2024

Ross, H., C.E. Haque and F. Berkes 2024. Transmission of knowledge and social learning for disaster risk reduction and building resilience: a Delphi study. Sustainable Development 32: 1525–1537. 

Berkes, F. 2024. Biodiversity, religion traditions. Encyclopedia of Biodiversity, Third Edition, volume 3, pp. 18-29. Elsevier, Oxford.

2023

Berkes, F. 2023. Advanced Introduction to Resilience. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA, USA. 194 pp.

Berkes, F. 2023. Social-ecological systems. In: Elgar Encyclopedia in Urban and Regional Planning & Design. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, pp. 361-363.
 
Berkes, F. 2023. Foreword. In: Putting Communities First: Rural Development for Sustainable Social-ecological Systems (C. Baldwin and S. van Bommel, editors) Springer Nature, pp. v-x. 

Berkes, F. 2023. Making connections: Leopold’s land health, Indigenous ways of knowing, social-ecological resilience, and One Health. CABI One Health 2:1 https://doi.org/10.1079/cabionehealth.2023.0008

Silvano, R.A.M., I. G. Baird, A. Begossi, G. Hallwass, H.P. Huntington, P.F.M. Lopes, B. Parlee and F. Berkes 2023. Fishers’ multidimensional knowledge advances fisheries and aquatic science. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 38: 8-12.

2022

Galappaththi, E.K., M. Falardeau, L.N. Harris, J.C. Rocha, J.-S. Moore and F. Berkes 2022. Resilience-based steps for adaptive co-management of Arctic small-scale fisheries. Environmental Research Letters 17 (8) doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac7b37
 
Berkes, F. 2022. Interview with Fikret Berkes: Voluntary Guidelines for the for Securing Sustainable Small-scale Fisheries. International Year of Artisanal Fisheries and Aquaculture IYAFA Newsletter No. 3. FAO, Rome.

Nayak, P.K. and F. Berkes 2022. Evolutionary perspectives on the commons: A model of commonisation and decommonisation. Sustainability 14, 4300. doi.org/10.3390/su14074300 

Haque, C.E., F. Berkes, A. Fernandez-Llamazares, H. Ross, F.S. Chapin III, B. Doberstein, M.G. Reed, N. Agrawal, P.K. Nayak, D. Etkin, M. Dore and D. Hutton 2022. Social learning for enhancing social-ecological resilience to disaster-shocks: A policy Delphi approach. Disaster Prevention and Management 31: 335-348. 

2021

Berkes, F. 2021. Advanced Introduction to Community-based Conservation. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, and Northampton, MA, USA. 169 pp.

Berkes, F. 2021. Toward a New Social Contract: Community-based Resource Management and Small-scale Fisheries. Too Big to Ignore TBTI Global Book Series. 312 pp. Open-access http://toobigtoignore.net/toward-a-new-social-contract-by-fikret-berkes/

Lejano, R., C. E. Haque and F. Berkes 2021. Co-production of risk knowledge and improvement of risk communication: A three-legged stool. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 64 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijdrr.2021.102508 

Berkes, F. 2021. Community-based conservation. Introduction to the May 2021 issue of IUCN CEESP Newsletter.

Parlee, B., H. Huntington, F. Berkes, T. Lantz, L. Andrew, J. Tsannie, C. Reece, C. Porter, V. Nicholson, S. Peter, D. Simmons, H. Michell, M. Lepine, B. Maclean, K. Ahkimnachie, L.J. King, A. Napoleon, J. Hogan, J. Lam, K. Hynes, J.D. Storr, S. Lord, M. Low, J. Lockhart, D. Giroux, M. Tollis, L. Lowe, E. Maloney and T. Howlett. 2021. One-size does not fit all – A networked approach to community-based monitoring in large river basins. Sustainability, 13, 7400. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13137400

Nayak, P.K. and F. Berkes 2021. Framing commons as a process: The rudiments of commonisation and decommonisation. In: Making Commons Dynamic (P.K. Nayak, editor). Routledge, London and New York, pp. 3-23.

Charles, A. and F. Berkes 2021. Community-based approaches for linking conservation and livelihoods. In: Communities, Conservation and Livelihoods (A. Charles, editor). International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Gland, and Community Conservation Research Network, Halifax, pp. 4-12. 
https://www.communityconservation.net/communities-conservation-livelihoods-the-book/

Berkes, F. 2021. A social-ecological systems lens for community conservation. In: Communities, Conservation and Livelihoods (A. Charles, editor). International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Gland, and Community Conservation Research Network, Halifax, pp. 13-18.

Charles, A. and F. Berkes 2021. Concluding synthesis and highlights. In: Communities, Conservation and Livelihoods (A. Charles, editor). International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Gland, and Community Conservation Research Network, Halifax, pp. 55-63.

Berkes, F., H.-M. Tsai, M.M. Bayrak and Y.-R. Lin 2021. Indigenous resilience to disasters in Taiwan and beyond. Sustainability 13, 2435. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13052435

Yeh, J.H-Y., S.-C. Lin, S.-C. Lai, Y.-H. Huang, Chen, Y.-F., Y.-T. Lee, and F. Berkes 2021. Taiwanese Indigenous cultural heritage and revitalization: Community practices and local development. Sustainability 13, 1799. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041799 

Gadgil, M., F. Berkes and C. Folke 2021. Indigenous knowledge: from local to global. 50th Anniversary Collection: Biodiversity conservation. Ambio 50. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-020-01478-7.

Winter, K.B., M. Vaughan, N. Kurashima, C. Giardina, K. Quiocho, K. Chang, M. Akutagawa, K. Beamer, and F. Berkes 2021. Empowering Indigenous agency through community-driven collaborative management to achieve effective conservation: Hawaiʻi as an example. Pacific Conservation Biology https://doi.org/10.1071/PC20009

Galappaththi, E. J. Ford, E. Bennett and F. Berkes 2021. Adapting to climate change in small-scale fisheries: Insights from Indigenous communities in the global north and south. Environmental Science & Policy 116: 160-170.

 

2020

Peterson, D., N. Hanazaki and F. Berkes 2020. Do we all speak the same language when talking conservation? Caiçara understandings of conservation in their landscape. Conservation and Society 18: 238-251.  

Winter, K. B., N. Kekuewa Lincoln, F. Berkes, R. A. Alegado, N. Kurashima, K. L. Frank, P. Pascua, Y. M. Rii, F. Reppun, I. S.S. Knapp, W. C. McClatchey, T. Ticktin, C. Smith, E. C. Franklin, K. Oleson, M. R. Price, M. A. McManus, M. J. Donahue, K. S. Rodgers, B. W. Bowen, C. E. Nelson, B. Thomas, J.-A. Leong, E. M. P. Madin, M. J. Rivera, K. A. Falinski, L. L. Bremer, J. L. Deenik, S. M. Gon III, B. Neilson, R. Okano, A. Olegario, B. Nyberg, A. Kawelo, K. Kotubetey, J. Kukea-Shultz and R. J. Toonen. 2020. Ecomimicry in Indigenous resource management: optimizing ecosystem services to achieve resource abundance, with examples from Hawaiʻi. Ecology and Society 25 (2):26. [online] URL: https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol25/iss2/art26/

Berkes, F. 2020. Foreword. Participatory Biodiversity Conservation, edited by Cristina Baldauf. Springer. https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783030416850

Berkes, F. 2020. Blue justice: Review of Svein Jentoft’s Life above Water. Samudra Report No. 82: 50-51.

