1

People and ecosystems

Understanding of the links between coral reef ecosystems, the goods and services they provide to people, and the wellbeing of human societies.

2

Ecosystem dynamics: past, present and future

Examining the multi-scale dynamics of reefs, from population dynamics to macroevolution

3

Responding to a changing world

Advancing the fundamental understanding of the key processes underpinning reef resilience.

Coral Bleaching

Coral Bleaching

Coral Reef Studies

From 2005 to 2022, the main node of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies was headquartered at James Cook University in Townsville, Queensland (Australia)

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Event

Multi-site, harmonized sustainability science: community monitoring in common-pool resources

When

Thursday 27th MAY 9am (AEST)

location
https://jcu.zoom.us/j/89438433233 Password: 966562
Presenter
Paul Ferraro
Paul Ferraro

Abstract: In 1990, Elinor Ostrom published Governing the Commons, a demonstration that communities could successfully manage common pool resources without resorting to individual private property rights or central government control. Yet after decades of theoretical and empirical studies, little is known about whether such success can be facilitated by external actors and, if so, whether those actors must target many institutional factors at once or can focus their actions more narrowly. In a Special Feature of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the authors try to answer these questions by developing and testing mechanism-based theories of the role of community monitoring in common pool resource management. Ferraro will discuss the results from these studies and, as a vehicle for emphasizing the importance of pre-registered, harmonized, multi-site research projects, he will also briefly present excerpts from a review paper that uncovers the empirical hallmarks of an impending replicability crisis in ecology (and, by extension, in conservation science).

Biography: Paul J. Ferraro is a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at Johns Hopkins University. He collaborates with scientists, lawyers, engineers, and program administrators to develop evidence-based environmental programs and to understand causal relationships, both natural and anthropogenic, in complex environments. He is particularly interested in elucidating the environmental and behavioral mechanisms through which environmental problems arise and through which environmental solutions are successful. As part of this effort, he directs or co-directs two scholar-practitioner collaboration centers (https://epic-evidence.org/ https://centerbear.org/) that focus on creating a culture of deliberate experimentation in environmental organizations to test both the common wisdom and new ideas about how coupled human-natural systems function.

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