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Collapse and recovery in a remote small island—A tale of adaptive cycles or downward spirals?
Authors:Matthew Bunce  Laurence Mee  Lynda D Rodwell  Richard Gibb
Institution:1. Overseas Development Group, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK;2. Scottish Association for Marine Science, Dunstaffnage Marine Laboratory, Dunbeg, Oban, Argyll PA37 1AQ, UK;3. Centre for Marine and Coastal Policy Research (School of Earth, Ocean and Environmental Sciences), University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK;4. School of Geography, University of Plymouth, Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK
Abstract:Few studies consider how social-ecological systems recover from disturbance. We consider the small semi-autonomous island of Rodrigues (Indian Ocean). Based on semi-structured interviews (n = 70), a fisher survey (n = 73), weather data and official records we build a timeline of key events. We tabulate local perceptions (5+ mentions) of changes (social, economic and natural capital) and look for signs of adaptive cycles in the island's social-ecological past. Rising human pressure and extreme weather event impacts are reported since first settlement. We propose a recent “collapse” phase catalysed in the 1970s by severe drought, based on respondents’ perceptions of still-ongoing changes in farming and fishing, water, external dependence, migration and inter-island political change. Connectivity (flows of people, goods, information, money, power) appear to have strengthed local island recovery, but degradation continued, not least due to water scarcity and a lack of shared political vision as Rodrigues became more tied into the wider world.Overall, our findings suggest social-ecological systems may get stuck in a post-collapse recovery without any new structure emerging, presuming adaptive cycles can even be detected. Data gaps and global change redefining spatial and temporal scales could mean the adaptive cycle's usefulness is limited in development policy-making contexts.
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