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Historical roots and the evolving science of forest management under a systemic perspective

Authors :
Orazio Ciancio
Susanna Nocentini
Piermaria Corona
Luigi Portoghesi
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

In recent history, both a growing awareness of how scientific and societal uncertainty impacts management decisions and of the intrinsic value of nature have suggested new approaches to forest management, with a growing debate in forest science over the need for a paradigmatic shift from the classic conventional world view, based on determinism, predictability, and output-oriented management, towards a world view that has roots in complex adaptive systems theory and is consistent with a nature-based ethic. A conceptual framework under this context is provided by systemic silviculture. In this discussion, we analyze how this approach can be linked to three fundamental moments of the history of forestry and forest science: the Dauerwald theory, Gurnaud’s control method, and the origins of environmental ethics. Relationships with the recent history of forest management science and current research perspectives are also highlighted.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1aa952400ee347dbb33ff246ca26c727