet, JM; Van den Born, RJG; Smits, AJM; Knippenberg, L",,,,"Fliervoet, J. M.; Van den Born, R. J. G.; Smits, A. J. M.; Knippenberg, L.",,,Combining safety and nature: A multi-stakeholder perspective on integrated floodplain management,JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT,,,,,,,,,,,,"In The Netherlands, river management strategies and land use of floodplains have changed drastically over the last two decades. Due to an integrated and participatory planning style, many agricultural fields in floodplains were transformed to nature. The idea of self-regulating nature in the floodplains and policies such as Room for the River and WaalWeelde created more multifunctional and natural floodplains. In this way, during the planning phase, win-win situations were created between flood protection and nature. It was only later that obstacles occurred with regard to the maintenance of floodplains, mainly because of different perspectives of the stakeholders on how to reconcile flood protection and nature. Therefore this study focuses on the opinions of persons involved with 'future' floodplain management strategies, which have been divided into five themes: visions of floodplain management; collaborators in floodplain management; visions of nature and self-regulating nature; realization of Natura 2000 goals in floodplains; feasibility of the Cyclic Floodplain Rejuvenation (CFR) strategy. We interviewed various persons involved in river and nature management along the Waal River. Based on our findings, it is concluded that an integrated planning approach has not been incorporated into the maintenance strategies and programs and, as a result, new, innovative management strategies such as CFR are proving to be incompatible with 'static' regulations such as Natura 2000's conservation goals and flood protection norms. However, by exploring the responders' visions of nature, we found that the majority of them preferred a dynamic vision of floodplains and, for this reason, they have advocated for more flexibility in current policies related to river and nature management. Additionally, the respondents emphasized the importance of multi-stakeholder collaboration to realize the goal of cost-efficient floodplain management. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.",,,,,"Smits, Toine/D-3315-2012; van den Born, Riyan J.G./B-3421-2017; Knippenberg, Lucas/Q-1531-2018; Knippenberg, Luuk/K-3571-2012","Knippenberg, Lucas/0000-0003-0395-6473; Knippenberg, Luuk/0000-0003-0395-6473",,,,,,,,,,,,,0301-4797,1095-8630,,,,15-Oct,2013,128,,,,,,1033,1042,,10.1016/j.jenvman.2013.06.023,0,,,,,,,,23911983,,,,,WOS:000326203400110,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,"Vision of floodplain type, somewhat also transformation" Lelani,"Frantzeskaki, N; van Steenbergen, F; Stedman, RC",,,,"Frantzeskaki, Niki; van Steenbergen, Frank; Stedman, Richard C.",,,"Sense of place and experimentation in urban sustainability transitions: the Resilience Lab in Carnisse, Rotterdam, The Netherlands",SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Experimentation as a means of governance for sustainability transitions has been advocated for years by transition scholars and geography scholars. We propose that examining the impact of experimentation requires an understanding of its embeddedness in place as a socio-spatial context. This notion of embeddedness, which conceptually aligns well with the understanding of sense of place, is under-examined in sustainability transitions literature. By conjoining the sense of place and sustainability transition literatures, we conceptualize that sense of place can be one outcome of experimentation fostering sustainability transitions. We examine urban living labs as an open format of urban experimentation, where multiple actors interact with the aim to co-design, test, and implement governance innovations. From the literature, we have distilled three phenomena that relate to a sense of place as mechanisms for transformation: a symbolic understanding or meaning of place; a narrative of place that connects to a transformative vision; and new types of relations between people and place. With this conceptual lens, we analyze our case study, an urban living lab called The Resilience Lab in a neighborhood of the city of Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Drawing from a longitudinal case study research, we contend that urban living labs can connect a sense of change (transformation) with a sense of place by co-creating new narratives of place, by co-producing knowledge on new practices and new relations between people and place, and by allowing the co-design or (re) establishment of places with symbolic meaning. As such, urban living labs facilitate urban sustainability transitions.",,,,,"Frantzeskaki, Niki/AAN-1044-2021","Frantzeskaki, Niki/0000-0002-6983-448X",,,,,,,,,,,,,1862-4065,1862-4057,,,,JUL,2018,13,4,,,,,1045,1059,,10.1007/s11625-018-0562-5,0,,,,,,,,30147796,,,,,WOS:000434638900009,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Gebhard, E; Hagemann, N; Hensler, L; Schweizer, S; Wember, C",,,,"Gebhard, Elisabeth; Hagemann, Nikolas; Hensler, Loni; Schweizer, Steffen; Wember, Carla",,,Agriculture and Food 2050: Visions to Promote Transformation Driven by Science and Society,JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL & ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS,,,,,10th EurSafe Congress on Climate Change and Sustainable Development - Ethical Perspectives on Land Use and Food Production,"MAY 30-JUN 02, 2012","Tubingen, GERMANY","Univ Tuebingen, Int Ctr Eth Sci & Humanities",,,,"Today's food production and consumption go hand in hand with immense damages to humans and nature. Change is needed, but where to start and which direction to go? This article tries to give an interdisciplinary answer by taking recourse to a vision, that is, an ideal image of the future which is drawn upon ethical reflection and beyond the limits of actual political and economic constraints. The main purpose of this paper is to show that generating and discussing visions can be a powerful process in order to regain ability to act in the face of the complex challenges of our time and that Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) plays an important role to enable current and future generations to become actors of change. First, a students vision on agriculture and society in 2050 is presented, followed by a theoretical examination of visions, their potentials, limits and practical implications. Subsequently, the results of a field analysis of current innovative solutions to local agriculture are given. These include intercultural gardens and community supported agriculture. Claiming that a sustainable development can only be reached if people are not only able to envision a desirable future, but to develop small scale, locally adapted solutions as answers to challenges such as climate change, this paper then focuses on the competence oriented educational concept of ESD. Here, an approach of integrating ethics in the course of studies of agricultural sciences implemented by a student's initiative serves as practice example.",,,,,"Schweizer, Steffen A./P-8150-2016; Hagemann, Nikolas/AAI-1379-2019","Schweizer, Steffen A./0000-0002-9489-1005; Hagemann, Nikolas/0000-0001-8005-9392",,,,,,,,,,,,,1187-7863,1573-322X,,,,JUN,2015,28,3,,,,,497,516,,10.1007/s10806-015-9532-4,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000356443800006,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Giampieri, MA; DuBois, B; Allred, S; Bunting-Howarth, K; Fisher, K; Moy, J; Sanderson, EW",,,,"Giampieri, Mario A.; DuBois, Bryce; Allred, Shorna; Bunting-Howarth, Katherine; Fisher, Kim; Moy, Jesse; Sanderson, Eric W.",,,Visions of resilience: lessons from applying a digital democracy tool in New York's Jamaica Bay watershed,URBAN ECOSYSTEMS,,,,,,,,,,,,"Resilience to extreme weather events and other sudden changes is an issue facing many communities in the early twenty-first century. Planning to respond to disasters is particularly complicated in densely inhabited, multi-jurisdictional urban social-ecological systems like the watershed of Jamaica Bay, a large urbanized estuary on the south side of New York City. This area contains parklands managed by New York City, the National Park Service, and other agencies, four sewage treatment plants, three former landfills, and urban and suburban communities, all of which were heavily impacted by Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Here successful resilience planning and response requires participation from a wide variety of government and civil society players each with different types of knowledge, value systems, and expectations about what resilience means. To investigate how visions of future resilience differed among several communities living in or concerned with Jamaica Bay, New York, we deployed a free, Internet-based modeling framework called Visionmaker that enabled interactive scenario creation and testing. Through a series of standardized workshops, we recruited participants from a variety of different communities of practice (i.e. researchers, land managers, educators, non-governmental organization staff, and community board members) to design visions of resilience. Visions spanned terrestrial and marine environments and contained natural and built ecosystems. Most users favored increasing resilience through expanding salt marsh and green infrastructure while, for the most part, keeping the built city landscape of streets and buildings intact. We compare and contrast these visions and discuss the implications for future resilience planning in coastal cities.",,,,,"Sanderson, Eric W./O-1664-2019","Allred, Shorna/0000-0001-6237-0638; SANDERSON, ERIC W./0000-0002-7477-0193",,,,,,,,,,,,,1083-8155,1573-1642,,,,FEB,2019,22,1,,,SI,,1,17,,10.1007/s11252-017-0701-2,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000457397500001,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Hamann, M; Biggs, R; Pereira, L; Preiser, R; Hichert, T; Blanchard, R; Warrington-Coetzee, H; King, N; Merrie, A; Nilsson, W; Odendaal, P; Poskitt, S; Betancourt, DS; Ziervogel, G",,,,"Hamann, M.; Biggs, R.; Pereira, L.; Preiser, R.; Hichert, T.; Blanchard, R.; Warrington-Coetzee, H.; King, N.; Merrie, A.; Nilsson, W.; Odendaal, P.; Poskitt, S.; Betancourt, D. Sanchez; Ziervogel, G.",,,Scenarios of Good Anthropocenes in southern Africa,FUTURES,,,,,,,,,,,,"In the rapidly changing and uncertain world of the Anthropocene, positive visions of the future could play a crucial role in catalysing deep social-ecological transformations to help guide humanity towards more sustainable and equitable futures. This paper presents the outcomes from a novel visioning process designed to elicit creative and inspirational future scenarios for southern Africa. The approach based scenario development on seeds of good Anthropocenes, i.e. existing initiatives or technologies that represent current, local-scale innovations for sustainability. A selection of seeds was used to create four distinct, positive visions in a participatory workshop process. Common themes that independently emerged in all four visions were i) decentralized governance and decision-making; ii) a strong emphasis on equity and empathy; iii) high levels of connectedness between people; and iv) a reinforced, respectful relationship with nature. The visions mainly differ in the extent of fusion between people and technology in everyday life, and how much nature plays a role in defining the human experience. The narratives presented here describe worlds that have undergone a more significant paradigm shift towards shared human values and stewardship of resources than is explored in most other ambient narratives for the region. These Good Anthropocene scenarios therefore demonstrate more radical, previously unimagined ways of thinking about sustainability futures on the African continent and beyond.",,,,,"Pereira, Laura M./L-7258-2013; blanchard, ryan/B-8856-2017","Pereira, Laura M./0000-0002-4996-7234; blanchard, ryan/0000-0002-3560-4133; Odendaal, Pieter/0000-0003-1679-1399; Hichert, Tanja/0000-0002-2169-1790; Poskitt, Sam/0000-0003-3029-8904",,,,,,,,,,,,,0016-3287,1873-6378,,,,APR,2020,118,,,,,,,,102526,10.1016/j.futures.2020.102526,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000528270600003,0,yes,multiple,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Hannah, L; Roehrdanz, PR; Marquet, PA; Enquist, BJ; Midgley, G; Foden, W; Lovett, JC; Corlett, RT; Corcoran, D; Butchart, SHM; Boyle, B; Feng, X; Maitner, B; Fajardo, J; McGill, BJ; Merow, C; Morueta-Holme, N; Newman, EA; Park, DS; Raes, N; Svenning, JC",,,,"Hannah, Lee; Roehrdanz, Patrick R.; Marquet, Pablo A.; Enquist, Brian J.; Midgley, Guy; Foden, Wendy; Lovett, Jon C.; Corlett, Richard T.; Corcoran, Derek; Butchart, Stuart H. M.; Boyle, Brad; Feng, Xiao; Maitner, Brian; Fajardo, Javier; McGill, Brian J.; Merow, Cory; Morueta-Holme, Naia; Newman, Erica A.; Park, Daniel S.; Raes, Niels; Svenning, Jens-Christian",,,30% land conservation and climate action reduces tropical extinction risk by more than 50%,ECOGRAPHY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Limiting climate change to less than 2 degrees C is the focus of international policy under the climate convention (UNFCCC), and is essential to preventing extinctions, a focus of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). The post-2020 biodiversity framework drafted by the CBD proposes conserving 30% of both land and oceans by 2030. However, the combined impact on extinction risk of species from limiting climate change and increasing the extent of protected and conserved areas has not been assessed. Here we create conservation spatial plans to minimize extinction risk in the tropics using data on 289 219 species and modeling two future greenhouse gas concentration pathways (RCP2.6 and 8.5) while varying the extent of terrestrial protected land and conserved areas from <17% to 50%. We find that limiting climate change to 2 degrees C and conserving 30% of terrestrial area could more than halve aggregate extinction risk compared with uncontrolled climate change and no increase in conserved area.",,,,,"Svenning, Jens-Christian/C-8977-2012; Morueta-Holme, Naia/J-4952-2013; Butchart, Stuart/AAJ-1852-2021; Enquist, Brian J./B-6436-2008; Marquet, Pablo A/B-7732-2009; Fajardo, Javier/AAG-7278-2020; Corlett, Richard T./S-2899-2019; Raes, Niels/A-9645-2011","Svenning, Jens-Christian/0000-0002-3415-0862; Morueta-Holme, Naia/0000-0002-0776-4092; Butchart, Stuart/0000-0002-1140-4049; Enquist, Brian J./0000-0002-6124-7096; Marquet, Pablo A/0000-0001-6369-9339; Fajardo, Javier/0000-0002-0990-9718; Corlett, Richard T./0000-0002-2508-9465; Raes, Niels/0000-0002-4329-4892; Newman, Erica/0000-0001-6433-8594; Maitner, Brian/0000-0002-2118-9880; Roehrdanz, Patrick/0000-0003-4047-5011; Park, Daniel/0000-0003-2783-530X; Feng, Xiao/0000-0003-4638-3927",,,,,,,,,,,,,0906-7590,1600-0587,,,,JUL,2020,43,7,,,,,943,953,,10.1111/ecog.05166,0,,Feb-20,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000518172000001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,Paper cites vision of 50% land conservation Lelani,"Helliwell, R; Burton, RJF",,,,"Helliwell, Richard; Burton, Rob J. F.",,,The promised land? Exploring the future visions and narrative silences of cellular agriculture in news and industry media,JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES,,,,,,,,,,,,"Cellular food technologies aim to decouple animal protein production from animal bodies and address the negative environmental, ethical, and human health implications of animal agriculture through its substitution. This marks a major rupture with previous expectations for agricultural biotechnology. If technically and commercially successful cellular agriculture could have far reaching effects that have yet to be the subject of concerted public or political discussion. These include, fundamentally altering human-nature relations, disrupting existing food systems, patterns of land use, rural economies, drivers of environmental change and biodiversity in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. In this paper we explore the environmental and rural visions of cellular agriculture in mainstream news and industry media, their contestation and the narrative silences. These silences represent the under-and un-explored questions, contingencies, and eventualities of envisioned developments. Our analysis highlights how anticipated efficiency gains are central to the realisation of several interlinked but separate positive environmental visions. Notably, that cellular agriculture will be able to replace conventional agriculture and feed the future whilst reducing environmental burdens and land use pressures. However, these visions leave many potential consequences unaddressed. We therefore explore these narrative silences. In doing so we explore the creative and destructive potential of these technologies with a specific emphasis on their environmental, rural, and spatial implications. In conclusion, we identify and anticipate environmental and rural policy implications stemming from these technologies that require further consideration, public and political discussion.