2011
DOI: 10.5751/es-03887-160125
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Resisting Diversity: a Long-Term Archaeological Study

Abstract: The value of "diversity" in social and ecological systems is frequently asserted in academic and policy literature. Diversity is thought to enhance the resilience of social-ecological systems to varied and potentially uncertain future conditions. Yet there are trade-offs; diversity in ecological and social domains has costs as well as benefits. In this paper, we examine social diversity, specifically its costs and benefits in terms of decision making in middle range or tribal societies, using archaeological ev… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…The second issue surfaces when building robustness to relevant shocks runs counter to the immediate desires of society. Decisions to migrate (as in Anderies and Hegmon 2011), to trade (Janssen 2011) or to nucleate (Nelson et al 2011a) may all be responses to system shocks and perceived vulnerabilities, or they may be decisions made for wholly different reasons such as individual or societal values and beliefs. Societies continually face the challenge of minimizing appropriate vulnerabilities and the balancing of trade-offs of both performance and vulnerability.…”
Section: The Influence Of Robustness-performance Trade-offs On Robustmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The second issue surfaces when building robustness to relevant shocks runs counter to the immediate desires of society. Decisions to migrate (as in Anderies and Hegmon 2011), to trade (Janssen 2011) or to nucleate (Nelson et al 2011a) may all be responses to system shocks and perceived vulnerabilities, or they may be decisions made for wholly different reasons such as individual or societal values and beliefs. Societies continually face the challenge of minimizing appropriate vulnerabilities and the balancing of trade-offs of both performance and vulnerability.…”
Section: The Influence Of Robustness-performance Trade-offs On Robustmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This special feature considers the following strategies for reducing vulnerability: 1) migration Hegmon 2011, Spielmann et al 2011), 2) social networking and trading (Janssen 2011, Nelson et al 2011b), 3) engaging in a diversity of social practices (Nelson et al 2011a), reciprocity by sharing resources with others (Spielmann et al 2011), and 4) conserving and storing food and water resources (Anderies and Hegmon 2011, Janssen 2011, Spielmann et al 2011). However, our case studies show that, in hindsight, prehistoric societies sometimes made choices that increased rather than decreased their vulnerability.…”
Section: Societal Choices and Robustness-vulnerability Trade-offsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Too much conformity lessens the potential response range. Overall, a reduction in diversity can increase short-term efficiency but create long-term vulnerability (Nelson et al 2011). This diversity is often seen as a hurdle-how can we in practice manage it to achieve short-term goals and retain long-term resilience?…”
Section: Harness Diversitymentioning
confidence: 99%