Charles, A., L. Loucks, F. Berkes and D. Armitage 2020. Community science: a typology and its implications for governance of social-ecological systems. Environmental Science and Policy 106: 77-86.

Hill, R., C. Adem, W.V. Alangui, Z. Molnár, Y. Aumeeruddy-Thomas, P. Bridgewater, M. Tengö, R. Thaman, C.Y.A, Yao, F. Berkes, J. Carino, M.C. da Cunha, M.C. Diaw, S. Diaz, V.E. Figueroa, J. Fisher, P. Hardison, K. Ichikawa, P. Kariuki, M. Karki, P.O’B. Lyver, P. Malmer, O. Masardule, A.A. Oteng Yeboah, D. Pacheco, T. Pataridze, E. Perez, M.-M. Roue, H. Roba, J. Rubis, O. Saito and D. Xue 2020. Working with indigenous, local and scientific knowledge in assessments of nature and nature’s linkages with people. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 43: 8-20. 

2019

Peterson, D., F. Berkes, I. Davidson-Hunt and N. Hanazaki 2019. The Caiçara in Juatinga Ecological Reserve, Brazil: Landscape ethnoecology of cultural products. Human Ecology 47: 827-838.

Berkes, F. (contributing author) 2019. Chapter 3: Polar Regions. Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 173 pp.
Mulrennan, M. and F. Berkes 2019. Protected area development in northern Canadian indigenous context. In: Caring for Eeyou Isthee: Protected Area Creation on Wemindji Cree Territory (M.E. Mulrennan, C.H. Scott and K. Scott, eds.) University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 23-58.

Peloquin, C. and F. Berkes 2019. Coastal goose hunt of the Wemindji Cree: adaptations to social and ecological change. In: Caring for Eeyou Isthee: Protected Area Creation on Wemindji Cree Territory (M.E. Mulrennan, C.H. Scott and K. Scott, eds.) University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 246-273 .

Molnar, Z., L. Doormann, V. Reyes-Garcia, B. Martin-Lopez, F. Berkes and O. Bodin 2019. Learning from indigenous populations and local communities. One Earth Voices 1, September 20, 2019. https://www.cell.com/action/showPdf?pii=S2590-3322%2819%2930004-1

Galappaththi, E. J. Ford, E. Bennett and F. Berkes 2019. Climate change and community fisheries in the Arctic: A case study from Pangnirtung, Canada. Journal of Environmental Management 250: 109534.

Galappaththi, E.., F. Berkes and J. Ford 2019. Climate change adaptation in coastal shrimp aquaculture: A case from northwestern Sri Lanka. Proceedings of FishAdapt: The Global Conference on Climate Change Adaptation for Fisheries and Aquaculture. FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Proceedings No. 61, pp. 89-98.

Leite, M., H. Ross and F. Berkes 2019. Interactions between individual, household and fishing community resilience in southeast Brazil. Ecology & Society 24 (3):2. https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol24/iss3/art2/

Rodriguez Valencia, M., I. Davidson-Hunt and F. Berkes 2019. Social-ecological memory and responses to biodiversity change in a Bribri community of Costa Rica. Ambio (online first: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-019-01176-z).

Seixas, C.S., I. Davidson-Hunt, D.C. Kalikoski, B. Davy, F. Berkes, F. De Castro, R.P. Medeiros, C.V. Minte-Vera, and L.G. Araujo 2019. Collaborative coastal management in Brazil: advancements, challenges and opportunities. In: Viability and Sustainability of Small-Scale Fisheries in Latin America and the Caribbean (S. Salas, M.J. Barragan-Paladines and R. Chuenpagdee, eds.) Springer, pp. 425-445.

Nayak, P.K. and F. Berkes 2019. Interplay between local and global: change processes and small-scale fisheries. In: Transdisciplinarity for Small-Scale Fisheries Governance (R. Chuenpagdee and S. Jentoft, eds.) Springer, pp. 203-220.

Berkes, F. 2019. Chisasibi Cree hunters and missionaries: Humor as evidence of tension. In: Politics of Joking: Anthropological Engagements (J. Kopelent-Rehak and S. Trnka, eds.) Routledge, London and New York, pp. 85-95.

Seixas, C.S., I. Davidson-Hunt, D.C. Kalikoski, B. Davy, F. Berkes, F. De Castro, R.P. Medeiros, C.V. Minte-Vera, and L.G. Araujo 2019. Collaborative coastal management in Brazil: advancements, challenges and opportunities. In: Viability and Sustainability of Small-Scale Fisheries in Latin America and the Caribbean (S. Salas, M.J. Barragan-Paladines and R. Chuenpagdee, eds.) Springer, pp. 425-445.

Nayak, P.K. and F. Berkes 2019. Interplay between local and global: change processes and small-scale fisheries. In: Transdisciplinarity for Small-Scale Fisheries Governance (R. Chuenpagdee and S. Jentoft, eds.) Springer, pp. 203-220.

Berkes, F. 2019. Chisasibi Cree hunters and missionaries: Humor as evidence of tension. In: Politics of Joking: Anthropological Engagements (J. Kopelent-Rehak and S. Trnka, eds.) Routledge, London and New York, pp. 85-95

2018

Berkes, F. and P.K. Nayak 2018. Role of communities in fisheries management: “one would first need to imagine it”. Maritime Studies 17: 241-251.

Winter, K.B., N.K. Lincoln, and F. Berkes 2018. The social-ecological keystone concept: A quantifiable metaphor for understanding the structure, function, and resilience of a biocultural system. Sustainability 10(9), 3294 https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/9/3294 Gavin, M.C., J. McCarter, F. Berkes, E. Sterling, and N.J. Turner 2018. Letter to editor: Protected land: many factors shape success. Science 361: 561.

Gavin, M.C., J. McCarter, F. Berkes, A. Mead, E. Sterling, R. Tang and N.J. Turner 2018. Effective biodiversity conservation requires dynamic, pluralistic, partnership-based approaches. Sustainability 10(6), 1846; doi:10.3390/su10061846

Berkes, F. 2018. Sacred Ecology. Fourth Edition. Routledge, New York and London.

Berkes, F. 2018. Foreword. In: When the Caribou Do Not Come: Indigenous Knowledge and Adaptive Management in the Western Arctic (B. Parlee and K. Caine, editors). University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. x-xii.

Molnár, Z. and F. Berkes 2018. Role of traditional ecological knowledge in linking cultural and natural capital in cultural landscapes. In: Reconnecting Natural and Cultural Capital (M.L. Paracchini P.C. Zingari and C. Blasi, editors). Publications Office of the European Union, Luxemburg, pp. 183-194.

Berkes, F. 2018. Arctic fish, northern cultures, and traditional ecological knowledge. In: Marine Fishes of Arctic Canada (B.W. Coad and J.D. Reist, editors) Canadian Museum of nature and University of Toronto Press, Toronto, pp. 57-60.

