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@article{1585480, author = {Oberlack, Christoph and Sietz, Diana and Bonanomi, Elisabeth Bürgi and Bremond, Ariane de and Dell'Angelo, Jampel and Eisenack, Klaus and Ellis, Erle C and Epstein, Graham and Giger, Markus and Heinimann, Andreas and Kimmich, Christian and Kok, Marcel TJ and ManuelandNavarrete, David and Messerli, Peter and Meyfroidt, Patrick and Václavík, Tomáš and VillamayorandTomas, Sergio}, article_location = {Wolfville}, article_number = {2}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-10747-240226}, keywords = {archetype; land systems; social-ecological system; sustainability; vulnerability}, language = {eng}, issn = {1708-3087}, journal = {Ecology and Society}, title = {Archetype analysis in sustainability research : meanings, motivations, and evidence-based policy making}, url = {https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss2/art26/}, volume = {24}, year = {2019} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1585480 AU - Oberlack, Christoph - Sietz, Diana - Bonanomi, Elisabeth Bürgi - Bremond, Ariane de - Dell'Angelo, Jampel - Eisenack, Klaus - Ellis, Erle C - Epstein, Graham - Giger, Markus - Heinimann, Andreas - Kimmich, Christian - Kok, Marcel TJ - Manuel-Navarrete, David - Messerli, Peter - Meyfroidt, Patrick - Václavík, Tomáš - Villamayor-Tomas, Sergio PY - 2019 TI - Archetype analysis in sustainability research : meanings, motivations, and evidence-based policy making JF - Ecology and Society VL - 24 IS - 2 SP - 1-19 EP - 1-19 PB - Resilience Alliance SN - 17083087 KW - archetype KW - land systems KW - social-ecological system KW - sustainability KW - vulnerability UR - https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss2/art26/ L2 - https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss2/art26/ N2 - Archetypes are increasingly used as a methodological approach to understand recurrent patterns in variables and processes that shape the sustainability of social-ecological systems. The rapid growth and diversification of archetype analyses has generated variations, inconsistencies, and confusion about the meanings, potential, and limitations of archetypes. Based on a systematic review, a survey, and a workshop series, we provide a consolidated perspective on the core features and diverse meanings of archetype analysis in sustainability research, the motivations behind it, and its policy relevance. We identify three core features of archetype analysis: recurrent patterns, multiple models, and intermediate abstraction. Two gradients help to apprehend the variety of meanings of archetype analysis that sustainability researchers have developed: (1) understanding archetypes as building blocks or as case typologies and (2) using archetypes for pattern recognition, diagnosis, or scenario development. We demonstrate how archetype analysis has been used to synthesize results from case studies, bridge the gap between global narratives and local realities, foster methodological interplay, and transfer knowledge about sustainability strategies across cases. We also critically examine the potential and limitations of archetype analysis in supporting evidence-based policy making through context-sensitive generalizations with case-level empirical validity. Finally, we identify future priorities, with a view to leveraging the full potential of archetype analysis for supporting sustainable development. ER -
OBERLACK, Christoph, Diana SIETZ, Elisabeth Bürgi BONANOMI, Ariane de BREMOND, Jampel DELL'ANGELO, Klaus EISENACK, Erle C ELLIS, Graham EPSTEIN, Markus GIGER, Andreas HEINIMANN, Christian KIMMICH, Marcel TJ KOK, David MANUEL-NAVARRETE, Peter MESSERLI, Patrick MEYFROIDT, Tomáš VÁCLAVÍK a Sergio VILLAMAYOR-TOMAS. Archetype analysis in sustainability research : meanings, motivations, and evidence-based policy making. \textit{Ecology and Society}. Wolfville: Resilience Alliance, 2019, roč.~24, č.~2, s.~1-19. ISSN~1708-3087. doi:10.5751/ES-10747-240226.
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