Bridging Scales and Knowledge Systems
					Concepts and Applications in Ecosystem Assessment
					Edited by Walter V. Reid, Fikret Berkes, 
					Thomas Wilbanks, Doris Capistrano
					
					The very first meeting of the MA Exploratory Committee 
					introduced three novel dimensions to the assessment process. 
					First, the group concluded that the assessment could not be 
					done at a single global scale and would need to examine 
					processes of ecosystem change and human impacts at other 
					scales, including in particular the scale of individual 
					communities. Second, it was evident that the audience for 
					the findings of an assessment of these issues was much 
					broader than the traditional audience of global assessments 
					(national governments) and must include other stakeholders 
					from business, nongovernmental organizations, indigenous 
					people, and other civil society groups. Finally, it was 
					clear that the knowledge base for an assessment of this 
					nature could not be limited to the scientific literature but 
					must draw on other “informal” sources of knowledge, 
					including local, traditional, and practitioner’s knowledge.
					The MA was the largest assessment effort ever to attempt 
					to incorporate all of these dimensions in its design, and in 
					that regard it can be seen as an experiment or pilot in 
					applying multiple scales and knowledge systems in an 
					assessment. But, in fact, a tremendous depth of research and 
					experience exists in relation to each of these dimensions of 
					scale, stakeholders, and knowledge systems. Recognizing that 
					this existing experience could significantly aid the MA 
					process, and also recognizing that the MA itself provided an 
					experiment that could further advance understanding of 
					issues of scale and epistemology, the MA Sub-Global Working 
					Group organized an international conference on these issues 
					called Bridging Scales and Epistemologies: Linking Local 
					Knowledge and Global Science in Multi-scale Assessments. 
					More than two hundred people from fifty countries 
					participated in that conference, which was held in March 
					2004 and hosted by the Bibliotheca Alexandrina in 
					Alexandria, Egypt. 
					This book—Bridging Scales and Knowledge Systems: Concepts 
					and Applications in Ecosystem Assessment—is one product of 
					that conference. While the MA provides the motivation for 
					this book, and while several chapters present experiences 
					from the MA, this book, like the conference, reaches far 
					beyond the MA process to explore the challenges, costs, and 
					benefits of bridging scales and knowledge systems in 
					assessment processes and in resource management. The issues 
					explored in this book push the limits of science, politics, 
					and social processes. Although a number of general lessons 
					emerge, many questions remain unanswered about how to make 
					such processes work, how to address issues of power and 
					empowerment, and how to address technical issues of 
					information scaling and knowledge validation. In this 
					respect, the volume does not attempt to provide a blueprint, 
					but it does illustrate the multiple dimensions of the 
					challenges inherent in bridging scales and knowledge 
					systems.
					Chapters for Download
					
					Contents, 
					Preface, Acknowledgements
					
					Chapter 1: Introduction (Walter V. Reid, Fikret Berkes, Thomas J. Wilbanks, And Doris Capistrano)
Bridging Scales 
Chapter 2: How Scale Matters: Some Concepts and Findings (Thomas J. Wilbanks)
Chapter 3: The Politics of Scale in Environmental Assessments (Louis Lebel)
Chapter 4: Assessing Ecosystem Services at Different Scales in the Portugal Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (Henrique M. Pereira, Tiago Domingos, And Luís Vicente)
Chapter 5: A Synthesis of Data and Methods across Scales to Connect Local Policy Decisions to Regional Environmental Conditions: The Case of the Cascadia Scorecard (Chris Davis)
Chapter 6: Scales of Governance in Carbon Sinks: Global Priorities and Local Realities (Emily Boyd)
Bridging Knowledge Systems 
Chapter 7: What Counts as Local Knowledge in Global Environmental Assessments and Conventions? (J. Peter Brosius)
Chapter 8: Bridging the Gap or Crossing a Bridge? Indigenous Knowledge and the Language of Law and Policy (Michael Davis)
Chapter 9: Mobilizing Knowledge for Integrated Ecosystem Assessments (Christo Fabricius, Robert Scholes, And Georgina Cundill)
Case Studies 
Chapter 10: Keep It Simple and Be Relevant: The First Ten Years of the Arctic Borderlands Ecological Knowledge Co-op (Joan Eamer)
Chapter 11: Cosmovisions and Environmental Governance:The Case of In Situ Conservation of Native Cultivated Plants and Their Wild Relatives in Peru (Jorge Ishizawa)
Chapter 12: Harmonizing Traditional and Scientific Knowledge Systems in Rainfall Prediction and Utilization (Rengalakshmi Raj)
Chapter 13: Managing People’s Knowledge: An Indian Case Study of Building Bridges from Local to Global and from Oral to Scientific Knowledge (Yogesh Gokhale, Madhav Gadgil, Anil Gupta, Riya Sinha, and K. P. (Prabha) Achar)
Chapter 14: Barriers to Local-level Ecosystem Assessment and Participatory Management in Brazil (Cristiana S. Seixas)
Chapter 15: Integrating Epistemologies through Scenarios (Elena Bennett And Monika Zurek)
Synthesis 
Chapter 16: The Politics of Bridging Scales and Epistemologies: Science and Democracy in Global Environmental Governance (Clark Miller And Paul Erickson)
Chapter 17: Conclusions: Bridging Scales and Knowledge Systems (Fikret Berkes, Walter V. Reid, Thomas J. Wilbanks, And Doris Capistrano)
Notes, List of Authors, Index