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,0743-0167,1873-1392,,,,MAY,2021,84,,,,,,180,191,,10.1016/j.jrurstud.2021.04.002,0,,Apr-21,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000655616500017,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Heras, M; Galafassi, D; Oteros-Rozas, E; Ravera, F; Berraquero-Diaz, L; Ruiz-Mallen, I",,,,"Heras, Maria; Galafassi, Diego; Oteros-Rozas, Elisa; Ravera, Federica; Berraquero-Diaz, Luis; Ruiz-Mallen, Isabel",,,Realising potentials for arts-based sustainability science,SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE,,,,,,,,,,,,"In recent years, a profusion of methods, practices, and experiences has emerged in the interface between arts and sustainability science. Drawing from two strong currents within sustainability science, namely, the emphasis on transdisciplinary approaches and the need to move towards societal transformations, such hybrid approaches seemingly contribute with unique methods to sustainability research. Despite repeated claims from sustainability scientists about art's role in sustainability transformations, joint analyses with artists and practitioners are still rare. We conveyed a collaborative and exploratory workshop with scientists, artists, and practitioners from the fields of education, public engagement, and activism to identify the potentials for arts-based sustainability research. Participants were invited to facilitate and trial various artistic practices from disciplines of performative, literary, narrative, audio-visual and plastic arts. In this paper, we present five key areas identified in the workshop, where arts-based methods can significantly contribute to sustainability research: embracing more-than-cognitive aspects of knowledge, improving communication, grappling with power dynamics, shifting relationships to nature, and facilitating futures visioning. Workshop participants also identified challenges related to power dynamics, tensions across paradigms, and implementation conditions, providing insights into how to leverage arts' potential to respond to global environmental challenges while boosting societal transformations. We then discuss research questions identified that address challenges and limitations for arts-based research in sustainability. Overall, these results suggest there are yet untapped resources and experiences within the field of arts-based sustainability science. (Audio-visual abstract available on S1)",,,,,"; Ruiz-Mallen, Isabel/E-9614-2018","Ravera, Federica/0000-0001-6282-6236; Ruiz-Mallen, Isabel/0000-0002-9679-3329; Berraquero Diaz, Luis/0000-0001-9902-5141; Heras, Maria/0000-0002-8030-1633",,,,,,,,,,,,,1862-4065,1862-4057,,,,NOV,2021,16,6,,,,,1875,1889,,10.1007/s11625-021-01002-0,0,,Aug-21,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000682447200001,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Holmes, G; Clemoes, J; Marriot, K; Wynne-Jones, S",,,,"Holmes, George; Clemoes, James; Marriot, Kate; Wynne-Jones, Sophie",,,The politics of the rural and relational values: Contested discourses of rural change and landscape futures in west wales,GEOFORUM,,,,,,,,,,,,"Across Europe, rural landscapes and communities are changing, following local, national and global pressures. The future physical makeup of these landscapes, the species, landforms and land uses that are present, and the relationship between these landscapes and local communities, is uncertain. At the same time, rural politics has moved from debates about agricultural production to broader considerations of ways of life, and who and what is appropriate in the countryside. As different visions for the physical makeup of landscapes are being proposed and negotiated, it is worth understanding how they fit into broader rural politics, and the values that underpin them, particularly relational landscape values. The purpose of this work is to understand contests over the future of landscapes in west Wales, with particular focus on the relational values that underpin different visions for the landscape. We use image based Q methodology to analyse different visions. We find two distinct visions which we name socio-ecological rebalancing and maintaining heritage farming landscapes. We find that relational and eudemonic values underpin these visions. Despite claims by participants and stakeholders to speak for rural communities, we find important difference within rural communities. We find that disagreements on the environmental and social future of the landscape are based on shared facts but divergent values and relationships with the landscape. These findings have important implications for the future of contested projects aimed at transforming the landscape of this region, and relevance for wider European landscape change. Our conceptual approach, which combines a focus on the politics of the rural with relational values, and our methodological approach, of image based Q methodology, have great potential for understanding debates over the future of rural landscapes.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,0016-7185,1872-9398,,,,JUL,2022,133,,,,,,153,164,,10.1016/j.geoforum.2022.05.014,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000809889200008,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Hutton, CW; Hensengerth, O; Berchoux, T; Tri, VPD; Tong, T; Hung, N; Voepel, H; Darby, SE; Bui, D; Bui, TN; Huy, N; Parsons, D",,,,"Hutton, Craig W.; Hensengerth, Oliver; Berchoux, Tristan; Van P D Tri; Thi Tong; Nghia Hung; Voepel, Hal; Darby, Stephen E.; Duong Bui; Thi N Bui; Nguyen Huy; Parsons, Daniel",,,Stakeholder Expectations of Future Policy Implementation Compared to Formal Policy Trajectories: Scenarios for Agricultural Food Systems in the Mekong Delta,SUSTAINABILITY,,,,,,,,,,,,"The development of a coherent and coordinated policy for the management of large socio-agricultural systems, such as the Mekong delta in southern Vietnam, is reliant on aligning the development, delivery, and implementation of policy on national to local scales. Effective decision making is linked to a coherent, broadly-shared vision of the strategic management of socio-agricultural systems. However, when policies are ambiguous, and at worst contradictory, long-term management and planning can consequently suffer. These potential adverse impacts may be compounded if stakeholders have divergent visions of the current and future states of socio-agricultural systems. Herein we used a transferable, scenario-based methodology which uses a standard quadrant matrix in order to explore both anticipated and idealized future states. Our case study was the Mekong delta. The scenario matrix was based upon two key strategic choices (axis) for the delta, derived from analysis of policy documents, literature, stakeholder engagement, and land use models. These are: (i) who will run agriculture in the future, agri-business or the established commune system; and (ii) to what degree sustainability will be incorporated into production. During a workshop meeting, stakeholders identified that agri-business will dominate future agricultural production in the delta but showed a clear concern that sustainability might consequently be undermined despite policy claims of the contrary. As such, our study highlights an important gap between national expectations and regional perspectives. Our results suggest that the new development plans for the Mekong delta (which comprise a new Master Plan and a new 5-year socio-economic development plan), which emphasize agro-business development, should adopt approaches that address concerns of sustainability as well as a more streamlined policy formulation and implementation that accounts for stakeholder concerns at both provincial and national levels.",,,,,"Darby, Stephen E/J-5799-2012; Voepel, Hal/K-7041-2014; Parsons, Daniel/G-9101-2011; Pham Dang Tri, VAN/M-5680-2016","Hutton, Craig/0000-0002-5896-756X; Hensengerth, Oliver/0000-0002-6565-692X; Darby, Stephen/0000-0001-8778-4394; Voepel, Hal/0000-0001-7375-1460; Parsons, Daniel/0000-0002-5142-4466; Berchoux, Tristan/0000-0003-4095-2164; Pham Dang Tri, VAN/0000-0002-2989-2001; BUI, NUONG/0000-0001-8703-3785",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2071-1050,,,,MAY,2021,13,10,,,,,,,5534,10.3390/su13105534,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000662521900001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,Results of stakeholders' workshop on visions for agriculture Lelani,"Joffre, OM; Bosma, RH; Ligtenberg, A; Tri, VPD; Ha, TTP; Bregt, AK",,,,"Joffre, Olivier M.; Bosma, Roe H.; Ligtenberg, Arend; Van Pham Dang Tri; Tran Thi Phung Ha; Bregt, Arnold K.",,,Combining participatory approaches and an agent-based model for better planning shrimp aquaculture,AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS,,,,,,,,,,,,"In the Mekong Delta coastal zone, decision makers must weigh trade-offs between sustaining the shrimp sector and thus ensuring economic development, while also promoting sustainable, environmentally friendly practices and planning for climate change adaptation. This study investigates future scenarios for development of shrimp aquaculture using a spatially explicit, agent-based model (ABM) simulating farmers' production system choices. A role playing game (RPG) with farmers was used to calibrate and validate the model. Four scenarios, representing different visions of aquaculture in the next 15 years, were elaborated with decision makers before discussing the different outputs of the model. Iterative consultation with farmers helped to fine-tune the model and identify key parameters and drivers in farmers' decision-making. The recursive process allowed us to construct a model that validly represents reality. Participants stated that use of the RPG improved their insight for planning. Results of the scenarios indicate that (i) intensification of production is unsustainable, (ii) market-based incentives are too limited to stimulate development of an integrated mangrove-shrimp production system and (iii) climate change will cause rapid decline of production in the absence of adaptation measures. RPG appeared to be a valuable method for formalizing local farmers' knowledge and integrating it into the planning approaches used by decision makers. The ABM, thus, can also be considered a medium or communication tool facilitating knowledge-sharing between farmers and decision makers. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.",,,,,"ligtenberg, arend/L-4267-2019","ligtenberg, arend/0000-0002-2093-7947; Joffre, Olivier M./0000-0002-7857-5766",,,,,,,,,,,,,0308-521X,1873-2267,,,,DEC,2015,141,,,,,,149,159,,10.1016/j.agsy.2015.10.006,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000365370700015,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Kok, A; Oostvogels, VJ; de Olde, EM; Ripoll-Bosch, R",,,,"Kok, A.; Oostvogels, V. J.; de Olde, E. M.; Ripoll-Bosch, R.",,,Balancing biodiversity and agriculture: Conservation scenarios for the Dutch dairy sector,AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT,,,,,,,,,,,,"Biodiversity is declining and current strategies to halt biodiversity loss have not succeeded. In preparing the EU's Biodiversity Strategy 2030, it is essential to unravel different visions about conservation targets for agriculture, and to understand potential trade-offs with food production. In this research, we translated the narratives of experts into two conservation scenarios on a case study area resembling the Dutch dairy sector. The scenarios reflected a targeted versus a generic approach towards conservation. In the targeted conservation (TC) scenario, extensive grassland, reduced drainage and delayed mowing were applied in core areas to enhance meadow bird abundance, whereas in the generic conservation (GC) scenario, networks of nature and extensive agriculture were created and no feed was imported, which required a change in local agricultural land use. Subsequently, total feed and food (milk and meat) production and potential impacts on biodiversity were assessed, using the total energy and protein value for dairy, dairy productivity and the potentially disappeared fraction (PDF) of plant species richness. Land use changed on 6% of the case study area in the TC scenario, and 69 % in the GC scenario. Feed production per ha (net energy for lactation) was reduced by 3% for the TC and 41 % for the GC scenario. Food production on the case study area reduced to the same extent in TC, and to a larger extent (by about two thirds) in GC because no feed was imported. In consequence, biodiversity increased, thus reducing the PDF from 0.17 in the baseline scenario to 0.16 in the TC scenario and 0.10 in the GC scenario. In both scenarios, extensive grassland offset part of the loss in plant species richness caused by cropland and intensive grassland. Implementing these opposing scenarios requires different policy approaches or incentives for the dairy sector. Moreover, judging whether measures are worth the expected benefits for biodiversity depends on stakeholders' values. Lastly, potential displacement of food production and associated impact on biodiversity needs to be considered.",,,,,"de Olde, Evelien/H-6304-2019; Bosch, Raimon Ripoll/AAB-5177-2022; Kok, Akke/I-6202-2019","Bosch, Raimon Ripoll/0000-0002-1234-7015; Kok, Akke/0000-0002-6024-5339; de Olde, Evelien M./0000-0002-5520-7514",,,,,,,,,,,,,0167-8809,1873-2305,,,,15-Oct,2020,302,,,,,,,,107103,10.1016/j.agee.2020.107103,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000564556600010,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Krause, G; Le Vay, L; Buck, BH; Costa-Pierce, BA; Dewhurst, T; Heasman, KG; Nevejan, N; Nielsen, P; Nielsen, KN; Park, K; Schupp, MF; Thomas, JB; Troell, M; Webb, J; Wrange, AL; Ziegler, F; Strand, A",,,,"Krause, Gesche; Le Vay, Lewis; Buck, Bela H.; Costa-Pierce, Barry Antonio; Dewhurst, Tobias; Heasman, Kevin G.; Nevejan, Nancy; Nielsen, Pernille; Nielsen, Kare Nolde; Park, Kyungil; Schupp, Maximilian F.; Thomas, Jean-Baptiste; Troell, Max; Webb, Julie; Wrange, Anna Lisa; Ziegler, Friederike; Strand, Asa",,,Prospects of Low Trophic Marine Aquaculture Contributing to Food Security in a Net Zero-Carbon World,FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS,,,,,,,,,,,,"To limit compromising the integrity of the planet, a shift is needed towards food production with low environmental impacts and low carbon footprint. How to put such transformative change towards sustainable food production whilst ensuring food security into practice remains a challenge and will require transdisciplinary approaches. Combining expertise from natural- and social sciences as well as industry perspectives, an alternative vision for the future in the marine realm is proposed. This vision includes moving towards aquaculture mainly of low trophic marine (LTM) species. Such shift may enable a blue transformation that can support a sustainable blue economy. It includes a whole new perspective and proactive development of policy-making which considers, among others, the context-specific nature of allocation of marine space and societal acceptance of new developments, over and above the decarbonization of food production, vis a vis reducing regulatory barriers for the industry for LTM whilst acknowledging the complexities of upscaling and outscaling. This needs to be supported by transdisciplinary research co-produced with consumers and wider public, as a blue transformation towards accelerating LTM aquaculture opportunities in a net zero-carbon world can only occur by considering the demands of society.",,,,,"Nielsen, P./K-4897-2014","Nielsen, P./0000-0003-4478-6335",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2571-581X,,,,26-May,2022,6,,,,,,,,875509,10.3389/fsufs.2022.875509,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000808336400001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Kuiper, JJ; van Wijk, D; Mooij, WM; Remme, RP; Peterson, GD; Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen, S; Mooij, CJ; Leltz, GM; Pereira, LM",,,,"Kuiper, Jan J.; van Wijk, Dianneke; Mooij, Wolf M.; Remme, Roy P.; Peterson, Garry D.; Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen, Sylvia; Mooij, Charlotte J.; Leltz, Georgette M.; Pereira, Laura M.",,,Exploring desirable nature futures for Nationaal Park Hollandse Duinen,ECOSYSTEMS AND PEOPLE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Achieving global sustainability goals requires most people and societies to fundamentally revisit their relationship with nature. New approaches are called for to guide change processes towards sustainable futures that embrace the plurality of people's desired relationships with nature. This paper presents a novel approach to exploring desirable futures for nature and people that was developed through an application in Nationaal Park Hollandse Duinen in the Netherlands. This new national park is developed bottom-up by a diverse group of actors reshaping their interactions with each other and with nature. Our approach, co-designed with key stakeholders of the national park, engages with a new pluralistic framework for human-nature relationships presented by the IPBES task force on scenarios and models to catalyze the development of nature-centered scenarios. We integrated this Nature Futures Framework with the Three Horizons Framework in a participatory workshop process designed to bring people's diverse relationships with nature to the fore, and jointly envision desirable futures and the pathways to get there. We present a methodology to analyze and compare the visions and assess their potential contribution to the SDGs. We summarize the results of the application in Nationaal Park Hollandse Duinen and reflect on lessons learned. The approach successfully engaged participants in joint exploration of desirable futures for the national park based on their plural perspectives on human-nature relationships. We see much potential for its applications to support change processes in various social-ecological contexts toward more sustainable futures for nature and people.",,,,,"Pereira, Laura/L-7258-2013; Peterson, Garry/C-1309-2008","Pereira, Laura/0000-0002-4996-7234; Remme, Roy/0000-0002-0799-2319; van Wijk, Dianneke/0000-0002-9074-928X; Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen, Sylvia I/0000-0001-7632-8545; Kuiper, Jan J./0000-0002-6655-9355; Peterson, Garry/0000-0003-0173-0112",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2639-5916,,,,31-Dec,2022,18,1,,,,,329,347,,10.1080/26395916.2022.2065360,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000796769000001,0,yes,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Larigauderie, A; Prieur-Richard, AH; Mace, GM; Lonsdale, M; Mooney, HA; Brussaard, L; Cooper, D; Cramer, W; Daszak, P; Diaz, S; Duraiappah, A; Elmqvist, T; Faith, DP; Jackson, LE; Krug, C; Leadley, PW; Le Prestre, P; Matsuda, H; Palmer, M; Perrings, C; Pulleman, M; Reyers, B; Rosa, EA; Scholes, RJ; Spehn, E; Turner, BL; Yahara, T",,,,"Larigauderie, Anne; Prieur-Richard, Anne-Helene; Mace, Georgina M.; Lonsdale, Mark; Mooney, Harold A.; Brussaard, Lijbert; Cooper, David; Cramer, Wolfgang; Daszak, Peter; Diaz, Sandra; Duraiappah, Anantha; Elmqvist, Thomas; Faith, Daniel P.; Jackson, Louise E.; Krug, Cornelia; Leadley, Paul W.; Le Prestre, Philippe; Matsuda, Hiroyuki; Palmer, Margaret; Perrings, Charles; Pulleman, Mirjam; Reyers, Belinda; Rosa, Eugene A.; Scholes, Robert J.; Spehn, Eva; Turner, B. L., II; Yahara, Tetsukazu",,,Biodiversity and ecosystem services science for a sustainable planet: the DIVERSITAS vision for 2012-20,CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY,,,,,,,,,,,,"DIVERSITAS, the international programme on biodiversity science, is releasing a strategic vision presenting scientific challenges for the next decade of research on biodiversity and ecosystem services: Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services Science for a Sustainable Planet. This new vision is a response of the biodiversity and ecosystem services scientific community to the accelerating loss of the components of biodiversity, as well as to changes in the biodiversity science-policy landscape (establishment of a Biodiversity Observing Network - GEO BON, of an Intergovernmental science-policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services - IPBES, of the new Future Earth initiative; and release of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020). This article presents the vision and its core scientific challenges.",,,,,"Reyers, Belinda/AAF-6225-2019; Brussaard, Lijbert/A-1698-2014; Díaz, Sandra/ABE-7349-2020; Mace, Georgina M/I-3072-2016; Diaz, Sandra/Q-9804-2018; Krug, Cornelia/B-5680-2013; Leadley, Paul/E-4773-2012; Pulleman, Mirjam/C-1207-2014; Jackson, Louise E/A-3562-2010; Spehn, Eva/B-7070-2018; daszak, peter/U-4588-2017; Elmqvist, Thomas/AAY-6344-2021; Cramer, Wolfgang/B-8221-2008; Palmer, Margaret A/F-9648-2013","Reyers, Belinda/0000-0002-2194-8656; Brussaard, Lijbert/0000-0003-3870-1411; Díaz, Sandra/0000-0003-0012-4612; Mace, Georgina M/0000-0001-8965-5211; Pulleman, Mirjam/0000-0001-9950-0176; daszak, peter/0000-0002-2046-5695; Elmqvist, Thomas/0000-0002-4617-6197; Cramer, Wolfgang/0000-0002-9205-5812; Palmer, Margaret A/0000-0003-1468-7993; Scholes, Robert/0000-0001-5537-6935; Krug, Cornelia/0000-0002-2470-1229; Yahara, Tetsukazu/0000-0001-5105-7152",,,,,,,,,,,,,1877-3435,,,,,MAR,2012,4,1,,,,,101,105,,10.1016/j.cosust.2012.01.007,0,,,,,,,,25104977,,,,,WOS:000302507600012,0,y,,1,1,0,yes,presents the IPBES vision for 2012 - 2020 Lelani,"Lesorogol, CK; Boone, RB",,,,"Lesorogol, Carolyn K.; Boone, Randall B.",,,Which way forward? Using simulation models and ethnography to understand changing livelihoods among Kenyan pastoralists in a new commons,INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE COMMONS,,,,,Annual Conference of the American-Anthropological-Association,2013,"Chicago, IL",Amer Anthropol Assoc,,,,"Over the last several decades there has been a transformation of the Samburu pastoral commons to new forms of land tenure and use. Government led land adjudication in the 1970s and 1980s established new forms of land ownership including group ranches and, in some places, complete