Authors
Xuemei Bai, Sander Van Der Leeuw, Karen O’Brien, Frans Berkhout, Frank Biermann, Eduardo S Brondizio, Christophe Cudennec, John Dearing, Anantha Duraiappah, Marion Glaser, Andrew Revkin, Will Steffen, James Syvitski
Publication date
2016/7/1
Journal
Global Environmental Change
Volume
39
Pages
351-362
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
While the concept of the Anthropocene reflects the past and present nature, scale and magnitude of human impacts on the Earth System, its true significance lies in how it can be used to guide attitudes, choices, policies and actions that influence the future. Yet, to date much of the research on the Anthropocene has focused on interpreting past and present changes, while saying little about the future. Likewise, many futures studies have been insufficiently rooted in an understanding of past changes, in particular the long-term co-evolution of bio-physical and human systems. The Anthropocene perspective is one that encapsulates a world of intertwined drivers, complex dynamic structures, emergent phenomena and unintended consequences, manifest across different scales and within interlinked biophysical constraints and social conditions. In this paper we discuss the changing role of science and the theoretical …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
X Bai, S Van Der Leeuw, K O'Brien, F Berkhout… - Global Environmental Change, 2016