Modeling Social-Ecological Problems in Coastal Ecosystems: A Case Study

Authored by John Forrester, Richard Greaves, Howard Noble, Richard Taylor

DOI: 10.1002/cplx.21524

Sponsors: No sponsors listed

Platforms: NetLogo

Model Documentation: UML Other Narrative Flow charts

Model Code URLs: http://modelingcommons.org/browse/one_model/3435#model_tabs_browse_info

Abstract

Complex social-ecological systems (SES) are not amenable to simple mathematical modeling. However, to address critical issues in SES (e. g., understanding ecological resilience/amelioration of poverty) it is necessary to describe such systems in their entirety. Based on empirical knowledge of local stakeholders and experts, we mapped their conceptions of one SES. Modelers codified what actors told us into two models: a local-level model and an overarching multiple-entity description of the system. Looking at these two representations together helps us understand links between the locally specific and other levels of decision taking and vice-versa. This “bimodeling” approach is investigated in one SES in coastal Kenya. (C) 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Tags
Agent-based models participatory modeling unified modeling language