Publication | Closed Access
Toward a Social Theory of Resilience: Social Systems, Cultural Systems, and Collective Action in Transitioning Forest‐Based Communities
69
Citations
41
References
2013
Year
Resilience (Structural Engineering)Social TheorySustainable DevelopmentEducationSocial ChangeSocial Ecological ResilienceSocial-ecological SystemSocial SciencesCultural MorphogenesisRural StudiesPolitical EcologyResilience (Community Psychology)Cultural SystemsCommunity ForestryCommunity ResilienceEcosystem ResilienceSocial EcologyAgroecological SystemsCultureCommunity DevelopmentSociologyCollective ActionAnthropologyCulture ChangePost‐ F OrdistLand ConservationSocial Anthropology
Abstract Impacts from post‐ F ordist and poststaples economic transition in the C anadian natural resource sector have resulted in dramatic challenges to the livelihoods of many rural residents and the viability of many rural communities. This study seeks to understand community response to economic transition through a lens of social ecological resilience. This article puts forward A rcher's theory of cultural morphogenesis as an analogous model of social ecological change that focuses attention on cultural systems, cultural elaboration, and collective action within an adaptive cycle of resilience. With case material from focused ethnographies of two forest‐dependent communities, we identify distinctive interactions between culture and agency over time that condition community response to change, and we make an analytical distinction between the social system and cultural system. These insights point to catalysts for collective action and adaptation within a resilient cultural realm that extend beyond institutional factors such as economic dependency or political opportunity. By integrating culture, we also deepen the social theory contribution to social‐ecological resilience.
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