2017

Islam, D. and F. Berkes 2017. Between a business and a social enterprise: the Norway House Fisherman’s co-op, northern Manitoba, Canada. Journal of Enterprising Communities 11: 530-546.

Kuzivanova, V. and I.J. Davidson-Hunt 2017. Biocultural design: harvesting manomin with Wabaseemoong Independent Nations. Ethnobiology Letters 8: 23-30.

Biswal, D. Johnson and F. Berkes 2017. Social wellbeing and commons management failure in a small-scale bag net fishery in Gujarat, India. International Journal of the Commons 11: 684-707.

Bockstael, E. and F. Berkes 2017. Using the capability approach to analyze contemporary environmental governance challenges in coastal Brazil. International Journal of the Commons 11: 799-822.

Lopez-Maldonado, Y. and F. Berkes 2017. Restoring the environment, revitalizing the culture: cenote conservation in Yucatan, Mexico. Ecology and Society 22(4):7. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-09648-220407

Quintana Morales, E.M., D. Lepofsky and F. Berkes 2017. Ethnobiology and fisheries: Learning from the past for the present. Journal of Ethnobiology 37: 369-379.

Berkes, F. 2017. Environmental governance for the Anthropocene? Social-ecological systems, resilience and collaborative learning. Sustainability 9(7), 1232. doi:10.3390/su9071232

Potvin, C., D. Sharma, I. Creed, S. Aitken, F. Anctil, E. Bennett, F. Berkes et al. 2017. Stimulating a Canadian narrative of hope for climate. FACETS 2: 131–149. DOI: 10.1139/facets-2016-0029

Bavinck, M., F. Berkes, A. Charles, A.C. Esteves Dias, N. Doubleday, P. Nayak and M. Sowman 2017. The impact of coastal grabbing on community conservation - a global reconnaissance. Maritime Studies 16:8 DOI 10.1186/s40152-017-0062-8

Bockstael, E. 2017. Critical capacity development: An action research approach in coastal Brazil. World Development 94: 336-345.

Lane, D.F., S. Beigzadeh, T. O’Sullivan, F. Berkes, R.H. Moll, C. Kuziemsky and A.T. Charles 2017. A system model of collaborative community response to environmental emergencies. International Journal of Climate Change: Impacts and Responses 9 (4). www.on-climate.com

Armitage, D., A. Charles and F. Berkes, editors. 2017. Governing the Coastal Commons. Communities, Resilience and Transformation. Earthscan/Routledge, London and New York.

Armitage, D., A. Charles and F. Berkes 2017. Toward transformative change in the coastal commons. In: Governing the Coastal Commons (D. Armitage, A. Charles and F. Berkes, editors). Earthscan/Routledge, London and New York, pp. 1-21.

Loucks, L., F. Berkes, and A. Charles 2017. Emergence of community science as a transformative process in Port Mouton Bay, Canada. In: Governing the Coastal Commons (D. Armitage, A. Charles and F. Berkes, editors). Earthscan/Routledge, London and New York, pp. 43-59.

Frey, J.B. and F. Berkes 2017. Transformations of the reef, transformations of the mind: marine aquarium trade in Bali, Indonesia. In: Governing the Coastal Commons (D. Armitage, A. Charles and F. Berkes, editors). Earthscan/Routledge, London and New York, pp. 81-99.

Armitage, D., F. Berkes and A. Charles 2017. Synthesis: governing coastal transformations. In: Governing the Coastal Commons (D. Armitage, A. Charles and F. Berkes, editors). Earthscan/Routledge, London and New York, pp. 253-265.

Samakov, A. and F. Berkes 2017. Spiritual commons: sacred sites as core of community-conserved areas in Kyrgyzstan. International Journal of the Commons 11: 422-444.

Berkes, F. 2017. Religious traditions and biodiversity. Reference Module in Life Sciences. 10 pp. Elsevier Science Direct doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-809633-8.02335-9

2016

Kelemen, E. with F. Berkes 2016. From Cree Indians to global environmental policy: interview with Professor Fikret Berkes. Special Issue on Traditional Ecological Knowledge, Kovász the Hungarian Slow Journal http://kovasz.uni-corvinus.hu/2016/berkes_en.pdf

Idrobo, C. J., I. J. Davidson-Hunt, and C. S. Seixas 2016. "Produced natures through the lens of biodiversity conservation and tourism: the Ponta Negra Caiçara in the Atlantic Forest coast of Brazil". Local Environment 21 (6): 1132-1150.

Choudhury, M. and C.E. Haque 2016. "We are more scared of the power of the elites than the floods": adaptive capacity and resilience of wetland community to flash flood disasters in Bangladesh. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 19: 145-158.

Zurba, M., A.P. Diduck and A.J. Sinclair 2016. First Nations and industry collaboration for forest governance in northwestern Ontario, Canada. Forest Policy and Economics 69: 1-10.

Sylvester, O., García Segura, A. G., and I. Davidson-Hunt 2016.The protection of rainforest biodiversity can conflict with food access for Indigenous people. Conservation and Society 14(3): 279-290.

Sylvester, O. and A. García Segura. 2016. Landscape ethnoecology of forest food harvesting in the Talamanca Bribri Indigenous Territory, Costa Rica. Journal of Ethnobiology 36(1): 215-233.

Sylvester, O., García Segura, A. G., and I. Davidson-Hunt 2016. Complex relationships among gender and forest food harvesting: insights from the Bribri Indigenous Territory, Costa Rica. International Forestry Review 18(2): 247-260.

Sylvester, O., García Segura, A. G., and I. Davidson-Hunt 2016. Wild food harvesting and access by household and generation in the Bribri Indigenous Territory, Costa Rica. Human Ecology 44(4): 449-461.

Berkes, F. 2016. Sustainability policy considerations for ecosystem management in Central and Eastern Europe. Ecosystem Health and Sustainability 2(8):e01234. doi:10.1002/ehs2.1234 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ehs2.1234/epdf

Berkes, F. 2016.How I learned to stop worrying and love the commons. The Commons Digest No. 19: 7-10.

Islam, D. and F. Berkes 2016. Indigenous peoples' fisheries and food security: a case from northern Canada. Food Security 8: 815-826.

2015

Rathwell, K.J., D. Armitage and F. Berkes 2015. Bridging knowledge systems to enhance governance of the environmental commons. International Journal of the Commons 9: 851-880. http://www.thecommonsjournal.org/index.php/ijc/article/view/584/508

Sylvester, O. and A. García Segura. 2015. Landscape ethnoecology of forest food harvesting in the Talamanca Bribri Indigenous Territory, Costa Rica. Journal of Ethnobiology 36: 215-233.

Deepananda, K.H.M.A., U.S. Amarasinghe and U.K. Jayasinghe-Mudalige 2015. Indigenous knowledge in beach seine fisheries in Sri Lanka: an indispensable factor in community-based fisheries management. Marine Policy 57: 69-77.

Kocho-Schellenberg, J.-E. and F. Berkes 2015. Tracking the development of co-management: using network analysis in a case from the Canadian Arctic. Polar Record 51: 422-431.

