Stockholm Resilience News
A window into the world's future oceans
New 3D programme allows scientists and policymakers to predict the future state of oceans.
When to be what and to whom
Science-to-policy organisations struggle to please divergent stakeholder needs.
Vi söker chefsassistent till Johan Rockström
Sista ansökningsdag är 2012.02.29.
Sticking to their trade
Why fishermen keep fishing despite dwindling catches.
Major breakthrough for resilience theory
New UN High-level report calls for resilience of people and planet.
Making sense of climate change and adaptation
Tim Lynam (CSIRO) on different understandings of climate change. See video!
Two upcoming Stockholm seminars
Talks on climate adaptation and the ethics and politics of cost-benefit analysis.
More not merrier for the murre
Quality food more important than quantity for seabirds in the Baltic.
Dilemma? What dilemma?
Students in China rates economic growth ahead of environmental protection.
The more the merrier?
Polycentric governance can boost governance of planetary boundaries, but beware of pitfalls.
A welcome can of worms?
Alien species in the Baltic Sea counteracts the effects of eutrophication.
Research highlights of 2011
And a ground breaking study that almost went unnoticed...
Save a third for the birds
Successful seabird breeding depends on access to one third of the world's fish.
Clean water under the bridge
Integrated land use planning and water management steadily improving, but gaps still exist.
New centre vacancies
Employment opportunities within the Resilience and Development programme and the Arctic Resilience Report.
Trading with coral reef resilience
Difficult trade-off between parrotfish trade and protecting crucial ecological functions.
Get away from short term and narrow interests
High-level dialogue at COP17 urges 'new mindset' in climate negotiations.
Bottled up
Taste, not health risk, the motivating factor for bottled water consumption.
Dealing with uncertainty in science and decision-making
Science-Po Professor Claude Henry puts things in perspective.
No longer each to their own
Novel network analysis can boost water resources management and collaboration in Tanzania.