Methodological pluralism is important when we study complex systems. We aim to show that methodological pluralism yields additional insight by applying it to a specific question: how are the economy and wildlife related in developed and developing countries? We identify three possible ingredients of methodological pluralism: (1) using both qualitative and quantitative information; (2) tapping the potential of history to illuminate slow-moving variables; and (3) explicitly synthesizing either individually or in groups, by thinking about the corresponding system. We illustrate with examples.
Current awareness of scientific abstracts and news clips emphasizing the land and people of East Africa.
Friday, September 3, 2010
ScienceDirect - Ecological Economics : Applying methodological pluralism to wildlife and the economy
ScienceDirect - Ecological Economics : Applying methodological pluralism to wildlife and the economy
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment