2008
DOI: 10.15365/cate.1142008
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Urban ecological stewardship: understanding the structure, function and network of community-based urban land management

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Cited by 129 publications
(104 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(24 reference statements)
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“…Stewardship is the act of caring for the environment to enhance the quality of life for the greater public good [1] "with the underlying assumption that doing so will improve the social-ecological functioning of specific urban areas" [2] (p. 76). We define environmental stewards as civic groups that conserve, manage, monitor, advocate for, and educate about a wide range of quality of life issues in urban areas [3,4]. While stewardship occurs within interactive and overlapping networks of civic, government, and private actors, here we focus on community-based UES.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stewardship is the act of caring for the environment to enhance the quality of life for the greater public good [1] "with the underlying assumption that doing so will improve the social-ecological functioning of specific urban areas" [2] (p. 76). We define environmental stewards as civic groups that conserve, manage, monitor, advocate for, and educate about a wide range of quality of life issues in urban areas [3,4]. While stewardship occurs within interactive and overlapping networks of civic, government, and private actors, here we focus on community-based UES.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stewardship actions are carried out by stewards-which can be individuals, groups, or networks of actors (Svendsen and Campbell 2008;Wolf et al 2011;Bodin 2017). Individual stewardship actions, for example, might include daily decisions made by individual resource users regarding maintenance or restoration of soil, the management of vegetation, removal of invasive species, the quantity of marine resources extracted, the type of extraction practice used and its related environmental impact, or where harvest occurs depending on sensitivity or vulnerability of habitat.…”
Section: Actors: Individuals Groups or Network Of Stewardsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lacking a database that inventoried EE programs after the hurricane, we initially identified study organizations through selective sampling of 796 stewardship organizations in the U.S. Forest Service STEW-MAP database (Svendsen and Campbell n.d.), the majority of which engage in some form of EE (Svendsen & Campbell, 2008), which were likely to have seen physical damage from Sandy or whose participants would have been impacted by the storm (e.g., lower Manhattan residents were more impacted than Bronx residents). We also attempted to sample the large environmental organizations in NYC, such as The Nature Conservancy, along with the most networked organizations that were identified through STEW-MAP (Campbell, 2014) such as GreenThumb.…”
Section: Study Organizationsmentioning
confidence: 99%