自然资源的综合研究:问题框架的关键作用。

R. Clark, G. Stankey
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引用次数: 27

摘要

罗杰·n·克拉克;乔治·h·斯坦基,2006。自然资源的综合研究:问题框架的关键作用。将军技术代表PNW-GTR-678。波特兰,或。美国农业部,林务局,太平洋西北研究站。综合研究是关于实现对复杂的生物物理和社会问题和问题的整体理解。它是由需要提高对这些系统的了解和利用综合研究过程的结果改进资源管理所驱动的。传统的研究倾向于将复杂的问题碎片化,更多地关注问题的碎片,而不是由多种相互关系和相互作用组成的整体。结果是,人们对这些部分(例如,娱乐、鱼类和野生动物)了解很多,但对它们之间的相互关系却知之甚少。人们似乎普遍认为,综合问题必须推动对综合理解的探索,但传统、惰性、制度文化、预算、培训和缺乏有效的领导,助长了简化主义(最坏的情况)或最低程度的综合(最好的情况),而不是任何实质性的、可持续的综合研究努力。在本文中,一个分阶段的方法来框架综合研究问题和解决实质性障碍,阻碍综合努力进行了讨论。一个关键的结论是,要在全面综合研究方面取得任何重大进展,需要的不仅仅是花言巧语。进步必须从各级研究机构更有效的领导开始。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Integrated research in natural resources: the key role of problem framing.
Clark, Roger N.; Stankey, George H. 2006. Integrated research in natural resources: the key role of problem framing. Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-678. Portland, OR. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 63 p. Integrated research is about achieving holistic understanding of complex biophysical and social issues and problems. It is driven by the need to improve understanding about such systems and to improve resource management by using the results of integrated research processes. Traditional research tends to fragment complex problems, focusing more on the pieces of problems rather than the whole that comprises multiple interrelationships and interactions. The outcome is that a lot is known about the parts (e.g., recreation, fish, and wildlife) but relatively little about how they are interrelated. There seems to be general agreement that integrated questions must drive the search for integrated understanding, but tradition, inertia, institutional culture, budgets, training, and lack of effective leadership foster reductionism (at worst) or minimal degrees of integration (at best) rather than any substantial, sustainable effort toward integrated research. In this paper, a phased approach to framing integrated research questions and addressing the substantial barriers that impede integrated efforts are discussed. A key conclusion is that to make any significant progress toward comprehensive integrated research will require more than rhetoric. Progress must begin with more effective leadership throughout various levels of research organizations.
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