Trimble, M. and F. Berkes 2015. Towards adaptive co-management of small-scale fisheries in Uruguay and Brazil: Lessons from using Ostrom's design principles. Maritime Studies 14:14 DOI: 10.1186/s40152-015-0032-y

Premauer, J. M. and F. Berkes 2015. A pluralistic approach to protected area governance: indigenous peoples and Makuira National Park, Colombia. Ethnobiology and Conservation 4:4 [Link]

Berkes, F. 2015. Retrospective on the commons: managing complex social-ecological systems. The Commons Digest No. 18: 10-13.

Galappaththi, E. K. and F. Berkes 2015a. Can co-management emerge spontaneously? Collaborative management in Sri Lankan shrimp aquaculture. Marine Policy 60: 1-8.

Galappaththi, E.K. and F. Berkes 2015b. Drama of the commons in small-scale shrimp aquaculture in northwestern Sri Lanka. International Journal of the Commons 9: 347-368.

Prado, D.S., C.S. Seixas and F. Berkes 2015. Looking back and looking forward: Exploring livelihood change and resilience building in a Brazilian coastal community. Ocean & Coastal Management 113: 29-37.

Berkes, F. and T. Palmer 2015. Much in common: managing shared resources. Special issue: Sustainable Canada Dialogues. Alternatives Journal 41(1): 66-68.

Gavin, M.C., J. McCarter, A. Mead, F. Berkes, J.R. Stepp, D. Peterson and R. Tang 2015. Defining biocultural approaches to conservation. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 30: 140-145.

Lane, D.F., R.H. Moll, S. Beigzadeh, C. Kuziemsky, T. O'Sullivan, A. Charles and F. Berkes 2015. A Structural Equation Model of Social and Collaborative Community Response to Environmental Emergencies. University of Ottawa, C-Change ICURA Working Paper Series No. 45.

Haque, C.E., C.J. Idrobo, F. Berkes and D. Giesbrecht 2015. Small-scale fishers' adaptations to change: the role of formal and informal credit in Paraty, Brazil. Marine Policy 51: 401-407.

Deb, A.K. and C.E. Haque 2015. Fishantry as a social domain: empirical observations from Bangladesh (Part 2). International Journal of Social Science Research 3 (1): 29-72. [Link]

Deb, A.K. 2015. "Something sacred, something secret": traditional ecological knowledge of the artisanal coastal fisheries of Bangladesh. Journal of Ethnobiology 35: 536-565.

Shahidullah, A.K.M. and Haque, C.E. 2015. Green microfinance strategy for entrepreneurial transformation: validating a pattern towards sustainability. Enterprise Development and Microfinance 26(4): 325-342.

2014

Galappaththi, E.K. and F. Berkes 2014. Institutions for managing common pool resources: The case of community-based shrimp aquaculture in northwestern Sri Lanka. Maritime Studies 13: 13. http://www.maritimestudiesjournal.com/content/pdf/s40152-014-0013-6.pdf

Nayak, P. and F. Berkes 2014. Linking global drivers with local and regional change: a social-ecological system approach in Chilika Lagoon, Bay of Bengal. Regional Environmental Change 14: 2067-2078.

Oliveira, L.E.C. and F. Berkes 2014. What value São Pedro's procession? Ecosystem services from local people's perceptions. Ecological Economics 107: 114-121.

Zurba, M. and F. Berkes 2014. Caring for country through participatory art: Creating a boundary object for communicating indigenous knowledge and values. Local Environment 19: 821-836.

Nayak, P. K., L. E. Oliveira and F. Berkes 2014. Resource degradation, marginalization, and poverty in small-scale fisheries: threats to social-ecological resilience in India and Brazil. Ecology and Society 19(2): 73 http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-06656-190273

Ross, H. and F. Berkes 2014. Research approaches for understanding, enhancing and monitoring community resilience. Society and Natural Resources 27: 787-804.

Begossi, A., F. Berkes, F. de Castro, P. F. M. Lopes, C. Seixas, R. A. M. Silvano 2014. Paraty fishery in the context of co-management and Latin America fisheries. A pesca em Paraty no contexto do co-manejo e a pesca na América Latina. In: Comunidades Pesqueiras de Paraty: Sugestões para Manejo (A. Begossi and P. F. Lopes, orgs.) RiMa Editora, Sao Carlos.

Stephenson, J., F. Berkes, N.J. Turner and J. Dick 2014. Biocultural conservation of marine ecosystems: examples from New Zealand and Canada. Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge 13: 257-265.

Hoole, A. 2014. Community-based conservation and protected areas: commons perspectives for promoting biodiversity and social justice in southern Africa. In: M. Sowman and R. Wynberg, editors, Governance for Justice and Environmental Sustainability. Routledge, Oxon and New York, pp. 131-155.

Wilson, B.K., Mignone, J.J., and Sinclair, A.J. 2014. Contextual influences on the sustainability of perspective livelihood diversification initiatives in farm villages in the Karnataka semiarid dryland region of India. Development Studies Research 1(1): 368-381. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21665095.2014.988361

Trimble, M. and M. Lázaro. 2014. Evaluation criteria for Participatory Research: Insights from coastal Uruguay. Environmental Management 54: 122-137. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-014-0276-0

Trimble, M., L. G. Araujo and C. S. Seixas. 2014. One party does not tango! Fishers' nonparticipation as a barrier to co-management in Paraty, Brazil. Ocean and Coastal Management 92: 9-18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2014.02.004

Zurba, M. and M. Trimble. 2014. Youth as the inheritors of collaboration: crisis and factors that influence participation of the next generation in natural resource management. Environmental Science & Policy 42: 78-87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2014.05.009

Trimble, M. 2014. Multi-stakeholder Participatory Research: Opportunities and Challenges in Coastal Uruguay. In: Enhancing Stewardship in Small-Scale Fisheries: Practices and Perspectives (Ed. McConney, P., R. Medeiros and M. Pena). Too Big To Ignore (TBTI) and Centre for Resource Management and Environmental Studies, The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados. CERMES Technical Report No. 73. pp. 98-105.

Robson, J.P., and R. Wiest 2014. Transnational Migration, Customary Governance, and the Future of Community: A Case Study from Oaxaca, Mexico. Volume 41 Issue 3 May 2014 pp. 102 - 116. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0094582X13506689

Frey, J. and F. Berkes 2014. Can partnerships and community-based conservation reverse the decline of coral reef social-ecological systems? The case of ornamental fisheries of Bali, Indonesia. International Journal of the Commons 8(1) https://thecommonsjournal.org/articles/10.18352/ijc.408Deb, A.K. and C.E. Haque 2014. Beyond the lens of 'peasantry': theoretical basis of 'fishantry' as a distinct social domain (part 1). International Journal of Social Science Research 2: 77-101. doi:10.5296/ijssr.v2i1.4887 http://dx.doi.org/10.5296/ijssr.v2i1.4887

Deb, A.K., C.E. Haque and S. Thompson 2014. 'Man can't give birth, woman can't fish': gender dynamics in the small-scale fisheries of Bangladesh. Gender, Place and Culture http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2013.855626

Shahidullah, A.K.M. and C.E. Haque 2014. Environmental orientation of small enterprises: can microcredit-assisted microenterprises be "green"? Sustainability 6: 3232-3251. doi:10.3390/su6063232

2013

Zurba, M. 2013. Leveling the playing field: Fostering collaborative governance towards on-going reconciliation. Environmental Policy and Governance. Wiley Online DOI: 10.1002/eet.163.