privatization of land into individual parcels. An important question is what forms of land use and social relations emerge in the wake of land adjudication, and with what consequences? Can a new commons arise following transformation of the traditional commons? We address these questions by examining the aftermath of privatization in a Samburu community. Through ethnographic observations and interviews, we gain insight into peoples' understanding of land use and current norms and practices and propose two diverse visions of the future - the pastoralist imperative of continued extensive livestock production and future farmers seeking a more settled, crop and wage labour-based livelihood. Using computer simulation models of the environment and households we conduct scenario analyses tracing the effects of land use practices and choices resulting from these different perspectives on variables such as livestock wealth, household income and food requirements, and ecological resources including grasses and shrubs. Our analysis suggests that privatization has yielded a new commons combining elements of individual ownership with shared management. These institutional innovations enable a continuation of extensive livestock production with new livelihood strategies that include a degree of land enclosure such as cultivation and land leasing. The analysis indicates that seemingly contradictory norms and practices can co-exist on the same land allowing considerable flexibility in production of livestock and crops. However, the models also demonstrate the limits that may be reached, particularly if common access is heavily curtailed.",,,,,"Boone, Randall B/N-6566-2013","Boone, Randall B/0000-0003-3362-2976; Lesorogol, Carolyn/0000-0001-8946-0289",,,,,,,,,,,,,1875-0281,,,,,,2016,10,2,,,,,747,770,,10.18352/ijc.656,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000388648200015,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Levine, G",,,,"Levine, Gabriel",,,Black-Light Ecologies Punctuate! Theatre's Bears wipes off the oil,PERFORMANCE RESEARCH,,,,,,,,,,,,"In the midst of climate catastrophe-a warming rate twice the global average, raging wildfires, surging floods-the Canadian addiction to pipelines and oil sands exploitation remains unchecked. The spectacle of a settler colony desperately turning more oil into state revenue, while ravaging Indigenous lands and simultaneously preaching environmental sustainability, could inspire a dark sort of laughter: catastrophe as camp. But could the ridiculousness of our predicament foster new forms of inter-species intimacy and collective transformation? This is the wager taken by Bears, a production by playwright/director Matthew MacKenzie and Alberta's Punctuate! Theatre which has toured widely since 2018. The play tells the story of Floyd, a Cree-Metis pipeline worker who finds himself on the run from the Mounties after committing an act of sabotage. Floyd narrates his westward escape in collaboration with a chorus of eight dancers who transform into the flora and fauna alongside the Trans-Mountain pipeline route: prairie gophers, berry patches, orcas, and grizzlies. Black light, shifting video projections and electronic beats provide a backdrop as Floyd, in his flight from the state, slowly finds himself turning into a bear. With the help of his Mama, a protective figure who moves freely about the stage, Floyd eventually manages to wipe off the oil that has obscured his connection with his ancestors and with the land. Yet Floyd's journey is not an escape into a romantic 'nature' or a commodified Indigenous spirituality. As Floyd moves through devastated landscapes, the chorus animates a black-light vision of our collective future, and calls for solidarity between humans and other beings. Can we find a way to stand together for justice, as the play exhorts us, within a dark mess of our own making?",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1352-8165,1469-9990,,,,17-Feb,2020,25,2,,,,,45,52,,10.1080/13528165.2020.1752576,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000537916800007,0,,,1,1,1,yes,"story or narrative, not a vision" Lelani,"Lichrou, M; O'Malley, L; Patterson, M",,,,"Lichrou, Maria; O'Malley, Lisa; Patterson, Maurice",,,"Making Santorini: reflecting on the past, imagining the future",JOURNAL OF PLACE MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT,,,,,,,,,,,,"Purpose - Strategic analyses of Mediterranean destinations have well documented the impacts of mass tourism, including high levels of seasonality and landscape degradation as a result of the anarchic nature of tourism development in these destinations. The lack of a strategic framework is widely recognised in academic and popular discourse. What is often missing, however, is local voice and attention to the local particularities that have shaped the course of tourism development in these places. Focusing on narratives of people living and working in Santorini, Greece, this paper aims to examine tourism development as a particular cultural experience of development. Design/methodology/approach - The authors conducted narrative interviews with 22 local residents and entrepreneurs. Participants belonged to different occupational sectors and age groups. These are supplemented with secondary data, consisting of books, guides, documentaries and online news articles on Santorini. Findings - The analysis and interpretation by the authors identify remembered, experienced and imagined phases of tourism development, which we label as romancing tourism, disenchantment and reimagining tourism. Research limitations/implications - Professionalisation has certainly allowed the improvement of quality standards, but in transforming hosts into service providers, a distance and objectivity is created that results in a loss of authenticity. Authenticity is not just about what the tourists seek but also about what a place is or can be, and the sense of place that residents have and use in their everyday lives. Social implications - Local narratives offer insights into the particularities of tourism development and the varied, contested and dynamic meanings of places. Place narratives can therefore be a useful tool in developing a reflexive and participative place-making process. Originality/value - The study serves the understanding of how tourism, subject to the global-local relations, is a particular experience of development that shapes a place's identity. The case of Santorini shows how place-making involves changing, multilayered desires and contradictory visions of tourism and development. This makes socio-cultural and environmental challenges hard to resolve. It is thus challenging to change the course of development, as various actors at the local level and beyond have diverse interests and interpretations of what is desirable for the place.",,,,,"Lichrou, Maria/AAL-6778-2020; O'Malley, Lisa/E-5197-2013; Patterson, Maurice/L-7028-2019","Lichrou, Maria/0000-0003-4532-1433; Patterson, Maurice/0000-0002-3351-7968",,,,,,,,,,,,,1753-8335,1753-8343,,,,,2017,10,2,,,SI,,106,120,,10.1108/JPMD-07-2016-0050,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000403337200002,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Lindberg, M; Nilsson, AW; Segerstedt, E; Hidman, E; Nilsson, KL; Karlberg, H; Balogh, J",,,,"Lindberg, Malin; Wikberg Nilsson, Asa; Segerstedt, Eugenia; Hidman, Erik; Nilsson, Kristina L.; Karlberg, Helena; Balogh, Johanna",,,Co-creative place-innovation in an arctic town,JOURNAL OF PLACE MANAGEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT,,,,,,,,,,,,"Purpose The purpose of this paper is to shed light on co-creative approaches for place innovation in an Arctic town, based on the relocation of Kiruna's city center in northern Sweden. Three cases of co-creative innovation processes in Kiruna are investigated and compared: an R&D project about local perceptions and visions of attractive urban environments; an R&D project about norm-creative design principles for inclusive and attractive urban design; and an R&D project about cross-industrial synergies for city center attractiveness. Design/methodology/approach The study's research design encompasses a comparative and participatory approach. The comparative approach implies investigation and comparison of three cases of co-creative innovation processes in Kiruna. The participatory approach implies joint development of new knowledge by researchers and local actors. The data consists of participatory observations of workshops and qualitative interviews with local actors. Findings The study reveals that the studied processes have harnessed the city center relocation as an opportunity to make Kiruna more attractive to residents and visitors, by using the co-creative approaches of Living Lab, Now-Wow-How and Norm-creative design. These approaches have enabled experts and local actors to jointly identify excluding patterns and norms in the relocation process and to envision inclusive and attractive (re-)configurations and (re-)conceptualizations of the future Kiruna. Research limitations/implications The results add to the academic strand of inclusive urban transformation, by providing insights into co-creative approaches for re-imagining an Arctic town in times of industrial and social change. New insights are provided regarding how the geographical, industrial and cultural identity of an Arctic town can be harnessed to envision new configuration, content and communication that is attractive and accessible for a diversity of residents and visitors. Practical implications The results highlight the potential to harness Arctic and rural characteristics in the promotion of urban attractiveness and public well-being, especially when combined with co-creative identification and transformation of excluding norms and patterns. Originality/value The results provide new insights into how co-creative approaches may facilitate innovative and inclusive renewal of towns and cities in the Arctic and beyond.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1753-8335,1753-8343,,,,11-Sep,2020,13,4,,,,,447,463,,10.1108/JPMD-02-2019-0009,0,,May-20,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000536049700001,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Lo, VBPG; Lopez-Rodriguez, MD; Metzger, MJ; Oteros-Rozas, E; Cebrian-Piqueras, MA; Ruiz-Mallen, I; March, H; Raymond, CM",,,,"Lo, Veronica B. P. G.; Lopez-Rodriguez, Maria D.; Metzger, Marc J.; Oteros-Rozas, Elisa; Cebrian-Piqueras, Miguel A.; Ruiz-Mallen, Isabel; March, Hug; Raymond, Christopher M.",,,How stable are visions for protected area management? Stakeholder perspectives before and during a pandemic,PEOPLE AND NATURE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Envisioning processes enable protected area managers to chart a course for future management to reach desired goals, but unexpected changes that could affect future visions are not usually considered. The global COVID-19 pandemic provided an opportunity to explore changes in stakeholder visions, the values that underpin the visions, and their perceptions of landscape changes and the underlying drivers (e.g. climate change, mass tourism and demographic trends). Through a mixed-methods approach in this post-evaluation study, we gathered comparative data on these issues from stakeholders in the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park, Spain, between July 2019 (pre-pandemic) and October 2020 (mid-pandemic). Our qualitative analysis demonstrates that pre-pandemic, differences in visions for protected area management were largely spurred by different perceptions of drivers of change, rather than differences in values or perceived landscape changes, which were similar across different vision themes. One year later, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the majority of stakeholders reported that their values, visions and perceptions of drivers did not change despite this large-scale disturbance. Of the 20%-30% of stakeholders that did report changes, visions generally shifted towards greater prioritization of biodiversity and nature conservation as a result of heightened perceptions of the impacts of drivers of change associated with an increase in the numbers of park visitors. These drivers included mass tourism, mountain recreation, lack of environmental awareness, and change in values and traditions. Our findings reinforce the importance of adaptive and inclusive management of protected areas, including enhancing transparency and communications regarding factors driving change in the landscape, and integration of local and traditional knowledge and stakeholder perceptions of changes and drivers. Furthermore, management plans integrating stakeholder values have the potential to stay relevant even in the face of wildcard events such as a pandemic. To enhance the relevancy of visions and scenarios in conservation and land-use planning, scenario planning methodologies should more strongly consider different potential disturbances and how drivers of change in the near and far future can be affected by wildcard events such as a pandemic. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.",,,,,"March, Hug/F-4935-2016; Raymond, Christopher/G-2712-2010; Ruiz-Mallen, Isabel/E-9614-2018; Oteros-Rozas, Elisa/L-8633-2014","March, Hug/0000-0003-2549-0803; Raymond, Christopher/0000-0002-7165-885X; Ruiz-Mallen, Isabel/0000-0002-9679-3329; Lo, Veronica/0000-0001-7297-2739; Oteros-Rozas, Elisa/0000-0003-4313-3041; Cebrian-Piqueras, Miguel Angel/0000-0002-2130-0921; Lopez-Rodriguez, Maria D./0000-0003-2401-8929",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2575-8314,,,,APR,2022,4,2,,,,,445,461,,10.1002/pan3.10292,0,,Jan-22,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000745695700001,0,y,,1,1,0,yes,"more about drivers of change, than transformative change - worth including" Lelani,"Mangnus, AC; Vervoort, JM; McGreevy, SR; Ota, K; Rupprecht, CDD; Oga, M; Kobayashi, M",,,,"Mangnus, Astrid C.; Vervoort, Joost M.; McGreevy, Steven R.; Ota, Kazuhiko; Rupprecht, Christoph D. D.; Oga, Momoe; Kobayashi, Mai",,,"New pathways for governing food system transformations: a pluralistic practice-based futures approach using visioning, back-casting, and serious gaming",ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY,,,,,,,,,,,,"The global environmental change that characterizes the Anthropocene poses a threat to food systems. Cities increasingly serve as the spaces where civil society, private actors, and local governments come together to strategize toward more sustainable food futures and experiment with new forms of food governance. However, much of the futures literature in the context of sustainability focuses on large-scale, global scenarios. These are important pieces of knowledge, but they often do not effect a change in local perspectives and practices. In this paper we respond to the need for novel futures approaches to help urban coalitions of societal actors create pathways to sustainability transformations. We investigate how existing examples of good practices, or seeds, can be used to open up novel, desirable, bottom-up futures in the case study of Kyoto (Japan). Innovative combinations of methodologies (visioning, back-casting, simulation games) are used and assessed in order to create multiple ways of experimenting and engaging with food system futures. Our results consist of a pluriform pathway to a sustainable Kyoto food system. Each method brings in its unique pathway elements: visioning to formulate a desired end goal, back-casting to create a step-by-step action plan, and gaming to practice with the future. The combination of Kyoto-based seeds with initiatives from elsewhere and with a new food system governance model (a food policy council) resulted in participants learning about new food system practices, extending their networks, and support for actualizing a food policy council. We conclude that multimethod futures processes that combine existing practices and new modes of governance are a promising new way to outline various pathways for sustainability transformations.",,,,,,"McGreevy, Steven/0000-0002-3708-424X; Mangnus, Astrid/0000-0003-4572-6510; Rupprecht, Christoph/0000-0003-1809-2129",,,,,,,,,,,,,1708-3087,,,,,DEC,2019,24,4,,,,,,,2,10.5751/ES-11014-240402,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000506574000005,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Manning, AD; Lindenmayer, DB; Fischer, J",,,,"Manning, Adrian D.; Lindenmayer, David B.; Fischer, Joern",,,Stretch goals and backcasting: Approaches for overcoming barriers to large-scale ecological restoration,RESTORATION ECOLOGY,,,,,,,,,,,,"The destruction and transformation of ecosystems by humans threatens biodiversity, ecosystem function, and vital ecosystem services. Ecological repair of ecosystems will be a major challenge over the next century and beyond. Restoration efforts to date have frequently been ad hoc, and site or situation specific. Although such small-scale efforts are vitally important, without large-scale visions and coordination, it is unlikely that large functioning ecosystems will ever be constructed by chance through the cumulative effects of small-scale projects. Although the problems of human-induced environmental degradation and the need for a solution are widely recognized, these issues have rarely been addressed on a sufficiently large-scale basis. There are numerous barriers that prevent large-scale ecological restoration projects from being proposed, initiated, or carried through. Common barriers include the shifting baseline syndrome, the scale and complexity of restoration, the long-term and open-ended nature of restoration, funding challenges, and preemptive constraint of vision. Two potentially useful approaches that could help overcome these barriers are stretch goals and backcasting. Stretch goals are ambitious long-term goals used to inspire creativity and innovation to achieve outcomes that currently seem impossible. Backcasting is a technique where a desired end point is visualized, and then a pathway to that end point is worked out retrospectively. A case study from the Scottish Highlands is used to illustrate how stretch goals and backcasting could facilitate large-scale restoration. The combination of these approaches offers ways to evaluate and shape options for the future of ecosystems, rather than accepting that future ecosystems are victims of past and present political realities.",,,,,"Manning, Adrian/AAX-7288-2021; Lindenmayer, David B/P-7183-2017; Fischer, Joern/C-6625-2012; Manning, Adrian/AAG-2949-2019; Fischer, Joern/W-5380-2019","Manning, Adrian/0000-0003-0989-9203; Lindenmayer, David B/0000-0002-4766-4088; Fischer, Joern/0000-0003-3187-8978;",,,,,,,,,,,,,1061-2971,,,,,DEC,2006,14,4,,,,,487,492,,10.1111/j.1526-100X.2006.00159.x,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000242239000001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Mansur, AV; McDonald, RI; Guneralp, B; Kim, H; de Oliveira, JAP; Callaghan, CT; Hamel, P; Kuiper, JJ; Wolff, M; Liebelt, V; Martins, IS; Elmqvist, T; Pereira, HM",,,,"Mansur, Andressa, V; McDonald, Robert, I; Guneralp, Burak; Kim, HyeJin; de Oliveira, Jose A. Puppim; Callaghan, Corey T.; Hamel, Perrine; Kuiper, Jan J.; Wolff, Manuel; Liebelt, Veronika; Martins, Ines S.; Elmqvist, Thomas; Pereira, Henrique M.",,,Nature futures for the urban century: Integrating multiple values into urban management,ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY,,,,,,,,,,,,"There is an emerging consensus that the health of the planet depends on the coexistence between rapidly growing cities and the natural world. One strategy for guiding cities towards sustainability is to facilitate a planning process based on positive visions for urban systems among actors and stakeholders. This paper presents the Urban Nature Futures Framework (UNFF), a framework for scenario building for cities that is based on three Nature Futures perspectives: Nature for Nature, Nature for Society, and Nature as Culture. Our framework engages stakeholders with envisioning the three Nature Futures perspectives through four components using participatory methods and quantitative models: identification of the socio-ecological feedbacks in cities, assessment of indirect impacts of cities on biodiversity, development of multi-scale indicators, and development of scenarios. Stakeholders in cities may use this framework to explore different options for integrating nature in its various manifestations within urban areas and to assess how different community preferences result in various cityscapes and distribution of associated benefits from nature among urban dwellers across multiple scales.