All Stories

  1. Assessing corporate social responsibility pressures in lithium mining: a topic modeling analysis approach
  2. Conceptualizing Meso‐Level Organizations and Their Relations to Catalyze Transformative Climate Adaptation
  3. Emergent polycentric governance in response to drought: Motivations, transaction costs, and feedback in corporate and city collaboration
  4. Challenging problem narratives through modeling
  5. Institutional Change of Farmer-Managed Irrigation Systems: Experience from Nepal
  6. Private provisioning of public adaptation: Integration of cognitive-behavioral, adaptive capacity, and institutional approaches
  7. Emergent governance responses to shocks to critical provisioning systems
  8. Integration of urban science and urban climate adaptation research: opportunities to advance climate action
  9. Uncomfortable knowledge: Mechanisms of urban development in adaptation governance
  10. Enabling collective agency for sustainability transformations through reframing in the Xochimilco social–ecological system
  11. Sense of Agency, Affectivity and Social-Ecological Degradation: An Enactive and Phenomenological Approach
  12. Who’s fighting for justice?: advocacy in energy justice and just transition scholarship
  13. Unveiling uncertainties to enhance sustainability transformations in infrastructure decision-making
  14. Analytic hierarchy process and sensitivity analysis implementation for social vulnerability assessment: A case study from Brazil
  15. Sustainable minerals extraction for electric vehicles: A pilot study of consumers’ perceptions of impacts
  16. Identifying, projecting, and evaluating informal urban expansion spatial patterns
  17. Critical minerals for electric vehicles: a telecoupling review
  18. Attending to the social–political dimensions of urban flooding in decision‐support research: A synthesis of contemporary empirical cases
  19. Challenges and opportunities for universities in building adaptive capacities for sustainability: lessons from Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean
  20. Crisis, transformation, and agency: Why are people going back-to-the-land in Greece?
  21. Entry points for addressing justice and politics in urban flood adaptation decision making
  22. Multilevel governance in climate change adaptation in Bangladesh: structure, processes, and power dynamics
  23. Advancing equitable health and well-being across urban–rural sustainable infrastructure systems
  24. Addressing complex, political and intransient sustainability challenges of transdisciplinarity: The case of the MEGADAPT project in Mexico City
  25. The role of institutional entrepreneurs and informal land transactions in Mexico City’s urban expansion
  26. Developing a socio-psychological model explaining farmers’ income diversification in response to groundwater scarcity in Iran
  27. Beyond the barriers: An overview of mechanisms driving barriers to adaptation in Bangladesh
  28. Editorial: Sustainability Challenges for Our Urban Futures
  29. Small irrigation users’ perceptions of environmental change, impacts, and response in Nepal
  30. Social and cultural bonds left to “the mercy of the winds:” an agricultural transition
  31. What are the ingredients for food systems change towards sustainability?—Insights from the literature
  32. Modeling interdependent water uses at the regional scale to engage stakeholders and enhance resilience in Central Arizona
  33. Exploring farmers’ perceptions about their depleting groundwater resources using path analysis: implications for groundwater overdraft and income diversification
  34. Structured Collaboration Across a Transformative Knowledge Network—Learning Across Disciplines, Cultures and Contexts?