Robson, J.P., A.J. Sinclair, I.J. Davidson-Hunt and A.P. Diduck 2013. What's in a name? The search for 'common ground' in Kenora, Northwestern Ontario. Journal of Public Deliberation. 9 (2),Article 7. http://www.publicdeliberation.net/jpd/vol9/iss2/art7

Robson, J.P. and R. Wiest 2013. Transnational migration, customary governance, and the future of community: A case study from Oaxaca, Mexico. Latin American Perspectives. DOI: 10.1177/0094582X13506689

Turner, N.J., F. Berkes, J. Stephenson and J. Dick 2013. Blundering intruders: extraneous impacts on two Indigenous food systems. Human Ecology 41: 563-574.

Boillat, S., and F. Berkes 2013. Perception and interpretation of climate change among Quechua farmers of Bolivia: indigenous knowledge as a resource for adaptive capacity. Ecology and Society 18(4): 21. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-05894-180421

Davidson-Hunt, I. J., C. J. Idrobo, R. D. Pengelly, and O. Sylvester 2013. Anishinaabe adaptation to environmental change in northwestern Ontario: a case study in knowledge coproduction for nontimber forest products. Ecology and Society 18(4): 44. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-06001-180444

Miller, A. M., and I. Davidson-Hunt 2013. Agency and resilience: teachings of Pikangikum First Nation elders, northwestern Ontario. Ecology and Society 18(3): 9.

Trimble, M. and F. Berkes 2013. Participatory research towards co-management: lessons from artisanal fisheries in coastal Uruguay. Journal of Environmental Management. 128: 768-778.

Kofinas, G., D. Clark, G.K. Hovelsrud, L. Alessa, H. Amundsen, M. Berman, F. Berkes, F.S. Chapin III, B. Forbes, J. Ford, C. Gerlach and J. Olsen 2013. Adaptive and transformative capacity. Chapter 5 of Arctic Resilience Interim Report. Arctic Council, pp. 73-93.

Lejano, R.P., J. Tavares-Reager and F. Berkes 2013.Climate and narrative: environmental knowledge in everyday life. Environmental Science & Policy 31: 61-70.

Marin, A. and F. Berkes 2013. Local people's accounts of climate change: to what extent are they influenced by the media? Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Climate Change 4: 1-8.

Leite, M. and M.A. Gasalla 2013. A method for assessing fishers' ecological knowledge as a practical tool for ecosystem-based fisheries management: seeking a consensus in southern Brazil. Fisheries Research 145: 43-53.

Hanazaki, N., F. Berkes, C.S. Seixas and N. Peroni 2013. Livelihood Diversity, food security and resilience among the Caiçara of coastal Brazil. Human Ecology 41: 152-164.

Boillat, S., E. Serrano, S. Rist and F. Berkes 2013. The importance of place names in the search for ecosystem-like concepts in indigenous societies: An example from the Bolivian Andes. Environmental Management 51: 663-678.

Berkes, F. 2013. Religious traditions and biodiversity. Encyclopedia of Biodiversity, Second Edition, Volume 6, pp. 380-388. Academic Press, Waltham MA.

Berkes, F. 2013. Poverty reduction isn't just about money: community perceptions of conservation benefits. In: Biodiversity Conservation and Poverty Alleviation (D. Roe, J. Elliott, C. Sandbrook and M. Walpole, eds.) Wiley, London, pp. 270-285.

Berkes, F. and H. Ross 2013. Community resilience: toward an integrated approach. Society and Natural Resources 26: 5-20.

Trimble, M. and D. Johnson 2013. Artisanal fishing as an undesirable way of life? Marine Policy 37: 37-44.

Robson, J.P. and G. Lichtenstein. 2013. Current trends in Latin American commons research. Journal of Latin American Geography 12(1): 5-31 [pdf]

Shahidullah, A.K.M., H.D. Venema and C.E. Haque 2013. Shifting developmentalism vis a vis community sustainability: can integration of ecosystem goods and services with microcredit create a local sustainability dispositif? International Journal of Development and Sustainability 2 (3): 1703-1722.

2012

Kent, K., Sinclair, A.J., and Diduck, A.P. 2012. Stakeholder engagement in sustainable adventure tourism development in the Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve, India. International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology 19: 89-100.

Peloquin, C. 2012. Turbulences et complexité environnementale: points de vue de l'écologie culturelle crie. In: Les Autochtones et la Modernité (A. Beaulieu and S.Bereau, eds.) Montreal, pp. 91-111.

Berkes, F., N.C. Doubleday and G.S. Cumming 2012 . Aldo Leopold's land health from a resilience point of view: Self-renewal capacity of social-ecological systems. EcoHealth 9: 278-287.

Berkes, F. 2012 . Implementing ecosystem-based management: evolution or revolution? Fish and Fisheries 13: 465-476.

Marin, A. y S. Gelcich 2012 . Gobernanza y capital social en el comanejo de recursos bentonicos en Chile [Governance and social capital in the co-management of benthic resources in Chile]. Cultura-Hombre-Sociedad 22: 131-153.

Pengally, R. and I. Davidson-Hunt 2012 . Partnership towards NTFP development: perspectives from Pikangikum First Nation. Journal of Enterprising Communities 6: 230-250.

Davidson-Hunt, I.J., K.L. Turner, A. Te pareake Mead, J. Cabrera-Lopez, R. Bolton, C.J. Idrobo, I. Miretsky, A. Morrison and J.P. Robson 2012. Biocultural design: a new conceptual framework for sustainable development in rural indigenous and local communities. SAPIENS 5(2):33-45. http://sapiens.revues.org/

Turner, K.L., F. Berkes, and N.J. Turner 2012. Indigenous perspectives on ecotourism development: a British Columbia case study. Journal of Enterprising Communities 6: 213-229.

Idrobo, C.J. and F. Berkes 2012. Pangnirtung Inuit and the Greenland shark: Co-producing knowledge of a little discussed species. Human Ecology 40: 405-414.

Idrobo, C.J. and I.J. Davidson-Hunt 2012. Adaptive learning, technological innovation and livelihood diversification: the adoption of pound nets in Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil. Maritime Studies 11 (3): 1-22.

Zurba, M., H. Ross, A. Izurieta, P. Rist, E. Bock and F. Berkes 2012. Building co-management as a process: problem solving through partnerships in Aboriginal country, Australia. Environmental Management 49: 1130-1142.

Zurba, M., D. Islam, D. Smith and S. Thompson 2012. Food and healing: an urban community food security assessment for the North End of Winnipeg. Urban Research and Practice 5 (2): 284-289.

Berkes, F . 2012. Sacred Ecology. Third Edition. Routledge, New York. 363 pp.

Haque, C.E. and D. Etkin , eds. 2012. Disaster Risk and Vulnerability: Mitigation through Mobilizing Communities and Partnerships. McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal. 300 pp.

Haque, C.E. and D. Etkin 2012. Dealing with disaster risk and vulnerability: People, community, and resilience perspectives. In: Disaster Risk and Vulnerability (C.E. Haque and D. Etkin, eds.) McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal, pp. 3-23.