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1462-9011,1873-6416,,,,MAY,2022,131,,,,,,46,56,,10.1016/j.envsci.2022.01.013,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000820278400006,0,yes,multiple,1,1,0,yes,scenarios Lelani,"Martin, A",,,,"Martin, A",,,Telling into wholeness,TEACHING SOCIOLOGY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Modernity glorifies hyperconsumerism and hyperindividualism, and gives rise to a consciousness of human separation from and superiority to nature. To counter these threats to our biological and sociological ecosystems, higher education in general, and sociology in particular, must adopt postmodern strategies to educate for survival. The metanarratives that served the modern age, such as science and progress, prove inadequate for the postmodern age of ecological crisis. We urgently need a more life-centered vision. The ecological perspective replants our feet on the bedrock of biological and sociological connectedness. Although science has been central to modernity's destructiveness, ecology is a subversive science which can serve us well as both science and story; it is the central transformative image of a new postmodern metanarrative.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,0092-055X,,,,,JAN,2000,28,1,,,,,1,11,,10.2307/1319417,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000084556700002,0,,,1,1,0,yes,"very complex, good luck to whomever codes this one" Lelani,"Martin-Ortega, J; Rothwell, SA; Anderson, A; Okumah, M; Lyon, C; Sherry, E; Johnston, C; Withers, PJA; Doody, DG",,,,"Martin-Ortega, Julia; Rothwell, Shane A.; Anderson, Aine; Okumah, Murat; Lyon, Christopher; Sherry, Erin; Johnston, Christopher; Withers, Paul J. A.; Doody, Donnacha G.",,,Are stakeholders ready to transform phosphorus use in food systems? A transdisciplinary study in a livestock intensive system,ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Food systems worldwide are vulnerable to Phosphorus (P) supply disruptions and price fluctuations. Current P use is also highly inefficient, generating large surpluses and pollution. Global food security and aquatic ecosystems are in jeopardy if transformative action is not taken. This paper pivots from earlier (predominantly conceptual) work to develop and analyse a P transdisciplinary scenario process, assessing stakeholders potential for transformative thinking in P use in the food system. Northern Ireland, a highly livestock-intensive system, was used as case study for illustrating such process. The stakeholder engagement takes a normative stance in that it sets the explicit premise that the food system needs to be transformed and asks stakeholders to engage in a dialogue on how that transformation can be achieved. A Substance Flow Analysis of P flows and stocks was employed to construct visions for alternative futures and stimulate stakeholder discussions on system responses. These were analysed for their transformative potential using a triple-loop social learning framework. For the most part, stakeholder responses remained transitional or incremental, rather than being fundamentally transformative. The process did unveil some deeper levers that could be acted upon to move the system further along the spectrum of transformational change (e.g. changes in food markets, creation of new P markets, destocking, new types of land production and radical land use changes), providing clues of what an aspirational system could look like. Replicated and adapted elsewhere, this process can serve as diagnostics of current stakeholders thinking and potential, as well as for the identification of those deeper levers, opening up avenues to work upon for global scale transformation.",,,,,,"withers, paul/0000-0002-1153-0328; Lyon, Christopher/0000-0003-2319-2933; Rothwell, Shane Andrew/0000-0002-3919-6077",,,,,,,,,,,,,1462-9011,1873-6416,,,,MAY,2022,131,,,,,,,,,10.1016/j.envsci.2022.01.011,0,,,,,,,,35505912,,,,,WOS:000820277500007,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,Stakeholders' visions on phosphorus flows in food systems are presented Lelani,"Masao, CA; Prescott, GW; Snethlage, MA; Urbach, D; Rando, ATM; Molina-Venegas, R; Mollel, NP; Hemp, C; Hemp, A; Fischer, M",,,,"Masao, Catherine A.; Prescott, Graham W.; Snethlage, Mark A.; Urbach, Davnah; Rando, Amor Torre-Marin; Molina-Venegas, Rafael; Mollel, Neduvoto P.; Hemp, Claudia; Hemp, Andreas; Fischer, Markus",,,"Stakeholder perspectives on nature, people and sustainability at Mount Kilimanjaro",PEOPLE AND NATURE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Effective approaches towards sustainability need to be informed by a diverse array of stakeholder perspectives. However, capturing these perspectives in a way that can be integrated with other forms of knowledge can represent a challenge. Here we present the first application of the conceptual framework of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) to a participatory assessment of local perspectives on nature, people and sustainability on Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania. This assessment was organized in the form of a participatory workshop with five different groups of stakeholders. Following this framework, we assembled information on the state of and trends in species diversity, Nature's Contributions to People (NCP), and on the main drivers of changes in species and habitats. Additionally, we gathered perspectives on the needs and opportunities for the sustainable management and conservation of natural resources from the individual to the international level. The various stakeholders agreed that both the condition and extent of the various habitats and NCP are declining. In line with available knowledge, the key direct drivers of change mentioned by the workshop participants were land use and climate change, whereas human population growth was singled out as the most important indirect driver. The most frequently suggested measures to address the observed decline in species diversity and its drivers were related to land and water management and to education and awareness raising. Yet, the stakeholder groups differed in the measures they suggested. The willingness of a diversity of knowledge holders to systematically engage in a structured discussion around all the elements of the IPBES framework provides support for its applicability in participatory workshops aimed at capturing nuanced and context-based perspectives on social-ecological systems from informed stakeholders. The application of the IPBES framework enabled the comparability needed for developing narratives of stakeholder visions that can help identify new pathways towards sustainability and guide planning while retaining the context-based nuances that remain unresolved with non-participatory methods. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.",,,,,"; Prescott, Graham/U-8569-2018","Hemp, Andreas/0000-0002-5369-2122; Prescott, Graham/0000-0001-5123-514X",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2575-8314,,,,JUN,2022,4,3,,,,,711,729,,10.1002/pan3.10310,0,,Mar-22,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000766960900001,0,yes,,1,1,1,yes,"a single, synthesised 'vision' is presented, see 3.5 ""Actions for the sustainable management of species and habitats on Mount Kilimanjaro and for a sustainable future""" Lelani,"Milkoreit, M",,,,"Milkoreit, Manjana",,,Imaginary politics: Climate change and making the future,ELEMENTA-SCIENCE OF THE ANTHROPOCENE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Climate change places major transformational demands on modern societies. Transformations require the capacity to collectively envision and meaningfully debate realistic and desirable futures. Without such a collective imagination capacity and active deliberation processes, societies lack both the motivation for change and guidance for decision-making in a certain direction of change. Recent arguments that science fiction can play a role in societal transformation processes is not yet supported by theory or empirical evidence. Advancing the argument that fiction can support sustainability transformations, this paper makes four contributions. First, building on the imaginary concept, I introduce and define the idea of socio-climatic imaginaries. Second, I develop a theory of imagination as linked cognitive-social processes that enable the creation of collectively shared visions of future states of the world. This theory addresses the dynamics that bridge imagination processes in the individual mind and collective imagining that informs social and political decision-making. Third, emphasizing the political nature of creating and contesting imaginaries in a society, I introduce the role of power and agency in this theory of collective imagination. I argue that both ideational and structural power concepts are relevant for understanding the potential societal influence of climate fiction. Finally, the paper illuminates these different forms of transformational power and agency with two brief case studies: two climate fiction novels. I contrast a dystopian and utopian science fiction novel - Paolo Bacigalupi's The Water Knife (2015) and Kim Stanley Robinson's Green Earth (2015). The two books are very similar in their power/agency profile, but the comparison provides initial insights into the different roles of optimistic and pessimistic future visions.",,,,,"Milkoreit, Manjana/L-3673-2019","Milkoreit, Manjana/0000-0002-7862-3561",,,,,,,,,,,,,2325-1026,,,,,6-Nov,2017,5,,,,,,,,62,10.1525/elementa.249,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000416796500001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Misselhorn, A; Aggarwal, P; Ericksen, P; Gregory, P; Horn-Phathanothai, L; Ingram, J; Wiebe, K",,,,"Misselhorn, Alison; Aggarwal, Pramod; Ericksen, Polly; Gregory, Peter; Horn-Phathanothai, Leo; Ingram, John; Wiebe, Keith",,,A vision for attaining food security,CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Food is fundamental to human wellbeing and development. Increased food production remains a cornerstone strategy in the effort to alleviate global food insecurity. But despite the fact that global food production over the past half century has kept ahead of demand, today around one billion people do not have enough to eat, and a further billion lack adequate nutrition. Food insecurity is facing mounting supply-side and demand-side pressures; key among these are climate change, urbanisation, globalisation, population increases, disease, as well as a number of other factors that are changing patterns of food consumption. Many of the challenges to equitable food access are concentrated in developing countries where environmental pressures including climate change, population growth and other socio-economic issues are concentrated. Together these factors impede people's access to sufficient, nutritious food; chiefly through affecting livelihoods, income and food prices. Food security and human development go hand in hand, and their outcomes are co-determined to a significant degree. The challenge of food security is multi-scalar and cross-sector in nature. Addressing it will require the work of diverse actors to bring sustained improvements inhuman development and to reduce pressure on the environment. Unless there is investment in future food systems that are similarly cross-level, cross-scale and cross-sector, sustained improvements in human wellbeing together with reduced environmental risks and scarcities will not be achieved. This paper reviews current thinking, and outlines these challenges. It suggests that essential elements in a successfully adaptive and proactive food system include: learning through connectivity between scales to local experience and technologies high levels of interaction between diverse actors and sectors ranging from primary producers to retailers and consumers, and use of frontier technologies.",,,,,,"Ericksen, Polly/0000-0002-5775-7691; Wiebe, Keith/0000-0001-6035-620X; Gregory, Peter/0000-0002-4118-4833",,,,,,,,,,,,,1877-3435,1877-3443,,,,MAR,2012,4,1,,,,,7,17,,10.1016/j.cosust.2012.01.008,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000302507600003,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Mitchell, MGE; Bennett, EM; Gonzalez, A; Lechowicz, MJ; Rhemtulla, JM; Cardille, JA; Vanderheyden, K; Poirier-Ghys, G; Renard, D; Delmotte, S; Albert, CH; Rayfield, B; Dumitru, M; Huang, HH; Larouche, M; Liss, KN; Maguire, DY; Martins, KT; Terrado, M; Ziter, C; Taliana, L; Dancose, K",,,,"Mitchell, Matthew G. E.; Bennett, Elena M.; Gonzalez, Andrew; Lechowicz, Martin J.; Rhemtulla, Jeanine M.; Cardille, Jeffrey A.; Vanderheyden, Kees; Poirier-Ghys, Genevieve; Renard, Delphine; Delmotte, Sylvestre; Albert, Cecile H.; Rayfield, Bronwyn; Dumitru, Maria; Huang, Hsin-Hui; Larouche, Martine; Liss, Kate N.; Maguire, Dorothy Y.; Martins, Kyle T.; Terrado, Marta; Ziter, Carly; Taliana, Lucie; Dancose, Karine",,,"The Monteregie Connection: linking landscapes, biodiversity, and ecosystem services to improve decision making",ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY,,,,,,,,,,,,"To maximize specific ecosystem services (ES) such as food production, people alter landscape structure, i.e., the types of ecosystems present, their relative proportions, and their spatial arrangement across landscapes. This can have significant, and sometimes unexpected, effects on biodiversity and ES. Communities need information about how land/use activities and changes to landscape structure are likely to affect biodiversity and ES, but current scientific understanding of these effects is incomplete. The Monteregie Connection (MC) project has used the rapidly suburbanizing agricultural Monteregien landscape just east of Montreal, Quebec, Canada, to investigate how current and historic landscape structure influences ES provision. Our results highlight the importance of forest connectivity and functional diversity on ES provision, and show that ES provision can vary significantly even within single land-use types in response to changes in landscape structure. Our historical analysis reveals that levels of ES provision, as well as relationships among individual ES, can change dramatically through time. We are using these results to build quantitative ES-landscape structure models to assess four future landscape scenarios for the region: Periurban Development, Demand for Energy, Whole-System Crisis, and Green Development. These scenarios integrate empirical and historical data on ES provision with local stakeholder input about global and local social and ecological drivers to explore how land-use decisions could affect ES provision and human well-being across the region to the year 2045. By integrating empirical data, quantitative models, and scenarios we have achieved the central goals of the MC project: (1) increasing understanding of the effects of landscape structure on biodiversity and ES provision, (2) effectively linking this knowledge to decision making to better manage for biodiversity and ES, and (3) creating a vision for a more sustainable social-ecological system in the region.",,,,,"Bennett, Elena M/A-9553-2008; Lechowicz, Martin/Y-7211-2019; Gonzalez, Andrew/F-2247-2010; Mitchell, Matthew G. E./C-2340-2012; Rayfield, Bronwyn/ABB-8306-2021; Albert, Cécile H./AAA-5490-2019","Gonzalez, Andrew/0000-0001-6075-8081; Mitchell, Matthew G. E./0000-0002-3490-9314; Rayfield, Bronwyn/0000-0003-1768-1300; Albert, Cécile H./0000-0002-0991-1068; Lechowicz, Martin/0000-0003-2562-7136; Cardille, Jeffrey/0000-0002-4667-9085; Renard, Delphine/0000-0002-3228-4269; Bennett, Elena/0000-0003-3944-2925; Ziter, Carly/0000-0002-3731-9678; Terrado, Marta/0000-0002-3484-5007",,,,,,,,,,,,,1708-3087,,,,,,2015,20,4,,,,,,,15,10.5751/ES-07927-200415,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000367628900018,0,yes,multiple,1,1,0,yes,scenarios Lelani,"Molinero-Parejo, R; Aguilera-Benavente, F; Gomez-Delgado, M; Soria-Lara, JA",,,,"Molinero-Parejo, Ramon; Aguilera-Benavente, Francisco; Gomez-Delgado, Montserrat; Soria-Lara, Julio A.",,,Mapping disruptive long-term scenarios using a participatory approach,JOURNAL OF MAPS,,,,,,,,,,,,"Although mapping long-term scenarios can be considered crucial in decision-making, its inclusion in planning processes remains a challenge. This paper aims to gain insights into this by showing a participatory mapping method that creates a dialogue and interaction space between stakeholders and experts. The research was based on three 2050 visions, taking as a case study the eastern sector of the metropolitan area of Madrid, Spain. The method consisted of conducting a participatory mapping workshop involving urban planners, transport engineers, environmental consultants, and property developers. Those experts mapped transformations in urban land use for each 2050 scenario. The results evidenced differences between the three 2050 scenarios, highlighting the usefulness of the participatory mapping workshop to represent the amount and nature of growth in urban land use and organisation of the transport network.",,,,,"Soria-Lara, Julio A./P-4672-2018; Aguilera-Benavente, Francisco/A-9598-2017","Aguilera-Benavente, Francisco/0000-0001-5710-2057; Molinero-Parejo, Ramon/0000-0001-7406-8604; Soria-Lara, Julio A./0000-0002-2383-6332",,,,,,,,,,,,,1744-5647,,,,,1-Jan,2021,17,1,,,,,106,115,,10.1080/17445647.2021.1937726,0,,Jun-21,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000660410700001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Moritz, J; Tuomisto, HL; Ryynanen, T",,,,"Moritz, Jana; Tuomisto, Hanna L.; Ryynanen, Toni",,,The transformative innovation potential of cellular agriculture: Political and policy stakeholders' perceptions of cultured meat in Germany,JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES,,,,,,,,,,,,"The current animal-based food systems are being challenged by environmental, social and economic sustain ability issues. A systemic transformation from conventional agriculture to a more sustainable cellular agriculture utilising cell-cultivation technologies to produce animal products has been proposed. The aim of this study is to explore the political and policy stakeholders' perceptions about cellular agriculture; how they perceive of the current food system and its potential transformation into a cellular agricultural system. The qualitative data comprises 13 interviews conducted with representatives of German stakeholders. The data were analysed with the Transformative Innovation Policy approach. Perceptions of the transformative potential of cultured products were classified into drivers and bottlenecks that either advance or hinder the progress of cellular agriculture in Germany. The results show that the political and policy stakeholders are aware of the changes that are needed, but anticipate that large-scale transformation to the cellular agriculture system may not be a plausible solution in the near future.",,,,,,"Moritz, Jana/0000-0001-6163-0573; Ryynanen, Toni/0000-0002-3710-5311; Tuomisto, Hanna L./0000-0002-5971-8354",,,,,,,,,,,,,0743-0167,1873-1392,,,,JAN,2022,89,,,,,,54,65,,10.1016/j.jrurstud.2021.11.018,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000774678000006,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,Perceptions of cultured meat Lelani,"Moskovits, DK; Fialkowski, CJ; Mueller, GM; Sullivan, TA",,,,"Moskovits, DK; Fialkowski, CJ; Mueller, GM; Sullivan, TA",,,Chicago Wilderness: A new force in urban conservation,ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN,,,,,47th Annual Systematics Symposium of the Missouri Botanical Garden,"OCT 13-14, 2000","ST LOUIS, MISSOURI",,,,,"In 1996, a coalition of diverse and determined organizations launched a new initiative in the Chicago region. Our vision? Chicago Wilderness: a thriving mosaic of natural areas, connected by greenways and wildlife corridors, embedded in the nation's third largest metropolis. In this vision, the region's human communities reclaim a cultural tradition of protecting and restoring these globally significant natural communities that enrich our lives. Today, more than 100 organizations join forces to transform this vision into reality. A regional Biodiversity Recovery Plan-the result of three Years OF assessment and planning by scientists, land managers, educators, and policy strategies-sets priorities and determines the lines of action for the coalition. This regional agenda stems from our vision and recovery goals for each ecological community; it encourages targeted research initiatives that focus on characterizing our native biological diversity and on analyzing elements critical to its recovery. Ultimately though the long-term survival of our natural wealth rests on the support from the public. While the challenges to conservation educators and communicators are many, Chicago Wilderness allows us to work together in understanding our. audiences, channeling our resources, and creating novel approaches to engage the wiliest public in our conservation efforts.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,0026-6493,,,,,,2002,89,2,,,,,153,163,,10.2307/3298560,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000176821200004,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Muller, M; Reutter, O",,,,"Mueller, Miriam; Reutter, Oscar",,,Vision Development towards a Sustainable North Rhine-Westphalia 2030 in a Science-Practice-Dialogue,SUSTAINABILITY,,,,,,,,,,,,"The paper presents the results of a participatory vision development process in the Federal State of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) in Germany. The vision development was part of a scientific research project that accompanied the development of a sustainability strategy for NRW at state level. The Sustainability Strategy NRW was adopted in July 2016 and contains parts of the vision developed in the research project: Sentences from the narrative text vision and proposed targets and indicators that back-up the vision for a sustainable NRW in 2030 were used by the state of NRW. The vision was developed in iterative steps in three consecutive dialogue rounds with different stakeholders from science and practice. The paper presents the methodological approach and the results of the vision formulation process. The paper discusses the lessons learned from the vision development-from both practical and theoretical perspectives of transition management. The paper explores the relevance of setting ambitious targets for sustainable development as part of a state strategy by taking the proposed target of a 4 x 25% modal split by 2030 as an example. The project demonstrated that a participatory approach for vision development is time and resource consuming, but worth the effort as it improves the quality and acceptance of a vision. Furthermore, the project demonstrated that transformative science contributes valuable inputs for sustainability transitions and for facilitating participatory vision development.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,2071-1050,,,,JUL,2017,9,7,,,,,,,1111,10.3390/su9071111,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000406709500040,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Nikologianni, A; Larkham, PJ",,,,"Nikologianni, Anastasia; Larkham, Peter J.",,,The Urban Future: Relating Garden City Ideas to the Climate Emergency,LAND,,,,,,,,,,,,"Climate emergency, landscape connectivity and rapid urbanization are among the major challenges of the 21st century. This paper discusses ways in which cities can respond to the changing climate and put in place a sustainable vision. It uses the garden city concept as a vehicle to investigate the future of our cities in relation to the climate emergency and the elements that urban centres need to provide. Cities and their wider regions are recognised as key actors in supporting systemic change and climate change governance, and therefore the scope of this paper is to explore contemporary models of garden cities and the ways in which these might be able to address climate emergency as well as the concepts of zero carbon and sustainability. The study uses the 2014 Wolfson Economics Prize, which was based on a garden city question. Taking an environmental perspective on the delivery of future cities, and using the competition essays and masterplans, this study produces analytical drawings aiming to unpack the concepts of sustainability and low carbon. This research concludes that the garden city concept can support the future needs of our settlements, but a 21st century approach needs to be developed. The social and economic ideas originally introduced at the end of the 19th century need to be updated as a holistic vision, including nature and biodiversity, climatic conditions, climate emergency adaptation and mitigation processes as well as community health and wellbeing, to be able to fully respond to the needs of the future.",,,,,,"Larkham, Peter/0000-0002-2456-958X; Nikologianni, Dr Anastasia/0000-0002-2234-4707",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2073-445X,,,,FEB,2022,11,2,,,,,,,147,10.3390/land11020147,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000770655500001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,Garden city vision is presented Lelani,"Niutanen, V; Korhonen, J",,,,"Niutanen, V; Korhonen, J",,,Industrial ecology flows of agriculture and food industry in Finland: utilizing by-products and wastes,INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND WORLD ECOLOGY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Industrial ecology (IE) studies the physical flows of matter and energy within, and most importantly, between the natural ecosystem and the human industrial system, aiming to reduce the environmental burden of the flows. One of the applications used is to transform the industrial system linear 'throughput' material and energy flow that relies on imported non-renewables, on virgin renewables and produces wastes and emissions dumped to nature toward a cyclical and cascading 'roundput' flow that relies oil local/regional renewables and wastes. The paper constructs a key function or an anchor activity that integrates the throughput material and energy flows and changes them into the roundput model in a local/regional agricultural and food industry system in Finland. This key activity is able to simultaneously utilise and process waste flows from the main steps in the food products' life cycle (value chain) and produce energy and fertiliser to the different processes in the life cycle by using waste as a fuel and as a resource with value. Difficulties in achieving this vision in practice are discussed. The paper uses national data from Finland, regional data from the Satakunta region in southwest Finland and local data from the municipality of Huittinen in Satakunta. A methodology in which environmental, economic and social variables are studied with different 'what if?' scenarios for the roundput model and for the throughput model is presented.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1350-4509,1745-2627,,,,JUN,2003,10,2,,,,,133,147,,10.1080/13504500309469792,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000184309600005,0,,,1,1,1,yes,"instead of visions, they present scenarios" Lelani,"Nummelin, T; Widmark, C; Riala, M; Stens, A; Nordstrom, EM; Nordin, A",,,,"Nummelin, Tuomas; Widmark, Camilla; Riala, Maria; Stens, Anna; Nordstrom, Eva-Maria; Nordin, Annika",,,Forest future s by Swedish students - developing a mind mapping method for data collection,SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH,,,,,,,,,,,,"Forests are an important natural resource in Sweden. They are used for multiple purposes, for example, providing economic returns from timber harvest, conservation of biodiversity, provision of wild berries and mushrooms and recreational benefits. People's perceptions of forests and forest use are currently under transformation due to drivers like globalization and urbanization. The aim of this study was to analyse in particular Swedish university student's visions of future forests using a newly developed survey method based on mind mapping. An online survey with mind map technique was used to collect data from university students in Umea, northern Sweden. The study focused on features of forests, products derived from forests and activities in forests. The results indicate that students regard ecological, social and economic aspects of forests as important for future forests and the use of them. In particular, the role of non-wood forest products, like berries and mushrooms, as well as recreational features of forests were central to many of the students. The multitude of different visions suggests that forest management decisions of today, directing the future of forests, need to consider the multiple use of forests to be able to satisfy forest preferences also of younger generations.",,,,,,"Widmark, Camila/0000-0002-1559-6471",,,,,,,,,,,,,0282-7581,1651-1891,,,,,2017,32,8,,,,,807,817,,10.1080/02827581.2017.1287303,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000413600600019,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Olabisi, LS; Adebiyi, J; Traore, PS; Kakwera, MN",,,,"Olabisi, Laura Schmitt; Adebiyi, Jelili; Traore, Pierre Sibiry; Kakwera, Mayamiko Nathaniel",,,Do participatory scenario exercises promote systems thinking and build consensus?,ELEMENTA-SCIENCE OF THE ANTHROPOCENE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Participatory scenario processes are associated with positive social learning outcomes, including consensus-building and shifts toward more systemic thinking. However, these claims have not been assessed quantitatively in diverse cultural and socio-ecological settings. We convened three stakeholder workshops around the future of agricultural development and rural livelihoods in Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and Malawi, using a participatory scenario generation process to examine proposed research and action priorities under conditions of uncertainty. We administered pre- and post-workshop surveys, and used a paired t-test to assess how stakeholders' rankings of research priorities changed after participating in the scenario visioning exercise. Workshop participants also listed their own priorities for research and implementation on both the pre- and post-survey forms. We found indications that the workshops promoted consensus-building around the research priorities, including a reduction in standard deviation of priority rankings post-workshop compared to pre- workshop; and a higher incidence of identical volunteered responses. We did not find evidence to support shifts in thinking to more systemic views of agricultural development. However, participants viewed themselves as having learned throughout the process. We conclude that scenario visioning does have the potential to foster consensus-building (one element of social learning) among diverse stakeholder groups. We urge researchers to continue to monitor and measure systems thinking outcomes from scenario visioning so that these processes may be designed to be more effective.",,,,,"; Traore, Pierre C. Sibiry/M-5629-2017","Kakwera, Mayamiko Nathaniel/0000-0003-4918-0367; Traore, Pierre C. Sibiry/0000-0001-8881-4794",,,,,,,,,,,,,2325-1026,,,,,21-Jul,2016,4,,,,,,,,113,10.12952/journal.elementa.000113,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000389920500001,0,y,,1,1,0,yes,"There are visions, which are somehow transformative" Lelani,"Orr, CJ; Williams, KC; Laurent, KL; Friedman, KB; Krantzberg, G; Scavia, D; Creed, IF",,,,"Orr, Christopher J.; Williams, Kathleen C.; Laurent, Katrina L.; Friedman, Kathryn B.; Krantzberg, Gail; Scavia, Donald; Creed, Irena F.",,,Trying hard to adapt to a chaotic world: How complex challenges overwhelmed best intentions,JOURNAL OF GREAT LAKES RESEARCH,,,,,,,,,,,,"In this future, citizens of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River basin recognize their dependence upon and became united around a common vision for a thriving Great Lakes basin. However, in 2063 the environment and economy are out of balance; citizens are constantly forced to make difficult trade-offs. Climate warming, geopolitical pressures such as environmental refugees, an aging population, and a sluggish economy have overwhelmed the region's efforts to find a balance that would have ensured human prosperity without diminishing the integrity of the Great Lakes basin. This narrative illustrates the time period 2013 to 2063, depicting how the collision of multiple drivers of change cause declining social and environmental conditions, and force a gradual transformation in societal values. While society was initially complacent, the groundwork for social transformation was laid over three decades. Impacts of education programs, opposition to environmentally degrading natural resource extraction, and widespread effects of both failing social services and physical infrastructure galvanize grassroots mobilization of communities around iceless hockey rink meetings. These meetings act as a catalyst, translating this social movement into governance that works towards a common vision based on shared values. However, despite innovative technologies and cohesive efforts, it becomes obvious that attempts to oppose the complex and interrelated forces driving changes in the Great Lakes region are limited. These efforts come at huge economic costs, and the harsh reality forces people in the region to make difficult decisions that threaten some facets of economic, social and environmental well-being while protecting others. (C) 2014 International Association for Great Lakes Research. Published by Elsevier BY. All rights reserved.",,,,,"Scavia, Donald/P-5917-2018; /A-5404-2008","Scavia, Donald/0000-0002-2784-8269; /0000-0002-2660-7770; Orr, Christopher/0000-0003-2406-209X; Williams, Kathleen/0000-0002-9577-6762",,,,,,,,,,,,,0380-1330,,,,,,2015,41,,,1,SI,,139,149,,10.1016/j.jglr.2014.12.003,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000351651300014,0,,,1,1,1,yes,[Lelani] I don't have access to paper Lelani,"Pereira, LM; Davies, KK; den Belder, E; Ferrier, S; Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen, S; Kim, H; Kuiper, JJ; Okayasu, S; Palomo, MG; Pereira, HM; Peterson, G; Sathyapalan, J; Schoolenberg, M; Alkemade, R; Ribeiro, SC; Greenaway, A; Hauck, J; King, N; Lazarova, T; Ravera, F; Chettri, N; Cheung, WWL; Hendriks, RJJ; Kolomytsev, G; Leadley, P; Metzger, JP; Ninan, KN; Pichs, R; Popp, A; Rondinini, C; Rosa, I; van Vuuren, D; Lundquist, CJ",,,,"Pereira, Laura M.; Davies, Kathryn K.; den Belder, Eefje; Ferrier, Simon; Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen, Sylvia; Kim, HyeJin; Kuiper, Jan J.; Okayasu, Sana; Palomo, Maria G.; Pereira, Henrique M.; Peterson, Garry; Sathyapalan, Jyothis; Schoolenberg, Machteld; Alkemade, Rob; Ribeiro, Sonia Carvalho; Greenaway, Alison; Hauck, Jennifer; King, Nicholas; Lazarova, Tanya; Ravera, Federica; Chettri, Nakul; Cheung, William W. L.; Hendriks, Rob J. J.; Kolomytsev, Grigoriy; Leadley, Paul; Metzger, Jean-Paul; Ninan, Karachepone N.; Pichs, Ramon; Popp, Alexander; Rondinini, Carlo; Rosa, Isabel; van Vuuren, Detlef; Lundquist, Carolyn J.",,,Developing multiscale and integrative nature-people scenarios using the Nature Futures Framework,PEOPLE AND NATURE,,,,,,,,,,,,"1. Scientists have repeatedly argued that transformative, multiscale global scenarios are needed as tools in the quest to halt the decline of biodiversity and achieve sustainability goals. 2. As a first step towards achieving this, the researchers who participated in the scenarios and models expert group of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) entered into an iterative, participatory process that led to the development of the Nature Futures Framework (NFF). 3. The NFF is a heuristic tool that captures diverse, positive relationships of humans with nature in the form of a triangle. It can be used both as a boundary object for continuously opening up more plural perspectives in the creation of desirable nature scenarios and as an actionable framework for developing consistent nature scenarios across multiple scales. 4. Here we describe the methods employed to develop the NFF and how it fits into a longer term process to create transformative, multiscale scenarios for nature. We argue that the contribution of the NFF is twofold: (a) its ability to hold a plurality of perspectives on what is desirable, which enables the development of joint goals and visions and recognizes the possible convergence and synergies of measures to achieve these visions and (b), its multiscale functionality for elaborating scenarios and models that can inform decision-making at relevant levels, making it applicable across specific places and perspectives on nature. 