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1. Unraveling complex causal processes that affect sustainability requires more integration between empirical and modeling approaches.

2. Rethinking resilience and development: A coevolutionary perspective.

3. The importance of transient social dynamics for restoring ecosystems beyond ecological tipping points.

4. Capturing emergent phenomena in social-ecological systems: an analytical framework.

5. The potential of models and modeling for social-ecological systems research: the reference frame ModSES.

6. Small-scale fisheries and agricultural trade networks are socially embedded: emerging hypotheses about responses to environmental changes.

7. Embedding Cognition: Judgment and Choice in an Interdependent and Dynamic World.

8. A framework for mapping and comparing behavioural theories in models of social-ecological systems.

9. Model-derived causal explanations are inherently constrained by hidden assumptions and context: The example of Baltic cod dynamics.

10. Robustness of norm-driven cooperation in the commons.

11. A framework for analyzing, comparing, and diagnosing social-ecological systems.

12. The SES-Framework as boundary object to address theory orientation in social–ecological system research: The SES-TheOr approach.

13. Testing the Social Function of Metacognition for Common‐Pool Resource Use.

14. Application of the SES Framework for Model-based Analysis of the Dynamics of Social-Ecological Systems.

15. Enhancing resilience to water flow uncertainty by integrating environmental flows into water management in the Amudarya River, Central Asia.

16. Toward Principles for Enhancing the Resilience of Ecosystem Services.

17. The survival of the conformist: Social pressure and renewable resource management

18. Exploring Resilience and Transformability of a River Basin in the Face of Socioeconomic and Ecological Crisis: an Example from the Amudarya River Basin, Central Asia.

19. Modeling responses of coupled social–ecological systems of the Gulf of California to anthropogenic and natural perturbations.

20. Managing water-use trade-offs in a semi-arid river delta to sustain multiple ecosystem services: a modeling approach.

21. Mechanisms of Resilience in Common-pool Resource Management Systems: an Agent-based Model of Water Use in a River Basin.

22. Application of a GIS-based simulation tool to illustrate implications of uncertainties for water management in the Amudarya river delta

23. A fuzzy habitat suitability index for Populus euphratica in the Northern Amudarya delta (Uzbekistan)

24. Optimizing long-term water allocation in the Amudarya River delta: a water management model for ecological impact assessment

25. Eliciting the plurality of causal reasoning in social-ecological systems research.

26. Integrating evolutionary theory and social–ecological systems research to address the sustainability challenges of the Anthropocene.

27. Adopting process-relational perspectives to tackle the challenges of social-ecological systems research.

28. Cross-scale cooperation enables sustainable use of a common-pool resource.

29. Compliance in small-scale fisheries is linked to fisher-trader relations: not fishers alone (Southeast Asian case study).

30. Local, Global, Multi-Level: Market Structure and Multi-Species Fishery Dynamics.

31. Micro-level explanations for emergent patterns of self-governance arrangements in small-scale fisheries—A modeling approach.

32. Cooperation Is Not Enough Exploring Social-Ecological Micro-Foundations for Sustainable Common-Pool Resource Use.

33. Studying human-nature relations in aquatic social-ecological systems using the social-ecological action situations framework: how to move from empirical data to conceptual models.

34. Modelling systemic change in coupled socio-environmental systems.

35. Combining approaches: Looking behind the scenes of integrating multiple types of evidence from controlled behavioural experiments through agent-based modelling.

36. A diagnostic procedure for applying the social-ecological systems framework in diverse cases.

37. Visualization of causation in social-ecological systems.

38. Explaining institutional persistence, adaptation, and transformation in East German recreational-fisheries governance after the German reunification in 1990.

39. Fish provision in a changing environment: The buffering effect of regional trade networks.

40. Taxonomies for structuring models for World–Earth systems analysis of the Anthropocene: subsystems, their interactions and social–ecological feedback loops.

41. Behavioural diversity in fishing—Towards a next generation of fishery models.

42. Governing the commons beyond harvesting: An empirical illustration from fishing.

43. Using agent-based modelling to simulate social-ecological systems across scales.

44. Traps and Sustainable Development in Rural Areas: A Review.

45. Taxonomies for structuring models for World-Earth system analysis of the Anthropocene: subsystems, their interactions and social-ecological feedback loops.

46. Transferring Williamson's discriminating alignment to the analysis of environmental governance of social-ecological interdependence.

48. An empirical model of the Baltic Sea reveals the importance of social dynamics for ecological regime shifts.

49. Three necessary conditions for establishing effective Sustainable Development Goals in the Anthropocene.

50. Standardised and transparent model descriptions for agent-based models: Current status and prospects.

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