Berkes, F . 2012. Understanding uncertainty and reducing vulnerability: lessons from resilience thinking. In: Disaster Risk and Vulnerability (C.E. Haque and D. Etkin, eds.) McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal, pp. 27-44.

Gardner, J.S. and J. Dekens 2012. Mountain hazards and the resilience of social-ecological systems: Examples from India and Canada. In: Disaster Risk and Vulnerability (C.E. Haque and D. Etkin, eds.) McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal, pp. 108-136.

Haque, C.E., M.E. Khan, M.S. Uddin and S.R. Chowdhury 2012. Disaster management and public policies in Bangladesh: Institutional partnerships in cyclone hazards mitigation and response. In: Disaster Risk and Vulnerability (C.E. Haque and D. Etkin, eds.) McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal, pp. 154-182.

Chowdhury, P.D., C.E. Haque and G. Smith 2012. Public and expert knowledge and perception of climate change-induced disaster risk: Canadian Prairie perspectives. In: Disaster Risk and Vulnerability (C.E. Haque and D. Etkin, eds.) McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal, pp. 200-234.

Davidson-Hunt, I.J., N. Deutsch and A.M. Miller 2012. Pimachiowin Aki Cultural Landscape Atlas: Land that Gives Life. Pimachiowin Aki Corporation, Winnipeg. 156 pp.

Marschke, M. 2012. Life, Fish and Mangroves. Resource Governance in Coastal Cambodia. University of Ottawa Press, Ottawa. 179 pp. [based in part on M. Marschke's 2005 NRI thesis]

Premauer, J. and F. Berkes 2012. Colombia: Makuira, the cosmological centre of origin for the Wayúu people. In: Protected Landscapes and Wild Biodiversity (N. Dudley and S. Stolton, eds.) International Conservation Union and GTZ, Gland, Switzerland, pp. 53-60.

Duran, E., J. Robson, M. Briones-Salas, D.B. Bray and F. Berkes 2012. Mexico: Wildlife conservation on community conserved lands in Oaxaca. In: Protected Landscapes and Wild Biodiversity (N. Dudley and S. Stolton, eds.) International Conservation Union and GTZ, Gland, Switzerland, pp. 71-82.  

Pawlowska, A. 2012. Canada: Reconceptualising wildlife conservation at Poplar River First Nation, Manitoba. In: Protected Landscapes and Wild Biodiversity (N. Dudley and S. Stolton, eds.) International Conservation Union and GTZ, Gland, Switzerland, pp. 91-98.  

Johansson, K. and M. Manseau 2012. Inuit safety culture and its relevance to safety management in Auyittuq National Park. Society and Natural Resources 25: 176-190.  

Marín, A., S. Gelcich, J.C. Castilla and F. Berkes 2012. Exploring social capital in Chile's coastal benthic comanagement system using a network approach. Ecology & Society 17 (1): 13. [online] URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art13/

2011

Robinson, L.W. and F. Berkes 2011 . Multi-level participation for building adaptive capacity: formal agency - community interactions in northern Kenya. Global Environmental Change 21: 1185-1194.

Turner, K.L. and C.P.H. Bitonti 2011. Conservancies in British Columbia, Canada: bringing together protected areas and First Nations? interests. International Indigenous Policy Journal 2 (2) Available online http://ir.lib.uwo.ca/iipj/vol2/iss2/3/.

Steneck, R.S., T.P. Hughes, J.E. Cinner, W. N. Adger, S. N. Arnold, F. Berkes, S. A. Boudreau, K. Brown, C. Folke, L. Gunderson, P. Olsson, M. Scheffer, E. Stephenson, B. Walker, J. Wilson and B. Worm 2011. Creation of a gilded trap by the high economic value of the Maine lobster fishery. Conservation Biology 25: 904-912.

Robson, J.P. & F. Berkes. 2011. Exploring some of the myths of land use change: Can rural to urban migration drive declines in biodiversity? Global Environmental Change 21(3):844-854.

Adger, W.N., K. Brown, D.R. Nelson, F. Berkes, H. Eakin, C. Folke, K. Galvin, L. Gunderson, M. Goiulden, K. O'Brien, J. Ruitenbeek and E.L. Tompkins 2011. Resilience implications of policy responses to climate change. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change 2: 757-766.

Sinclair, A.J., S.A. Collins and H. Spaling 2001. The role of participant learning in community conservation in the Arabuko-Sokoke Forest, Kenya. Conservation & Society 9: 42-53.

Nayak, P.K. and F. Berkes 2011. Commonisation and decommonisation: Understanding the processes of change in Chilika Lagoon, India. Conservation & Society 9:132-145.

Armitage, D., F. Berkes, A. Dale, E. Kocho-Schellenberg and E. Patton 2011. Co-management and the co-production of knowledge: learning to adapt in Canada's Arctic. Global Environmental Change 21:995-1004.

Robson, J. and F. Berkes 2011. How does out-migration affect community institutions? A study of two indigenous communities in Oaxaca, Mexico. Human Ecology 39: 179-190.

Berkes F. 2011. Restoring unity: the concept of social-ecological systems. In: World Fisheries: A Social-Ecological Analysis (R.E. Ommer, R.I. Perry, K. Cochrane and P. Cury, eds.) Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, pp. 9-28.

Huong, Ta Thi Thanh and F. Berkes 2011. Diversity of resource use and property rights in Tam Giang Lagoon, Vietnam. International Journal of the Commons 5 (1): 130-149 R. [online] URL:http://www.thecommonsjournal.org

Tarnoczi, T. 2011. Transformative learning and adaptation to climage change in the Canadian Prairie agro-ecosystem. Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 16:387-406.

2010 - Earlier

Peloquin, C. and F. Berkes 2010. Local knowledge and changing adaptive strategies in James Bay, Canada. In: Human Ecology: Contemporary Research and Practice (D.G. Bates and J. Tucker, eds.) Springer, New York, pp. 281-296.

Parkes, M.W., K.E Morrison, M.J. Bunch, L.K. Hallstrom, R.C Neudoerffer, H.D Venema, and D. Waltner-Toews 2010. Towards Integrated Governance for Water, Health and Social-Ecological Systems: The Watershed Governance Prism. Global Environmental Change 20: 693-704.  

Davidson-Hunt, I. and M. O'Flaherty 2010. Pikangikum Landscape Documentation Guide. Aboriginal Issues Press, Winnipeg, 78 pp.

Berkes, F. 2010. Hudson Plains (contributing author). In: Federal, Provincial and Territorial Governments of Canada. Canadian Biodiversity: Ecosystem Status and Trends 2010 [online]. Canadian Councils of Resource Ministers. Ottawa. www.biodivcanada.ca/ecosystems

Davidson-Hunt, I., P. Peters and C. Burlando 2010. Beekahncheekahmeeng Ahneesheenahbay Ohtahkeem (Pikangikum cultural landscape). In: Indigenous People and Conservation (K.W. Painemilla, A.B. Rylands, A. Woofter and C. Hughes, eds.) Conservation International, Arlington, VA pp. 137-144.

