Unruly Complexity
Ecology, Interpretation, Engagement
232 pages, 2 halftones, 43 line drawings 6 x 9
©
2005
Cloth $60.00
ISBN: 9780226790350
Published September 2005
Paper $25.00
ISBN: 9780226790367
Published September 2005
Acknowledgments Prologue Part I - Modeling Ecological Complexity 1. Problems of Boundedness in Modeling Ecological Systems A. The Construction of Complexity B. The Hidden Complexity of Simple Models 2. Open Sites in Model Building Part II - Interpreting Ecological Modelers in Their Complex Social Context 3. Metaphors and Allegory in the Origins of Systems Ecology A. Social-Personal-Scientific Correlations in the Work of H. T. Odum: A First Reading B. Another Look: Diagrams and Physical Analogies 4. Reconstructing Heterogeneous Webs in Socio-Environmental Research A. The Simulated Future of a Salt-Affected Agricultural Region B. An Intersection of Domains of Action that Include MIT, USAID, System Dynamics Modelers, and Nomadic Pastoralists Part III - Engaging Reflexively Within Ecological, Scientific, and Social Complexity 5. Reflecting on Researchers' Diverse Resources A. Further Intersections that Affect Researchers and Interpreters Extending Their Webs B. Workshops in which Ecologists Map Their Webs of Knowledge-Making C. Two Terms that Help Researchers Conceptualize More Complexity 6. Reasoned Understandings and Social Change in Research on Common Resources: Introducing a Framework to Keep Tensions Active, Productive, and Ever-Present A. Researchers Conduct a Dialogue, Involving Concepts and Evidence, with the Situations Studied B. Socially Situated Researchers Interact with Other Social Agents to Establish What Counts as Knowledge C. Researchers Pursue Social Change by Addressing Self-Consciously the Complexities of the Situations They Study and Their Own Social Situadness Epilogue: Three Stories A. Participation B. Flexible Engagement C. Open Questions Summary of Themes and Questions Opened Up Glossary Notes References Index
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