5. If humanity is to achieve its goal of a more sustainable and prosperous future rooted in a flourishing nature, it is critical to open up a space for more plural perspectives of human-nature relationships. As the global community sets out to develop new goals for biodiversity, the NFF can be used as a navigation tool helping to make diverse, desirable futures possible.",,,,,"Metzger, Jean Paul/C-2514-2012; Popp, Alexander/N-7064-2014; Pereira, Henrique Miguel/B-3975-2009; Hauck, Jennifer/P-4115-2017; Pereira, Laura M./L-7258-2013; Peterson, Garry D/C-1309-2008; Rondinini, Carlo/E-9027-2011","Metzger, Jean Paul/0000-0002-0087-5240; Popp, Alexander/0000-0001-9500-1986; Pereira, Henrique Miguel/0000-0003-1043-1675; Hauck, Jennifer/0000-0002-1614-9657; Pereira, Laura M./0000-0002-4996-7234; Peterson, Garry D/0000-0003-0173-0112; Schoolenberg, Machteld/0000-0002-8940-0291; Davies, Kathryn/0000-0002-8979-8295; Okayasu, Sana/0000-0002-6534-0458; Rondinini, Carlo/0000-0002-6617-018X; Kuiper, Jan J./0000-0002-6655-9355; Lundquist, Carolyn/0000-0002-2101-7237; Ravera, Federica/0000-0001-6282-6236",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2575-8314,,,,DEC,2020,2,4,,,,,1172,1195,,10.1002/pan3.10146,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000657239900020,0,yes,multiple,1,1,1,yes,"describes the methods employed to develop the NFF and how it fits into a longer term process to create transformative, multiscale scenarios for nature Does have visions - see TABLE 1. Seven visions of positive Nature Futures that emerged from the Auckland workshop (adapted from Lundquist et al., 2017)" Lelani,"Pichler, M; Ingalls, M",,,,"Pichler, Melanie; Ingalls, Micah",,,"Negotiating between forest conversion, industrial tree plantations and multifunctional landscapes. Power and politics in forest transitions",GEOFORUM,,,,,,,,,,,,"Increasing forest cover through reforestation and forest regrowth constitutes an essential contribution to mitigating the climate crisis, especially in the tropics. The Southeast Asian country of Lao PDR is on the brink of a forest transition, that is, a shift from net deforestation to net increases in forest area. This process is, however, contested and this article sheds light to power and politics in forest transitions and the implications for forests and people in Lao PDR and beyond. We develop a conceptual framework rooted in political ecology and critical state theory to identify visions and strategies by institutional actors that aim to transform the forests in particular ways, reflect on their power resources and synthesize three development projects from these strategies. We identify an antecedent dominant extractivist development project, focused on state-led timber extraction and large-scale land acquisitions. We argue that green development strategies that commodify forests through offsetting schemes, results-based payments from REDD+ and industrial tree plantations are increasingly mobilized to complement and modernize this extractivist development trajectory. Whereas these strategies align in their focus on land sparing to intensify agricultural and forest production, on the margins, we carve out an alternative livelihoods-based development project that supports extensive agroecological practices (including shifting cultivation) and integrates forests into multifunctional landscapes, re-centering local interests in reforestation approaches. The research therefore contributes to a more complex understanding of power and politics in forest transition research as well as a nuanced understanding of forest politics in political ecology.",,,,,,"Pichler, Melanie/0000-0001-6224-1609",,,,,,,,,,,,,0016-7185,1872-9398,,,,AUG,2021,124,,,,,,185,194,,10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.06.012,0,,Jul-21,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000678501400009,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Planque, B; Mullon, C; Arneberg, P; Eide, A; Fromentin, JM; Heymans, JJ; Hoel, AH; Niiranen, S; Ottersen, G; Sando, AB; Sommerkorn, M; Thebaud, O; Thorvik, T",,,,"Planque, Benjamin; Mullon, Christian; Arneberg, Per; Eide, Arne; Fromentin, Jean-Marc; Heymans, Johanna Jacomina; Hoel, Alf Hakon; Niiranen, Susa; Ottersen, Geir; Sando, Anne Britt; Sommerkorn, Martin; Thebaud, Olivier; Thorvik, Thorbjorn",,,A participatory scenario method to explore the future of marine social-ecological systems,FISH AND FISHERIES,,,,,,,,,,,,"Anticipating future changes in marine social-ecological systems (MSES) several decades into the future is essential in the context of accelerating global change. This is challenging in situations where actors do not share common understandings, practices, or visions about the future. We introduce a dedicated scenario method for the development of MSES scenarios in a participatory context. The objective is to allow different actors to jointly develop scenarios which contain their multiple visions of the future. The method starts from four perspectives: fisheries management, ecosystem, ocean climate, and global context and governance for which current status and recent trends are summarized. Contrasted scenarios about possible futures are elaborated for each of the four single perspectives before being integrated into multiple-perspective scenarios. Selected scenarios are then developed into storylines. Focusing on individual perspectives until near the end allows actors with diverse cultures, interests and horizons to confront their own notions of the future. We illustrate the method with the exploration of the futures of the Barents Sea MSES by 2050. We emphasize the following lessons learned: first, many actors are not familiar with scenario building and attention must be paid to explaining the purpose, methodology, and benefits of scenarios exercises. Second, although the Barents Sea MSES is relatively well understood, uncertainties about its future are significant. Third, it is important to focus on unlikely events. Fourth, all perspectives should be treated equally. Fifth, as MSES are continuously changing, we can only be prepared for future changes if we collectively keep preparing.",,,,,"Ottersen, Geir/M-9676-2019; Thebaud, Olivier/D-9792-2011; Ottersen, Geir/AAS-3046-2020; Planque, Benjamin/D-2729-2013","Ottersen, Geir/0000-0002-9453-6679; Thebaud, Olivier/0000-0001-8665-3827; Planque, Benjamin/0000-0002-0557-7410; Fromentin, Jean-Marc/0000-0002-1496-4332; Eide, Arne/0000-0002-8009-7177; Niiranen, Susa/0000-0001-8405-8717",,,,,,,,,,,,,1467-2960,1467-2979,,,,MAY,2019,20,3,,,,,434,451,,10.1111/faf.12356,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000477638500003,0,yes,multiple,1,1,0,yes,"marine futures, blended scenarios" Lelani,"Reed, PM; Brooks, RP; Davis, KJ; DeWalle, DR; Dressler, KA; Duffy, CJ; Lin, HS; Miller, DA; Najjar, RG; Salvage, KM; Wagener, T; Yarnal, B",,,,"Reed, Patrick M.; Brooks, Robert P.; Davis, Kenneth J.; DeWalle, David R.; Dressler, Kevin A.; Duffy, Chistopher J.; Lin, Hangsheng; Miller, Douglas A.; Najjar, Raymond G.; Salvage, Karen M.; Wagener, Thorsten; Yarnal, Brent",,,Bridging river basin scales and processes to assess human-climate impacts and the terrestrial hydrologic system,WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH,,,,,,,,,,,,"[ 1] The increasing expression of human activity, climate variability, and climate change on humid, terrestrial hydrologic systems has made the integrated nature of large river basins more apparent. However, to date, there is no instrument platform sufficient to characterize river basins' hydrologic couplings and feedbacks, with many processes and impacts left almost entirely unobserved ( e. g., snowmelt floods). Characterization at the river basin scale will require a more holistic vision and a far greater commitment from the environmental science community. It will require new designs and implementation of integrated instrumentation, a new generation of models, and a management framework that clearly addresses the human-climate-terrestrial interactions impacting our watersheds and river basins. Initially, we propose that existing similarity classifications'' ( e. g., regional soil, geologic, ecologic, hydrographic digital products) can provide a starting point for organizing historical data and initiating a long-term adaptive, multiscale observing strategy. This vision paper outlines instrumentation platforms for point, plot, reach, and hillslope scales that could be located within the characteristic'' landscapes of river basins. The network of observing platforms then forms the basis of a Hydro-Mesonet'' that can potentially support multiscale, multiprocess scientific studies necessary to understand and improve forecasts of our water resources at the river basin scale. This paper concludes with a discussion of how a network of such sites can support research at the level of the individual researcher and scale to the level of community-wide initiatives.",,,,,"Wagener, Thorsten/C-2062-2008; Reed, Patrick M/E-4435-2014; Lin, Henry/E-8234-2011; Davis, Kenneth/AAF-2661-2020","Wagener, Thorsten/0000-0003-3881-5849; Reed, Patrick M/0000-0002-7963-6102; Davis, Kenneth/0000-0002-1992-8381",,,,,,,,,,,,,0043-1397,1944-7973,,,,22-Jul,2006,42,7,,,,,,,W07418,10.1029/2005WR004153,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000239583700002,0,,,1,1,0,yes,river visions Lelani,"Ruano, J",,,,"Collado Ruano, Javier",,,REFLECTIONS ON PHILOSOPHY AND SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION: A PARADIGMATOLOGY APPROACH,SOPHIA-COLECCION DE FILOSOFIA DE LA EDUCACION,,,,,,,,,,,,"The philosophical reflections of this article aim to study the epistemological and paradigmatic problems inherent in the processes of educational transformation. The study combines the transdisciplinary methodology with Complexity Theory to organize knowledge horizontally, without hierarchizing the different epistemes that co-exist in the same space-time. From this epistemological perspective, research shows that individuals know, think, and act according to the cultural paradigms inscribed in them. Hence the need to create a liberating education that sows seeds of human emancipation in the 21st century. In this sense, the work analyzes paradigmatic constraints that transcend human training through the study of our human relationships and social role of education in the social and natural environment. Sustainable development requires reorienting our models of life within the biophysical limits of nature, without compromising ecosystem regeneration neither a dignity development of our next generations. This is an investigation that aims to contribute to the debate between philosophy and sociology of education through co-evolutionary vision that integrates the human being in his cosmic and earthly context. As a result, it is discussed philosophically about the paradigmatic conditions that occur in the field of sociology of education. In conclusion, it is argued that education represents a paradigmatic transformation tool when it is promoted an ecology of knowledge that combines scientific reason with other epistemic, spiritual, religious, emotional, political, rhetorical, poetic, artistic, and philosophical aspects.",,,,,"Collado-Ruano, Javier/D-5740-2014","Collado-Ruano, Javier/0000-0003-0063-6642",,,,,,,,,,,,,1390-3861,1390-8626,,,,JUL-DEC,2017,,23,,,,,55,79,,10.17163/soph.n23.2017.01,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000424093600002,0,,,1,1,1,yes,"Article in Spanish - abstract mentions ""co-evolutionary vision that integrates the human being in his cosmic and earthly context"" but I am not able to ascertain whether the paper constitutes a vision as we describe it" Lelani,"Saunders, FP; Gallardo-Fernandez, GL; Tuyen, TV; Raemaekers, S; Marciniak, B; Pla, RD",,,,"Saunders, Fred P.; Gallardo-Fernandez, Gloria L.; Truong Van Tuyen; Raemaekers, Serge; Marciniak, Boguslaw; Diaz Pla, Rodrigo",,,Transformation of small-scale fisheries - critical transdisciplinary challenges and possibilities,CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY,,,,,,,,,,,,"One way to confront the global marginalisation of small-scale fisheries (SSF) is to support a sustainable transformation of these coastal communities. In 2014/15, a network of researchers and SSF communities from four countries cooperated in a transdisciplinary research approach to examine governance shifts, fish stock collapses, power structures, future visions and transformation strategies. We combined a political ecology approach with transformation theory to: (i) consider how local context is affected by structural changes and (ii) identify place-based transformational strategies for each case. The global emergence of large-scale fisheries and associated free markets appeared as key factors negatively affecting SSF and coastal sustainability. Through envisioning exercises and context dependent analysis, SSF communities articulated possible and actual strategies towards sustainability that will require ongoing support.",,,,,,"Tuyen, Truong Van/0000-0001-5382-6242",,,,,,,,,,,,,1877-3435,1877-3443,,,,JUN,2016,20,,,,,,26,31,,10.1016/j.cosust.2016.04.005,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000389513300006,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Schroder, P; Vergragt, P; Brown, HS; Dendler, L; Gorenflo, N; Matus, K; Quist, J; Rupprecht, CDD; Tukker, A; Wennersten, R",,,,"Schroder, Patrick; Vergragt, Philip; Brown, Halina Szejnwald; Dendler, Leonie; Gorenflo, Neal; Matus, Kira; Quist, Jaco; Rupprecht, Christoph D. D.; Tukker, Arnold; Wennersten, Ronald",,,Advancing sustainable consumption and production in cities - A transdisciplinary research and stakeholder engagement framework to address consumption-based emissions and impacts,JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION,,,,,,,,,,,,"Urban consumption patterns and lifestyles are increasingly important for the sustainability of cities today and in the future. However, considerations of consumption issues, social norms, behaviour and lifestyles within current urban sustainability research and practices are limited. Much untapped potential for the reduction of the environmental footprint of cities exists in combined production and consumption-based approaches, particularly in the demand areas of mobility, housing, food, and waste. To change unsustainable consumption and production patterns in cities, research needs to be transdisciplinary, actively involving stakeholders through co-creation processes. This paper builds on the premise that the perspectives and approaches of Sustainable Consumption and Production (SCP) for cities require the involvement of non-traditional stakeholders that are generally not included in urban planning processes such as social change initiatives, citizen groups and informal sector representatives. We present a transdisciplinary research and engagement framework to understand and advance the transition to sustainable SCP patterns and lifestyles in cities. This transdisciplinary approach to SCP transformations in cities combines co-creation, participatory visioning processes and back-casting methods, participatory urban governance and institutional change, and higher-order learning from small-scale community initiatives. We illustrate our conceptual framework through three empirical case studies in cities which take an integrative approach to lowering ecological footprints and carbon emissions. (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier Ltd.",,,,,"Matus, Kira/AAL-6456-2021; Quist, Jaco/D-9679-2014; Tukker, Arnold/M-4596-2013","Matus, Kira/0000-0001-8477-0691; Quist, Jaco/0000-0002-6365-4082; Tukker, Arnold/0000-0002-8229-2929; Rupprecht, Christoph/0000-0003-1809-2129",,,,,,,,,,,,,0959-6526,1879-1786,,,,10-Mar,2019,213,,,,,,114,125,,10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.12.050,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000461132600009,0,y,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Schubert, M; van den Eynde, J",,,,"Schubert, Margaret; van den Eynde, Julie",,,Nature strip gardens as sites for transformative change,AUSTRALIAN COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGIST,,,,,,,,,,,,"Transformative change is required for society to reduce and adapt to the effects of climate change. In this study, theories, methods and practices of transformative change in the social science literature were interpreted and summarised into three processes perceived by the researchers to contribute to transformative change: ethical awareness, social justice practices and a sense of vision for the future. The interpreted and summarised processes were used to investigate nature strip gardens (edible or native gardens on the footpath) which have been identified as having potential to contribute towards transformative change for environmental issues. Households with a nature strip garden received a letter requesting participation in social justice research about their nature strip garden. A questionnaire based on the summary of transformative change developed by the researchers was utilised with prompts from a social justice scale to carry out eight qualitative interviews. The data was analysed deductively using codes directly from the interpreted summary of social science literature on transformative change, including ecological consciousness, framing issues in terms of power, and changing policy. The findings lent weight to the conceptualisation of nature strip gardens as sites where transformative change processes can occur.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1835-7393,,,,,JUN,2018,29,1,,,,,139,153,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000498833000010,0,,,1,1,1,yes,[Lelani] I don't have access to paper Lelani,"Sexton, M",,,,"Sexton, Melissa",,,"Tropic of Orange, Los Angeles, and the Anthropocene Imagination",CONCENTRIC-LITERARY AND CULTURAL STUDIES,,,,,,,,,,,,"This paper argues that Karen Tei Yamashita's novel Tropic of Orange (1997) provides a prescient, Anthropocene vision of the city. The idea of the Anthropocene a geological epoch dominated by human-driven changes to the environment blurs tidy distinctions between the human and the natural. But literary and ecocritical depictions of the city have frequently relied on such categories, imagining the city as a distinctly unnatural space. Tropic of Orange offers an alternative urban vision, depicting Los Angeles as a complex ecological space, shaped both by material histories and by unjust social systems. The novel uses magical realist elements to reverse what Jean and John L. Comaroff have described as the occult economies of globalization, making the material elements of global exchange visible as they move through the city. Similarly, magical events draw together crowds of people, living and dead, who have been integrated into the city's economy, making the human element of the city's impact visible as well. By materializing the human and ecological networks that support the city, and by rejecting traditionally escapist and pastoral visions of the natural world, Tropic of Orange offers a complex vision of the city as a sociomaterial ecosystem. While the novel does not offer a fully-formed alternative urban vision, it does provide a cautionary tale about what will happen if we do not accept the fundamental challenges that the Anthropocene provides to conventional understandings of nature, ecology, and human responsibility.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1729-6897,1729-8792,,,,MAR,2017,43,1,,,,,13,32,,10.6240/concentric.lit.2017.43.1.02,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000400593600002,0,,,1,1,0,yes,Tropic of Orange offers a complex vision of the city as a sociomaterial ecosystem Lelani,"Song, QB; Li, JH; Zeng, XL",,,,"Song, Qingbin; Li, Jinhui; Zeng, Xianlai",,,Minimizing the increasing solid waste through zero waste strategy,JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION,,,,,,,,,,,,"Increasing population, booming economy, rapid urbanization and the rise in community living standards have significantly accelerated the solid waste generation in the world. Solid waste has become one of the global environmental issues. Continuous depletion of natural finite resources is leading the globe to an uncertain future. To prevent further depletion of global resources, sustainable consumption and a strategic waste management system would be required. One approach that has been suggested as a means of addressing these concerns is that of the concepts of Zero Waste. However, transforming currently over-consuming activities into zero waste is still challenging. In this study, the challenges of solid waste (focusing on industrial waste e-waste, food waste and packaging waste), zero waste practices, and zero waste strategy were discussed to analyze the challenges and opportunities to transform traditional waste management toward zero waste vision. Zero Waste is a good solution to minimizing the increasing solid waste. However, in order to minimize the solid waste, there are still more endeavors need to be done in future. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.",,,,,"Zeng, Xianlai/J-9753-2019; Song, Qingbin/M-1184-2018; li, liang/G-8974-2018","Zeng, Xianlai/0000-0001-5563-6098;",,,,,,,,,,,,,0959-6526,1879-1786,,,,1-Oct,2015,104,,,,,,199,210,,10.1016/j.jclepro.2014.08.027,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000357552900020,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,"zero waste vision, but wek connection to nature and/or biodiversity" Lelani,"Spiegel, SJ; Thomas, S; O'Neill, K; Brondgeest, C; Thomas, J; Beltran, J; Hunt, T; Yassi, A",,,,"Spiegel, Samuel J.; Thomas, Sarah; O'Neill, Kevin; Brondgeest, Cassandra; Thomas, Jen; Beltran, Jiovanni; Hunt, Terena; Yassi, Annalee",,,"Visual Storytelling, Intergenerational Environmental Justice and Indigenous Sovereignty: Exploring Images and Stories amid a Contested Oil Pipeline Project",INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH,,,,,,,,,,,,"Visual practices of representing fossil fuel projects are entangled in diverse values and relations that often go underexplored. In Canada, visual media campaigns to aggressively push forward the fossil fuel industry not only relegate to obscurity indigenous values but mask evidence on health impacts as well as the aspirations of those most affected, including indigenous communities whose food sovereignty and stewardship relationship to the land continues to be affronted by oil pipeline expansion. The Tsleil-Waututh Nation, based at the terminal of the Trans Mountain Pipeline in Canada, has been at the forefront of struggles against the pipeline expansion. Contributing to geographical, environmental studies, and public health research grappling with the performativity of images, this article explores stories conveying health, environmental, and intergenerational justice concerns on indigenous territory. Adapting photovoice techniques, elders and youth illustrated how the environment has changed over time; impacts on sovereignty-both food sovereignty and more broadly; concepts of health, well-being and deep cultural connection with water; and visions for future relationships. We explore the importance of an intergenerational lens of connectedness to nature and sustainability, discussing visual storytelling not just as visual counter-narrative (to neocolonial extractivism) but also as an invitation into fundamentally different ways of seeing and interacting.",,,,,,"Spiegel, Samuel/0000-0003-2163-3512",,,,,,,,,,,,,,1660-4601,,,,APR,2020,17,7,,,,,,,2362,10.3390/ijerph17072362,0,,,,,,,,32244419,,,,,WOS:000530763300194,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Tallis, HM; Hawthorne, PL; Polasky, S; Reid, J; Beck, MW; Brauman, K; Bielicki, JM; Binder, S; Burgess, MG; Cassidy, E; Clark, A; Fargione, J; Game, ET; Gerber, J; Isbell, F; Kiesecker, J; McDonald, R; Metian, M; Molnar, JL; Mueller, ND; O'Connell, C; Ovando, D; Troell, M; Boucher, TM; McPeek, B",,,,"Tallis, Heather M.; Hawthorne, Peter L.; Polasky, Stephen; Reid, Joseph; Beck, Michael W.; Brauman, Kate; Bielicki, Jeffrey M.; Binder, Seth; Burgess, Matthew G.; Cassidy, Emily; Clark, Adam; Fargione, Joseph; Game, Edward T.; Gerber, James; Isbell, Forest; Kiesecker, Joseph; McDonald, Robert; Metian, Marc; Molnar, Jennifer L.; Mueller, Nathan D.; O'Connell, Christine; Ovando, Daniel; Troell, Max; Boucher, Timothy M.; McPeek, Brian",,,An attainable global vision for conservation and human well-being,FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT,,,,,,,,,,,,"A hopeful vision of the future is a world in which both people and nature thrive, but there is little evidence to support the feasibility of such a vision. We used a global, spatially explicit, systems modeling approach to explore the possibility of meeting the demands of increased populations and economic growth in 2050 while simultaneously advancing multiple conservation goals. Our results demonstrate that if, instead of business as usual practices, the world changes how and where food and energy are produced, this could help to meet projected increases in food (54%) and energy (56%) demand while achieving habitat protection (>50% of natural habitat remains unconverted in most biomes globally; 17% area of each ecoregion protected in each country), reducing atmospheric greenhouse-gas emissions consistent with the Paris Climate Agreement (<= 1.6 degrees C warming by 2100), ending overfishing, and reducing water stress and particulate air pollution. Achieving this hopeful vision for people and nature is attainable with existing technology and consumption patterns. However, success will require major shifts in production methods and an ability to overcome substantial economic, social, and political challenges.",,,,,"Metian, Marc/F-8010-2018; Bielicki, Jeffrey/D-4239-2016; Troell, Max/I-1724-2019; Beck, Michael W./AAB-2844-2019; Clark, Adam Thomas/S-7544-2017; Game, Edward/AAD-2289-2020; Isbell, Forest/C-6915-2012; Mueller, Nathan D/E-5864-2010; Clark, Adam/AAC-1039-2022; Brauman, Kate/ABD-5349-2021; Polasky, Stephen/AAC-5341-2019; Reid, Joseph/I-3292-2012","Metian, Marc/0000-0003-1485-5029; Bielicki, Jeffrey/0000-0001-8449-9328; Troell, Max/0000-0002-7509-8140; Beck, Michael W./0000-0002-5107-9973; Clark, Adam Thomas/0000-0002-8843-3278; Game, Edward/0000-0003-4707-9281; Isbell, Forest/0000-0001-9689-769X; Mueller, Nathan D/0000-0003-1857-5104; Clark, Adam/0000-0002-8843-3278; Brauman, Kate/0000-0002-8099-285X; Hawthorne, Peter/0000-0003-1125-5239; Cassidy, Emily/0000-0003-4405-0264; Burgess, Matthew/0000-0002-3750-4347; Reid, Joseph/0000-0001-6905-5235; Gerber, James/0000-0002-6890-0481; McDonald, Robert/0000-0002-7273-6549",,,,,,,,,,,,,1540-9295,1540-9309,,,,DEC,2018,16,10,,,,,563,570,,10.1002/fee.1965,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000451912200006,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Thompson, CL; Alberti, M; Barve, S; Battistuzzi, FU; Drake, JL; Goncalves, GC; Govaert, L; Partridge, C; Yang, Y",,,,"Thompson, Cynthia L.; Alberti, Marina; Barve, Sahas; Battistuzzi, Fabia U.; Drake, Jeana L.; Goncalves, Guilherme Casas; Govaert, Lynn; Partridge, Charlyn; Yang, Ya",,,Back to the Future: Reintegrating Biology to Understand How Past Eco-evolutionary Change Can Predict Future Outcomes,INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY,,,,,,,,,,,,"During the last few decades, biologists have made remarkable progress in understanding the fundamental processes that shape life. But despite the unprecedented level of knowledge now available, large gaps still remain in our understanding of the complex interplay of eco-evolutionary mechanisms across scales of life. Rapidly changing environments on Earth provide a pressing need to understand the potential implications of eco-evolutionary dynamics, which can be achieved by improving existing eco-evolutionary models and fostering convergence among the sub-fields of biology. We propose a new, data-driven approach that harnesses our knowledge of the functioning of biological systems to expand current conceptual frameworks and develop corresponding models that can more accurately represent and predict future eco-evolutionary outcomes. We suggest a roadmap toward achieving this goal. This long-term vision will move biology in a direction that can wield these predictive models for scientific applications that benefit humanity and increase the resilience of natural biological systems. We identify short, medium, and long-term key objectives to connect our current state of knowledge to this long-term vision, iteratively progressing across three stages: (1) utilizing knowledge of biological systems to better inform eco-evolutionary models, (2) generating models with more accurate predictions, and (3) applying predictive models to benefit the biosphere. Within each stage, we outline avenues of investigation and scientific applications related to the timescales over which evolution occurs, the parameter space of eco-evolutionary processes, and the dynamic interactions between these mechanisms. The ability to accurately model, monitor, and anticipate eco-evolutionary changes would be transformational to humanity's interaction with the global environment, providing novel tools to benefit human health, protect the natural world, and manage our planet's biosphere.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1540-7063,1557-7023,,,,5-Feb,2022,61,6,,,,,2218,2232,,10.1093/icb/icab068,0,,,,,,,,33964141,,,,,WOS:000755202100024,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,no access Lelani,"Tillmann, T; Salas, M",,,,"Tillmann, Timmi; Salas, Maruja",,,"PARTICIPATORY ACTION RESEARCH: VISUALIZING TERRACED LANDSCAPES FROM ASIA, EUROPE AND LATIN AMERICA",ANNALES-ANALI ZA ISTRSKE IN MEDITERANSKE STUDIJE-SERIES HISTORIA ET SOCIOLOGIA,,,,,,,,,,,,"The application of Participatory Action Research (PAR) in Peru, PR China, Philippines, Thailand, Italy and Spain illustrates the local perceptions on terraced landscapes and its potential to transformative action. This methodology creates a space to express and mobilise local knowledge related to nature in rural contexts as well as in other formats like the International Conferences on Terraced Landscapes since 2010. The article shows how different actors, when invited to visualize their ideas and practices about terraces, demonstrate original visions of the future responding to modern challenges like nurturing biodiversity, dealing with climate crisis and sustaining their identities. To conclude we deal with the essential epistemological reflection of facing diverse ways of knowing and power to jointly design local initiatives in the defence of terraced landscapes.",,,,,,"Tillmann, Dr. Hermann J./0000-0001-5325-2293",,,,,,,,,,,,,1408-5348,2591-1775,,,,,2018,28,4,,,,,693,708,,10.19233/ASHS.2018.42,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000454626100001,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Tomita, A; Nakura, Y; Ishikawa, T",,,,"Tomita, Akio; Nakura, Yoshio; Ishikawa, Takuya",,,Review of coastal management policy in Japan,JOURNAL OF COASTAL CONSERVATION,,,,,,,,,,,,"Japan experienced severe water pollution throughout the period of high economic growth in the 1960s. With the concentration of population and industries in coastal regions, large quantities of pollutants such as chemicals, organic matters and nutrients flowed into the sea, and these caused health hazard and harmful algae blooms which damage fishery and living environment. To cope with this situation, the Water Pollution Control Law and various other laws and systems for pollutant control were established, and the installation of sewage systems and wastewater treatment facilities has been promoted. Total Pollutant Load Control System (TPLCS) has been implemented in Tokyo bay, Ise Bay, and the Seto Inland Sea. The TPLCS is designed to reduce the total amount of pollutant loads (target item; chemical oxygen demand, total nitrogen, total phosphorus) flowing into enclosed ocean. In the Seto Inland Sea, the largest enclosed coastal sea in Japan, the concentrations of nitrogen and phosphorus came to meet Environmental Quality Standards in almost all areas as a result of 40 year efforts including the TPLCS. However, some enclosed coastal sea areas in our country are still suffering from frequent generation of algae blooms and oxygen deficient water masses due to eutrophication. In other areas, on the other hand, the reduction of nutrient loads, hindering the circulation of nutrients to organisms of higher trophic levels in food chain, is considered to have changed the balance of ecosystem and caused a decline in fishery resources. For such areas, it is necessary to rebalance the circulation of nutrients through the entire cycle from land to sea areas. To deal with these problems, efficient and effective management policies for a smooth circulation of nutrients through land and sea areas should be specifically established for respective coastal sea areas. For this purpose, the Ministry of the Environment (MOE) has had discussions to develop Action Plan for Healthy Material Circulation in Ocean for 3 years since 2010. In addition, the MOE supports the restoration efforts of the regions affected by the Great East Japan Earthquake on March 11th of 2011. The environments of such areas were greatly damaged by landform changes in coastal lines and sea bottoms as well as disappearance of seaweed beds. We have assisted the environmental recovery, using the method and the knowhow of Sato-umi Creation. Sato-umi is defined as a coastal zone where the livelihood of human beings and the blessings of nature coexist harmoniously through human works with coastal area eco-systems. Under such circumstances, Central Environment Council submitted a report last October on Desirable Future Vision of the Seto Inland Sea. According to the report, the sea has multifunctional roles/values likened to Garden, Farm and Seaway. In addition, the report set out a vision of Bountiful Seto Inland Sea where these three functions are maximized in harmony with the environmental conservation for the sustainable use of the ecosystem service in the future. In response to the report, we will revise the master plan for the environmental conservation of the Seto Inland sea (Ministry of the Environment, 2000).",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1400-0350,1874-7841,,,,AUG,2015,19,4,,,,,393,404,,10.1007/s11852-015-0386-8,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000362017900001,0,,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Tozer, L; Klenk, N",,,,"Tozer, Laura; Klenk, Nicole",,,Discourses of carbon neutrality and imaginaries of urban futures,ENERGY RESEARCH & SOCIAL SCIENCE,,,,,,,,,,,,"By analyzing the discourses in carbon governance texts, this paper identifies visions for the built environment in carbon neutral urban futures and the storylines driving those urban imaginaries. Local authorities have begun aiming for 'carbon neutral' transformations, but it is not clear what kind of city will result. Different imaginaries about the futurity of energy will send cities down divergent sociotechnical paths. Using discourse analysis, this paper identifies the storylines underlying sociotechnical imaginaries of urban carbon neutrality among the 17 founding members of the Carbon Neutral Cities Alliance, which is a network of local governments mainly from Europe and North America pioneering deep decarbonization. This paper elaborates on five storylines in urban carbon governance texts: 1. The diverse meanings of carbon neutrality 2. The new economy of carbon control 3. The city as a laboratory 4. Technological fixes and the modern city and 5. Reframing what it means to be a 'good' urban citizen. The developing sociotechnical imaginary of urban carbon neutrality is structuring shifts in policy and practice. Trends include a focus on technological fixes and innovation as solutions where private capital is a fundamental partner, as well as reflexivity about the experimental nature of achieving carbon neutrality.",,,,,"Klenk, Nicole/ABF-8239-2020","Klenk, Nicole Lisa/0000-0001-8224-6992",,,,,,,,,,,,,2214-6296,2214-6326,,,,JAN,2018,35,,,,,,174,181,,10.1016/j.erss.2017.10.017,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000425247200018,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Tramberend, S; Burtscher, R; Burek, P; Kahil, T; Fischer, G; Mochizuki, J; Greve, P; Kimwaga, R; Nyenje, P; Ondiek, R; Nakawuka, P; Hyandye, C; Sibomana, C; Luoga, HP; Matano, AS; Langan, S; Wada, Y",,,,"Tramberend, Sylvia; Burtscher, Robert; Burek, Peter; Kahil, Taher; Fischer, Gunther; Mochizuki, Junko; Greve, Peter; Kimwaga, Richard; Nyenje, Philip; Ondiek, Risper; Nakawuka, Prossie; Hyandye, Canute; Sibomana, Claver; Luoga, Hilda Pius; Matano, Ali Said; Langan, Simon; Wada, Yoshihide",,,Co-development of East African regional water scenarios for 2050,ONE EARTH,,,,,,,,,,,,"The development of and access to freshwater resources in East Africa is fundamental to the region's sustainable development goals. Following vision documents for regional development and working with local stake-holders, we developed water scenarios up to 2050 that inform the hydro-economic modeling analysis of the extended Lake Victoria Basin, the headwaters of the Nile River. Water scenarios that take an integrated approach to assessing the combined effects of climate change, land use, and increasing human water use suggest that the flow regime of the Nile may remain relatively stable. However, if this stability is to be achieved, while at the same time sufficient water is preserved for healthy freshwater ecosystems, a large fraction of water infrastructure must rely on advanced, often costly technologies and management. Interconnected analyses of both upstream and downstream water resources over time, guided by co-developed scenarios, are indispensable for planning sustainable water-development pathways.",,,,,"Greve, Peter/K-5311-2015; Wada, Yoshihide/F-3595-2012","Greve, Peter/0000-0002-9454-0125; Wada, Yoshihide/0000-0003-4770-2539; Nyenje, Philip/0000-0002-7942-6922; Kahil, Taher/0000-0002-7812-5271",,,,,,,,,,,,,2590-3330,2590-3322,,,,19-Mar,2021,4,3,,,,,434,447,,10.1016/j.oneear.2021.02.012,0,,Mar-21,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000646469700017,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,"Visions are presented regarding water management, but they are not that environmental per se" Lelani,"Troger, J; Reese, G",,,,"Troger, Josephine; Reese, Gerhard",,,Talkin' bout a revolution: an expert interview study exploring barriers and keys to engender change towards societal sufficiency orientation,SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Representative studies report high levels of acceptance of environmental protection and approval for stricter political measures to ensure a liveable future. However, in the last years, climate-damaging emissions did not decrease in accordance with the Paris Agreement, and important societal actors failed to implement effective strategies that could promote a socio-ecological transformation. Sufficiency with its underlying 'mind-set' can be a seen as leverage point for transformation and thus is targeted within our qualitative study. To explore barriers that prevent the implementation of knowledge about the sufficiency approach and ways to encourage sufficiency orientation on a societal level, we conducted interviews with experts from science, politics and economy (N = 21). Using qualitative content analysis, we identified keys for change, i.e., narratives, rewards and recognition, time structures and responsibilities that could have a leveraging effect towards system transformation. We propose an exploratory framework that points out main barriers, keys in terms of levers and experts' visions towards a sufficiency-oriented society. Furthermore, we outline that the sufficiency discourse contains ambiguities and varieties concerning the experts' perceptions regarding effective levers for a transformation. Through brief discourse pattern analysis, we highlight different perceptions regarding the role of technology, social responsibility and the societal change and time. The proposed framework can inspire future research and policy-making on sufficiency.",,,,,,"Troger, Josephine/0000-0003-4167-2658",,,,,,,,,,,,,1862-4065,1862-4057,,,,MAY,2021,16,3,,,SI,,827,840,,10.1007/s11625-020-00871-1,0,,Jan-21,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000607038500001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,Experts' visions are presented Lelani,"Urban, MC; Travis, JMJ; Zurell, D; Thompson, PL; Synes, NW; Scarpa, A; Peres-Neto, PR; Malchow, AK; James, PMA; Gravel, D; De Meester, L; Brown, C; Bocedi, G; Albert, CH; Gonzalez, A; Hendry, AP",,,,"Urban, Mark C.; Travis, Justin M. J.; Zurell, Damaris; Thompson, Patrick L.; Synes, Nicholas W.; Scarpa, Alice; Peres-Neto, Pedro R.; Malchow, Anne-Kathleen; James, Patrick M. A.; Gravel, Dominique; De Meester, Luc; Brown, Calum; Bocedi, Greta; Albert, Cecile H.; Gonzalez, Andrew; Hendry, Andrew P.",,,Coding for Life: Designing a Platform for Projecting and Protecting Global Biodiversity,BIOSCIENCE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Time