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Henrik Ernstson

Researcher at Royal Institute of Technology

Publications -  66
Citations -  5354

Henrik Ernstson is an academic researcher from Royal Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ecosystem services & Urban ecosystem. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 64 publications receiving 4603 citations. Previous affiliations of Henrik Ernstson include Stanford University & University of Manchester.

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Urban Transitions: On Urban Resilience and Human-Dominated Ecosystems

TL;DR: It is argued that urban governance need to harness social networks of urban innovation to sustain ecosystem services, while nurturing discourses that situate the city as part of regional ecosystems.
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Social networks in natural resource management: what is there to learn from a structural perspective?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a framework to analyze the social-ecological dynamics behind the generation and distribution of ecosystem services in urban landscapes, and argue for deeper engagement with urban political ecology and critical geography to inform governance and collective action in relation to urban ecosystems.
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Toward a network perspective of the study of resilience in social-ecological systems

TL;DR: A network perspective for social-ecological systems is proposed that enables us to better focus on the structure of interactions between identifiable components of the system and might be useful for developing formal models and comparing case studies of social-ECological systems.
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Scale-Crossing Brokers and Network Governance of Urban Ecosystem Services : The Case of Stockholm

TL;DR: In this article, a central challenge for sustaining ecosystem services lies in addressing scale mismatches between ecological ecosystems and human well-being and the livability of cities, and the authors propose a solution to address this mismatch.
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The social production of ecosystem services: A framework for studying environmental justice and ecological complexity in urbanized landscapes

TL;DR: In this paper, a framework is constructed for how to relate ecosystem services to environmental justice, and the benefits humans and society can derive from biophysical processes cannot be viewed as objectively existing "out there" but as entangled in social and political processes.