Kendrick, A. and M. Manseau 2010. Indigenous wildlife monitoring in Canada's North. In: Indigenous Peoples and Conservation (K.W. Painemilla, A.B. Rylands, A. Woofter and C. Hughes, eds.) Conservation International, Arlington, VA, pp. 247-255.

Berkes, F. 2010. Devolution and natural resources governance: trends and future. Environmental Conservation 37: 489-500.

Berkes, F. and D. Armitage 2010. Co-management institutions, knowledge and learning: adapting to change in the Arctic. Etudes/Inuit/Studies 34: 109-131.

Robson, J.P. and P.K. Nayak 2010. Rural out-migration and resource-dependent communities in Mexico and India. Population and Environment 32: 263-284.

Robinson, L.W. and A.M. Fuller 2010. Towards an ecosystem approach to policy process: Insights from the sustainable livelihoods and ecosystem health approaches. International Journal of Sustainable Development 13: 393-411. http://www.roboroz.ca/articles/RobinsonFuller2010.pdf

Miller, A.M., I.J. Davidson-Hunt and P. Peters 2010. Talking about fire: Pikangikum First Nation elders guiding fire management. Canadian Journal of Forestry Research 40: 2290-2301

Berkes, F. 2010. Shifting perspectives on resource management: resilience and the reconceptualization of 'natural resources' and 'management'. MAST Maritime Studies 9: 11-38.

Marin, A., S. Gelcich, G. Araya, G. Olea, M. Espinola and J.C. Castilla 2010. The 2010 tsunami in Chile: devastation and survival of coastal small-scale fishing communities. Marine Policy 34: 1381-1384.

Robinson, L.W., J.A. Sinclair, and H. Spaling 2010. Traditional pastoralist decision-making processes: Lessons for reforms to water resources management in Kenya. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 53: 847-862.

Berkes, F. 2010. Rethinking community-based conservation. In: International Year of Biodiversity: Conservation Social Science. Wiley-Blackwell virtual publication http://www.wiley.com/bw/vi.asp?ref=0888-8892&site=1 (original paper: Conservation Biology 18: 621-630, 2004.)

Trimble, M., M. Ríos, C. Passadore, M. Szephegyi, M. Nin, F. Olaso Garcia, C. Fagúndez, P. Laporta 2010. Ecosistemas costeros uruguayos: una guía para su conocimiento. Averaves, Cetáceos Uruguay, Karumbé. Editorial Imprenta Monteverde. Montevideo, Uruguay.

Robson, J.P. and F. Berkes 2010. Sacred nature and community conserved areas. In: Nature and Culture: Rebuilding Lost Connections (S. Pilgrim and J. Pretty, eds.) Earthscan, London, pp. 197-216.

Khan, S.M.M.H. and C.E. Haque 2010. Wetland resource management in Bangladesh: implications for marginalization and vulnerability of local harvesters. Environmental Hazards 9: 54-73.

Mamun, A. A. 2010. Understanding the value of local ecological knowledge and practices for habitat conservation in human-altered floodplain systems: a case from Bangladesh. Environmental Management 45: 922-938.

Nayak, P.K. and F.Berkes 2010. Whose marginalization? Politics around environmental injustices in India's Chilika Lagoon. Local Environment 15: 553-567.

Almudi, T. and D.C. Kalikoski 2010. Traditional fisherfolk and no-take protected areas: the Peixe Lagoon National Park dilemma. Ocean & Coastal Management 53: 225-233.

Almudi, T. and F. Berkes 2010. Barriers to empowerment: fighting eviction for conservation in a southern Brazilian protected area. Local Environment 15:217-215.

Berkes, F. and I.J. Davidson-Hunt 2010. Innovating through commons use: community-based enterprises. International Journal of the Commons 4 (1): 1-7. [online] URL: http://www.thecommonsjournal.org

Chapin, F.S. III, S.R. Carpenter, G. P. Kofinas, C. Folke, N. Abel, W.C. Clark, P. Olsson, D.M.S. Smith, B. Walker, O.R. Young, F. Berkes, R. Biggs, J.M. Grove, R.L. Naylor, E. Pinkerton, W. Steffen and F.J. Swanson 2010. Ecosystem stewardship: sustainability strategies for a rapidly changing planetTrends in Ecology and Evolution 25: 241-249.

Berkes, F. 2010. Linkages and multi-level systems for matching governance and ecology: lessons from roving bandits. Bulletin of Marine Science 86: 235-250 .

Davidson-Hunt, I. and F. Berkes 2010. Journeying and remembering: Anishinaabe landscape ethnoecology from northwestern Ontario. In: Landscape Ethnoecology (L.M. Johnson and E.S. Hunn, eds.) Berghahn, New York and Oxford, pp. 222-240 .

Hoole, A.F. 2010. Place-power-prognosis: community-based conservation, partnerships and ecotourism enterprise in Namibia. International Journal of the Commons 4 (1): 78-99. [online] URL: http://www.thecommonsjournal.org

Hoole, A. and F. Berkes 2010. Breaking down fences: recoupling social-ecological systems for biodiversity conservation in Namibia. Geoforum 41: 304-317.5

Marin, A. and F. Berkes 2010. Network approach for understanding small-scale fisheries governance: The case of the Chilean coastal co-management system. Marine Policy 34:851-858..

Miller, A.M. and I. Davidson-Hunt 2010. Fire, agency and scale in the creation of aboriginal cultural landscapes. Human Ecology 38: 401-414.

Orozco-Quintero, A. and F. Berkes 2010. Role of linkages and diversity of partnerships in a Mexican community-based forest enterprise. Journal of Enterprising Communities 4: 148-161 .

Orozco-Quintero, A. and I.J. Davidson-Hunt 2010. Community-based enterprises and the commons: the case of San Juan Nuevo Parangaricutiro, Mexico. International Journal of the Commons 4 (1): 8-35. [online] URL: http://www.thecommonsjournal.org

Robinson, L.W. and F. Berkes 2010. Applying resilience thinking to questions of policy for pastoralist systems: lessons from the Gabra of northern Kenya. Human Ecology 38:335-350.

Shukla, S.R. and A.J. Sinclair 2010. Strategies for self-organization: learning from a village-level community-based conservation initiative in India..Human Ecology 38:205-215.

Seixas, C.S. and F. Berkes 2010. Community-based enterprises: the significance of partnerships and institutional linkages. International Journal of the Commons 4 (1): 183-212. [online] URL: http://www.thecommonsjournal.org30

Tarnoczi, T.J. and F. Berkes 2010. Sources of information for farmers? adaptation practices in Canada?s Prairie agro-ecosystem. Climatic Change 98: 299-305.

Shahidullah, A.K.M. and C. E. Haque 2010. Linking medicinal plant production with livelihood enhancement in Bangladesh: Implications of a vertically integrated value chain. Journal of Transdisciplinary Environmental Studies, Vol 9(2):1-18. http://www.journal-tes.dk

2009

Deutsch, N. and I. Davidson-Hunt 2010. Pikangikum family hunting areas and traplines. In: Planning Co-Existence: Aboriginal Issues in Forest and Land Use Planning (M.G. Stevenson and D. C. Natcher, eds.) Canadian Circumpolar Institute Press, Edmonton, pp. 149-170.