is running out to limit further devastating losses of biodiversity and nature's contributions to humans. Addressing this crisis requires accurate predictions about which species and ecosystems are most at risk to ensure efficient use of limited conservation and management resources. We review existing biodiversity projection models and discover problematic gaps. Current models usually cannot easily be reconfigured for other species or systems, omit key biological processes, and cannot accommodate feedbacks with Earth system dynamics. To fill these gaps, we envision an adaptable, accessible, and universal biodiversity modeling platform that can project essential biodiversity variables, explore the implications of divergent socioeconomic scenarios, and compare conservation and management strategies. We design a roadmap for implementing this vision and demonstrate that building this biodiversity forecasting platform is possible and practical.",,,,,"Thompson, Patrick L/B-6213-2012; Albert, Cécile H./AAA-5490-2019; Zurell, Damaris/E-2439-2012; Brown, Calum/D-4341-2017","Thompson, Patrick L/0000-0002-5278-9045; Albert, Cécile H./0000-0002-0991-1068; Zurell, Damaris/0000-0002-4628-3558; Brown, Calum/0000-0001-9331-1008",,,,,,,,,,,,,0006-3568,1525-3244,,,,JAN,2022,72,1,,,,,91,104,,10.1093/biosci/biab099,0,,Oct-21,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000743475000009,0,yes,,1,1,0,maybe,"no mention of transformative change, more a vision of a platform than a vision of the future" Lelani,"van Rooij, S; Timmermans, W; Roosenschoon, O; Keesstra, S; Sterk, M; Pedroli, B",,,,"van Rooij, Sabine; Timmermans, Wim; Roosenschoon, Onno; Keesstra, Saskia; Sterk, Marjolein; Pedroli, Bas",,,Landscape-Based Visions as Powerful Boundary Objects in Spatial Planning: Lessons from Three Dutch Projects,LAND,,,,,,,,,,,,"In a context of a rapidly changing livability of towns and countryside, climate change and biodiversity decrease, this paper introduces a landscape-based planning approach to regional spatial policy challenges allowing a regime shift towards a future land system resilient to external pressures. The concept of nature-based solutions and transition theory are combined in this approach, in which co-created normative future visions serve as boundary concepts. Rather than as an object in itself, the landscape is considered as a comprehensive principle, to which all spatial processes are inherently related. We illustrate this approach with three projects in the Netherlands in which landscape-based visions were used to guide the land transition, going beyond the traditional nature-based solutions. The projects studied show that a shared long-term future landscape vision is a powerful boundary concept and a crucial source of inspiration for a coherent design approach to solve today's spatial planning problems. Further, they show that cherishing abiotic differences in the landscape enhances sustainable and resilient landscapes, that co-creation in the social network is a prerequisite for shared solutions, and that a landscape-based approach enhances future-proof land-use transitions to adaptive, circular, and biodiverse landscapes.",,,,,"; Pedroli, Bas/E-1352-2016","Keesstra, Saskia/0000-0003-4129-9080; van Rooij, Sabine/0000-0001-5436-4780; Roosenschoon, Onno/0000-0003-2502-7229; Pedroli, Bas/0000-0003-3450-447X",,,,,,,,,,,,,,2073-445X,,,,JAN,2021,10,1,,,,,,,16,10.3390/land10010016,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000610328400001,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,"Landscape-based visioning, highly relevant" Lelani,"Vangansbeke, P; Gorissen, L; Nevens, F; Verheyen, K",,,,"Vangansbeke, Pieter; Gorissen, Leen; Nevens, Frank; Verheyen, Kris",,,"Towards co-ownership in forest management: Analysis of a pioneering case 'Bosland' (Flanders, Belgium) through transition lenses",FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS,,,,,,,,,,,,"Forest management in Western-Europe is evolving towards multifunctionality and higher levels of sustainability. Co-owned forest managing models, where different owners collaborate and forest users participate however, are still rather an exception of a rule. Bosland (literally forest-land) in Flanders (Belgium) is a statutory partnership of several public forest owners and stakeholders, managing an area of about 22,000 ha of previously fragmented forest relicts. By looking at this case through transition lenses we describe a pioneering case in forest management where a new way of management is adopted more geared towards management for coherence across multiple ecosystem services and across a multitude of stakeholders. By use of a learning history we were able to reconstruct the change trajectory of Bosland. Analysis of this change trajectory through transition lenses aided to identify essential key features in which Bosland differs from 'management as usual' approaches: (i) a distinctive paradigm shift towards management for coherence; (ii) a long term vision that informs and guides the short-term action agenda; (iii) a bottom up approach focusing on participation and co-creation. The methods used and lessons learnt in Bosland can thus be highly interesting for the wider community involved in forest and nature management. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",,,,,"Nevens, Frank/G-7429-2016; Vangansbeke, Pieter/AAP-6762-2021","Verheyen, Kris/0000-0002-2067-9108; Vangansbeke, Pieter/0000-0002-6356-2858",,,,,,,,,,,,,1389-9341,1872-7050,,,,JAN,2015,50,,,,,,98,109,,10.1016/j.forpol.2014.07.006,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000347763100011,0,,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Vannier, C; Bierry, A; Longaretti, PY; Nettier, B; Cordonnier, T; Chauvin, C; Bertrand, N; Quetier, F; Lasseur, R; Lavorel, S",,,,"Vannier, Clemence; Bierry, Adeline; Longaretti, Pierre-Yves; Nettier, Baptiste; Cordonnier, Thomas; Chauvin, Christophe; Bertrand, Nathalie; Quetier, Fabien; Lasseur, Remy; Lavorel, Sandra",,,"Co-constructing future land-use scenarios for the Grenoble region, France",LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING,,,,,,,,,,,,"Physically and socially heterogeneous mountain landscapes support high biodiversity and multiple ecosystem services. But rapid landscape transformation from fast urbanisation and agricultural intensification around cities to abandonment and depopulation in higher and more remote districts, raises urgent environmental and planning issues. For anticipating their future in a highly uncertain socio-economic context, we engaged stakeholders of a dynamic urban region of the French Alps in an exemplary interactive participatory scenario planning (PSP) for co-creating salient, credible and legitimate scenarios. Stakeholders helped researchers adapt, downscale and spatialize four normative visions from the regional government, co-producing four storylines of trend versus break-away futures. Stakeholder input, combined with planning documents and analyses of recent dynamics, enabled parameterisation of high-resolution models of urban expansion, agriculture and forest dynamics. With similar storylines in spite of stakeholders insisting on different governance arrangements, both trend scenarios met current local and European planning objectives of containing urban expansion and limiting loss and fragmentation of agricultural land. Both break-away scenarios induced considerable conversion from agriculture to forest, but with highly distinctive patterns. Under a commonly investigated, deregulated liberal economic context, encroachment was random and patchy across valleys and mountains. A novel reinforced nature protection scenario affecting primarily mountain and hilly areas fostered deliberate consolidation of forested areas and connectivity. This transdisciplinary approach demonstrated the potential of combining downscaled normative scenarios with local, spatially-precise dynamics informed by stakeholders for local appropriation of top-down visions, and for supporting land planning and subsequent assessment of ecosystem service trade-offs.",,,,,"Cordonnier, Thomas/I-2586-2019; Quetier, Fabien/K-6872-2015","Cordonnier, Thomas/0000-0003-3684-4662; Vannier, Clemence/0000-0003-4776-8319; Quetier, Fabien/0000-0002-3767-0353",,,,,,,,,,,,,0169-2046,1872-6062,,,,OCT,2019,190,,,,,,,,103614,10.1016/j.landurbplan.2019.103614,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000484871000031,0,yes,,1,1,1,yes, Lelani,"Verkerk, PJ; Lindner, M; Perez-Soba, M; Paterson, JS; Helming, J; Verburg, PH; Kuemmerle, T; Lotze-Campen, H; Moiseyev, A; Muller, D; Popp, A; Schulp, CJE; Sturck, J; Tabeau, A; Wolfslehner, B; van der Zanden, EH",,,,"Verkerk, Pieter J.; Lindner, Marcus; Perez-Soba, Marta; Paterson, James S.; Helming, John; Verburg, Peter H.; Kuemmerle, Tobias; Lotze-Campen, Hermann; Moiseyev, Alexander; Mueller, Daniel; Popp, Alexander; Schulp, Catharina J. E.; Sturck, Julia; Tabeau, Andrzej; Wolfslehner, Bernhard; van der Zanden, Emma H.",,,Identifying pathways to visions of future land use in Europe,REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE,,,,,,,,,,,,"Plausible scenarios of future land use derived from model projections may differ substantially from what is actually desired by society, and identifying such mismatches is important for identifying policies to resolve them. This paper presents an approach to link explorative projections of future land use for the European Union to normative visions of desired land-use futures. We used the results of 24 scenario projections obtained from seven linked simulation models to explore uncertainty in future land-use developments. Land-use projections were linked to statements made by stakeholders for three normative visions of desired, future land use. The visions differed in the scale of multifunctionality of land use: at European (Best Land in Europe), regional (Regional Connected) or local (Local Multifunctional) level. To identify pathways to these visions, we analysed in which cases projected land-use changes matched with the land-use changes desired in the visions. We identified five pathways to the vision Regional Connected, two pathways to the vision Best Land in Europe, but no pathway to the vision Local Multifunctional. Our results suggest that policies have the ability to change the development of land use such that it is more in line with land-use futures desired by society. We believe our approach represents an interesting avenue for foresight studies on land use, as it combines the credibility from explorative scenarios with legitimacy and saliency of normative visions.",,,,,"Schulp, Catharina JE/G-1451-2013; Mueller, Daniel/A-4454-2009; Lotze-Campen, Hermann/AAA-5093-2020; , IAMO/G-2328-2012; Kuemmerle, Tobias/B-4340-2008; Change, Structural/W-8306-2019; Tabeau, Andrzej/AAE-8214-2019; Verburg, Peter H/Z-1582-2019; Popp, Alexander/N-7064-2014; Verburg, Peter/A-8469-2010","Mueller, Daniel/0000-0001-8988-0718; Lotze-Campen, Hermann/0000-0002-0003-5508; , IAMO/0000-0001-7922-9665; Kuemmerle, Tobias/0000-0002-9775-142X; Change, Structural/0000-0002-2459-4646; Popp, Alexander/0000-0001-9500-1986; Verburg, Peter/0000-0002-6977-7104; Helming, John/0000-0002-5185-1935; Paterson, James/0000-0003-3264-8242; van der Zanden, Emma/0000-0003-1687-5533; Moiseyev, Alexander/0000-0001-8579-7271; Verkerk, Pieter Johannes/0000-0001-5322-8007",,,,,,,,,,,,,1436-3798,1436-378X,,,,MAR,2018,18,3,,,,,817,830,,10.1007/s10113-016-1055-7,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000428382200016,0,yes,multiple,1,1,0,yes,pathways and scenarios Lelani,"Warren, LS",,,,"Warren, Louis S.",,,animal visions: rethinking the history of the human future,ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Wild animal abundance and scarcity have been key to religious and secular visions of the American future for centuries, and changes in their meanings reflect radical shifts in understandings of nature and progress. In the colonial era, the extirpation of wildlife was a sign of the fulfillment of prophecy and the conquest of Indians. But by the late nineteenth century, fears of wildlife decline were so great as to render the Ghost Dance, an American Indian prophecy of game abundance, oddly resonant for a broad swath of Americans. More recently, secular scientific predictions of wildlife extinction inspired such writers as Paul Shepard, Rachel Carson, Peter Matthiessen, and Cormac McCarthy to contemplate (and sometimes to prophesy) global extinctions.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,1084-5453,,,,,JUL,2011,16,3,,,,,413,417,,10.1093/envhis/emr057,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000293601700005,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Wortelboer, FG; Bischof, BG",,,,"Wortelboer, Frederick G.; Bischof, Baerbel G.",,,Scenarios as a tool for supporting policy-making for the Wadden Sea,OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT,,,,,,,,,,,,"The Wadden Sea region along the Dutch coast is currently an area undergoing a turning point in the context of both environmental change and economic growth and development, which will inevitably result in pivotal alterations of its natural systems. In this work, we apply scenarios as a tool to explore possible futures of both environmental conditions and use-regimes in this region. Implications of divergent world-views about the Wadden Sea environment and its development potential are evaluated with this methodology to find common ground among stake-holders regarding management trajectories and the possible environmental conditions that may result from prospective policy options. Particular considerations of how to generate and evaluate scenarios are identified and applied to reveal how current environmental tensions regarding development, resource exploitation, and conservation in the Wadden Sea region can be useful to frame feasible policy prescriptions and mitigate conflict among user-groups. Two scenarios, Nature First and Food and Energy were constructed based on present-day attitudes and perceptions of how this region should be managed, given its particular status as a unique and sensitive ecosystem that also harbors abundant resources and industrial growth capacity. We show that by looking ahead into potential outcomes of current trends in development efforts, these scenarios can effectively inform the decision-making processes by revealing the potential consequences, both beneficial and adverse, that could result from the variety of development goals currently being considered for the Wadden Sea region. We show that this heavily-utilized coastal zone requires a strategic long-term integrated vision that includes the flexibility to accommodate unexpected circumstances that result from short-term management decisions. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.",,,,,"Wortelboer, Rick/F-3423-2016","Wortelboer, Rick/0000-0003-3418-2327",,,,,,,,,,,,,0964-5691,1873-524X,,,,NOV,2012,68,,,,SI,,189,200,,10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2012.05.027,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000311472700016,0,y,,1,1,1,yes,Visions for Wadden sea Lelani,"Wyatt, KH; Arkema, KK; Wells-Moultrie, S; Silver, JM; Lashley, B; Thomas, A; Kuiper, JJ; Guerry, AD; Ruckelshaus, M",,,,"Wyatt, Katherine H.; Arkema, Katie K.; Wells-Moultrie, Stacey; Silver, Jessica M.; Lashley, Brett; Thomas, Adelle; Kuiper, Jan J.; Guerry, Anne D.; Ruckelshaus, Mary",,,Integrated and innovative scenario approaches for sustainable development planning in The Bahamas,ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY,,,,,,,,,,,,"Using alternative future scenarios in development planning supports the integration of diverse perspectives and the joint consideration of the needs of humans and nature. Here, we report on the use of scenarios as an integral part of a two-year sustainable development planning process for Andros Island, The Bahamas. We combined qualitative and quantitative approaches to link stakeholder visions of the future of their island with quantitative assessments of the likely impacts of those visions on future conditions. We highlight knowledge gains for scenarios in three key areas: (1) inclusion of participatory mapping as both a mechanism for eliciting stakeholder knowledge and aspirations, and as an input for risk assessment; (2) participation of a transdisciplinary team to guide the scenario creation process and enable better understanding of the range of stakeholder visions and values; and (3) use of cumulative risk assessment as a framework to bring together quantitative and qualitative information and provide objective comparisons between alternatives. We convened over 560 people in 35 meetings and worked with 13 government ministries to create and compare four alternative scenarios consisting of storylines and maps of habitat risk of degradation. We found that one scenario, featuring intensive development, would pose the greatest risk to habitats and worked together to understand which activities could lead to such a future and what interventions could be taken to help avoid it. Ultimately, our collaborative process yielded objective comparisons between alternative future scenarios, incorporated diverse visions and values of stakeholders into the island-wide master plan, and informed investments in the sustainable management of coastal ecosystems and infrastructure critical for the livelihoods of island communities. This process can serve as an example for scientists and practitioners worldwide seeking to use scenarios to inform sustainable development planning.",,,,,,"Kuiper, Jan J./0000-0002-6655-9355",,,,,,,,,,,,,1708-3087,,,,,DEC,2021,26,4,,,,,,,23,10.5751/ES-12764-260423,0,,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000730831300003,0,y,,1,1,0,yes, Lelani,"Zaman, A; Qadir, J","Sarac, M; Hassan, MK",,,"Zaman, Asad; Qadir, Junaid","Sarac, M; Hassan, MK",,ISLAMIC APPROACHES TO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT,ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE FOR SUSTAINABLE FINANCIAL SYSTEM,,,,,,,,,,,,"The myopic formulation of human development by neoclassical economics exclusively in terms of economic growth has resulted in a transformation through which self-interested greed-based consumption is idealized to the great detriment of both the planet and the inhabitants of this planet (not only of the current generation but also those of the future generations). The Islamic notion of human development, in contrast, emphasizes a harmonious coexistence of human beings and nature through the responsible utilization of natural resources, which are considered as God's gift to the whole of humanity (belonging to the present as well as the future generations). In this article, we articulate the failings of the modern conceptions of development and contrast that with the Islamic sustainable development vision. The Islamic conception of development is endogenously sustainable due to its emphasis on the responsible use of resources; moderate consumption and simple living; and empathy for the less privileged (e.g., through both optional and mandatory charity). After providing a broad framing of the Islamic sustainable development vision, we also describe briefly the tools, incentives, and guidelines that Islam offers regarding authentic sustainable development. We also describe how Islamic guidelines provide the keys for facilitating social inclusion, environmental sustainability, and inter-generational sustainability.",,,,,"Qadir, Junaid/Q-6329-2019","Qadir, Junaid/0000-0001-9466-2475",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,978-605-07-0754-0; 978-605-07-0758-8,,,,2020,,,,,,,57,74,,10.26650/B/SS10.2020.017.03,0,10.26650/B/SS10.2020.017,,,,,,,,,,,,WOS:000748889400004,0,,,1,1,1,yes,