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Structuring institutional analysis for urban ecosystems: A key to sustainable urban forest management
Authors:Sarah K Mincey  Miranda Hutten  Burnell C Fischer  Tom P Evans  Susan I Stewart  Jessica M Vogt
Institution:1. School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Center for the Study of Institutions, Population, and Environmental Change (CIPEC), Indiana University, 408 N. Indiana Ave, Bloomington, IN, 47408, USA
2. USDA Forest Service Northeastern Area, 271 Mast Rd, Durham, NH, 03824, USA
3. School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, 1315 E. Tenth Street, Bloomington, IN, 47405, USA
4. Department of Geography, Center for the Study of Institutions, Population, and Environmental Change (CIPEC), Indiana University, Student Building 120, 701 E. Kirkwood Ave, Bloomington, IN, 47405, USA
5. USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station, 1033 University Place, Suite 360, Evanston, IL, 60201, USA
Abstract:A decline in urban forest structure and function in the United States jeopardizes the current focus on developing sustainable cities. A number of social dilemmas—for example, free-rider problems—restrict the sustainable production of ecosystem services and the stock of urban trees from which they flow. However, institutions, or the rules, norms, and strategies that affect human decision-making, resolve many such social dilemmas, and thus, institutional analysis is imperative for understanding urban forest management outcomes. Unfortunately, we find that the definition of institutions varies greatly across and within disciplines, and conceptual frameworks in urban forest management and urban ecosystems research often embed institutions as minor variables. Given the significance of institutional analysis to understanding sustainable rural resource management, this paper attempts to bring clarity to defining, conceptually framing, and operationally analyzing institutions in urban settings with a specific focus on sustainable urban forest management. We conclude that urban ecologists and urban forest management researchers could benefit from applying a working definition of institutions that uniquely defines rules, norms, and strategies, by recognizing the nested nature of operational, collective choice, and constitutional institutions, and by applying the Institutional Analysis and Development framework for analysis of urban social-ecological systems (SESs). Such work promises to spur the desired policy-based research agenda of urban forestry and urban ecology and provide cross-disciplinary fertilization of institutional analysis between rural SESs and urban ecosystems.
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