  35. Expressions of collective grievance as a feedback in multi-actor adaptation to water risks in Mexico City
  36. Transformations to sustainability: combining structural, systemic and enabling approaches
  37. Transformative spaces in the making: key lessons from nine cases in the Global South
  38. Mental Models, Meta-Narratives, and Solution Pathways Associated With Socio-Hydrological Risk and Response in Mexico City
  39. Advancing the research agenda on food systems governance and transformation
  40. Operationalizing the feedback between institutional decision-making, socio-political infrastructure, and environmental risk in urban vulnerability analysis
  41. Intentional disruption of path-dependencies in the Anthropocene: Gray versus green water infrastructure regimes in Mexico City, Mexico
  42. Spatially-explicit simulation of two-way coupling of complex socio-environmental systems: Socio-hydrological risk and decision making in Mexico City
  43. Examination of coastal vulnerability framings at multiple levels of governance using spatial MCDA approach
  44. What Can Be: Stakeholder Perspectives for a Sustainable Food System
  45. A standardization process for mental model analysis in socio-ecological systems
  46. Cryospheric hazards and risk perceptions in the Sagarmatha (Mt. Everest) National Park and Buffer Zone, Nepal
  47. Loss and social-ecological transformation: pathways of change in Xochimilco, Mexico
  48. Governing the gaps in water governance and land-use planning in a megacity: The example of hydrological risk in Mexico City
  49. Managing household socio-hydrological risk in Mexico city: A game to communicate and validate computational modeling with stakeholders
  50. Socio-environmental impacts of lithium mineral extraction: towards a research agenda
  51. Agricultural change and resilience: Agricultural policy, climate trends and market integration in the Mexican maize system
  52. Critical Lines of Action for Vulnerability and Resilience Research and Practice: Lessons from the 2017 Hurricane Season
  53. Biophysical, infrastructural and social heterogeneities explain spatial distribution of waterborne gastrointestinal disease burden in Mexico City
  54. Measuring what matters in the Great Barrier Reef
  55. Leveraging Post-Disaster Windows of Opportunities for Change towards Sustainability: A Framework
  56. Governance of food systems across scales in times of social-ecological change: a review of indicators
  57. Adaptive pathways and coupled infrastructure: seven centuries of adaptation to water risk and the production of vulnerability in Mexico City
  58. Promoting agency for social-ecological transformation: a transformation-lab in the Xochimilco social-ecological system
  59. Perceptions of climate trends among Mexican maize farmers
  60. Urban resilience efforts must consider social and political forces
  61. Transforming governance in telecoupled food systems
  62. Adapting to risk and perpetuating poverty: Household’s strategies for managing flood risk and water scarcity in Mexico City
  63. Identifying attributes of food system sustainability: emerging themes and consensus
  64. The limits of poverty reduction in support of climate change adaptation
  65. Linking development to climate adaptation: Leveraging generic and specific capacities to reduce vulnerability to drought in NE Brazil
  66. Collaborative framework for designing a sustainability science programme
  67. Reframing adaptation: The political nature of climate change adaptation
  68. Adapting a social-ecological resilience framework for food systems
  69. Correlates of Maize Land and Livelihood Change Among Maize Farming Households in Mexico
  70. “We and us, not I and me”: Justice, social capital, and household vulnerability in a Nova Scotia fishery
  71. Cognitive and institutional influences on farmers’ adaptive capacity: insights into barriers and opportunities for transformative change in central Arizona
  72. Development pathways at the agriculture–urban interface: the case of Central Arizona
  73. Information and communication technologies and climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: a framework for action
  74. Reconceptualising adaptation to climate change as part of pathways of change and response
  75. Differentiating capacities as a means to sustainable climate change adaptation
  76. Agro-environmental sustainability assessment using multicriteria decision analysis and system analysis
  77. Selling Maize in Mexico: The Persistence of Peasant Farming in an Era of Global Markets
  78. Growing buildings in corn fields: Urban expansion and the persistence of maize in the Toluca Metropolitan Area, Mexico
  79. Does External Funding Help Adaptation? Evidence from Community-Based Water Management in the Colombian Andes
  80. Water Scarcity in the Andes: A Comparison of Local Perceptions and Observed Climate, Land Use and Socioeconomic Changes
  81. Adaptation in a multi-stressor environment: perceptions and responses to climatic and economic risks by coffee growers in Mesoamerica
  82. Mexican maize production: Evolving organizational and spatial structures since 1980
  83. Chiapas' delayed entry into the international labour market: a story of peasant isolation, exploitation, and coercion
  84. Understanding peri-urban maize production through an examination of household livelihoods in the Toluca Metropolitan Area, Mexico
  85. Assessing the adaptation strategies of farmers facing multiple stressors: Lessons from the Coffee and Global Changes project in Mesoamerica