Berkes, F. 2009. Indigenous ways of knowing and the study of environmental change. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand39: 151-156.

Robson, J.P., A.M. Miller, C.J. Idrobo, C. Burlando, N. Deutsch, J.-E. Kocho-Schellenberg, R.D. Pengelly and K.L. Turner 2009. Building communities of learning: indigenous ways of knowing in contemporary natural resources and environmental management. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand39: 173-177.

Zurba, M. 2009. Bringing local synthesis into governance and management systems: the Girrungun TUMRA case in northern Queensland, Australia. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand39: 170-182.

Pretty, J., W. Adams, F. Berkes, S.F. de Athayde, N. Dudley, E. Hunn, L. Maffi, K. Milton, D. Rapport, P. Robbins, E. Sterling, S. Stolton, A. Tsing, E. Vintinner and S. Pilgrim 2009. The intersections of biological diversity and cultural diversity: towards integration. Conservation & Society 7(2): 100-112.

Turner, N.J., Y. Ari, F. Berkes, I.Davidson-Hunt, Z. F. Ertug, and A.M. Miller 2009. Cultural management of living trees: an international perspective. Journal of Ethnobiology 29: 237-270.

Robinson, L.W. 2009. A complex systems approach to pastoral commons. Human Ecology 37: 441-451.

Dahlberg, A. C., and C. Burlando. 2009. Addressing trade-offs: experiences from conservation and development initiatives in the Mkuze wetlands, South Africa. Ecology and Society14(2): 37. [online] URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol14/iss2/art37/

Berkes, F. 2009. Indigenous traditions ? the Arctic. In: Berkshire Encyclopedia of Sustainability. Volume 2: The Spirit of Sustainability (W. Jenkins, ed.) Berkshire, Great Barrington, MA, pp. 213-215.

Peloquin, C. and F. Berkes 2009. Local knowledge, subsistence harvests, and social-ecological complexity in James Bay. Human Ecology 37: 533-545.

O?Brien, K., B. Hayward and F. Berkes 2009. Rethinking social contracts: building resilience in a changing climate. Ecology and Society 14 (2): 12. [online] URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol14/iss2/art12/

Berkes, F. 2009. Revising the commons paradigm. Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research 1: 261-264.

Haque, C.E., A.K. Deb and D. Medeiros 2009. Integrating conservation with livelihood improvement for sustainable development: the experiment of an oyster producers' cooperative in southwest Brazil. Society and Natural Resources 22: 554-570.

Shukla, S. 2009. Communicating education for sustainable development with less articulate and underprivileged communities: Innovative approaches to socially critical environmental education. In: Biogeography and Biodiversity: IGU Commission Contribution to International Year of Planet Earth (R.B. Singh, ed.) New Delhi: Rawat Publications, pp. 48-60.

Shukla, S. 2009. Augmenting women's contributions in community-based conservation of medicinal plants: Lessons from biodiversity and recipe contests. In: Conservation of Medicinal Plants (R.N. Pati and D.N. Tewari, eds.) New Delhi: APH Publishing.

Shukla, S. and A.J. Sinclair. 2009. Becoming a traditional medicinal plant healer: divergent views of practicing and young healers on traditional medicinal plant knowledge skills in India. Ethnobotany Research and Applications 7: 39-51. http://www.ethnobotanyjournal.org/

Robson, J.P. 2009. Out-migration and commons management: social and ecological change in a high biodiversity region of Oaxaca, Mexico. International Journal of Biodiversity Science and Management 5: 21-34

Berkes, F., G.P. Kofinas and F.S. Chapin, III. 2009. Conservation, community and livelihoods. In: Principles of Ecosystem Stewardship: Resilience-based Resource Management in a Changing World (F.S. Chapin, III, G.P. Kofinas and C. Folke, eds.) Springer-Verlag, New York, pp. 129-147

Berkes, F2009. Social aspects of fisheries management. In: A Fishery Manager?s Guidebook. Second Edition (K.L. Cochrane and S.M. Garcia, eds.) FAO/Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 52-74.

O'Flaherty, R.M., I.J. Davidson-Hunt and A.M. Miller2009. Anishinaabe stewardship values for sustainable forest management of the Whitefeather Forest, Pikangikum First Nation, Ontario. In: Changing the Culture of Forestry in Canada (M.G. Stevenson and D.C. Natcher, eds.) Canadian Circumpolar Institute Press, Edmonton, pp. 19-34.

Berkes, F., I. Davidson-Hunt, N. Deutsch, C. Burlando, A. Miller, C. Peters, P. Peters, R. Preston, J. Robson, M. Strang, A.Tanner, L. Trapper, R. Trosper and J. Turner. 2009. Institutions for Algonquian land use: change, continuity and implications for forest management. In: Changing the Culture of Forestry in Canada ( M.G. Stevenson and D. C. Natcher, eds.) Canadian Circumpolar Institute Press, Edmonton, pp. 35-52.

Shearer, J., P. Peters and I.J. Davidson-Hunt. 2009. Co-producing a Whitefeather Forest cultural landscape monitoring framework. In: Changing the Culture of Forestry in Canada (M.G. Stevenson and D.C. Natcher, eds.) Canadian Circumpolar Institute Press, Edmonton, pp. 63-84.

Armitage, D., R. Plummer, F. Berkes, R.I. Arthur, A.T. Charles, I.J. Davidson-Hunt, A.P. Diduck, N.C. Doubleday, D. Johnson, M. Marschke, P. McConney, E.W. Pinkerton, and E.K. Wollenberg. 2009. Adaptive co-management for social-ecological complexity. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 7:95-102

Berkes, F2009. Evolution of co-management: role of knowledge generation, bridging organizations and social learning. Journal of Environmental Management 90:1692-1702.

Berkes, F. 2009. Community conserved areas: policy issues in historic and contemporary context. Conservation Letters 2:19-24.

Berkes, F. and M. Kislalioglu Berkes. 2009. Ecological complexity, fuzzy logic and holism in indigenous knowledge. Futures 41: 6-12.

Marschke, M. and A.J. Sinclair. 2009. Learning for sustainability: participatory resource management in Cambodian fishing villages. Journal of Environmental Management 90: 206-216.

2008

  1. Berkes, F. 2008. Sacred Ecology. Second Edition, Routledge, New York
  2. Wiber, M., A. Charles and J. Kearney and F. Berkes 2008. Enhancing community empowerment through participatory fisheries research. Marine Policy 33: 172-179.
  3. Suluk, T.K. and S.L. Blakney 2008. Land claims and resistance to the management of harvester activities in Nunavut. Arctic 61(Suppl 1): 62-70.
  4. Kendrick, A. and M. Manseau 2008. Representing traditional knowledge: resource management and Inuit knowledge of barren-ground caribou. Society and natural Resources 21 (5): 404-418.
  5. Mamun, A.A. and C.E. Haque 2008. Understanding culture-based fisheries: an assessment of community-managed beel fisheries in Bangladesh. Asian Fisheries Science 21: 257-273.
  6. Fernandes, D. and F. Berkes 2008. "More eyes watching . . ." Community-based management of the arapaima (Arapaima gigas) in central Guyana. In: El Manejo de las pesquerias en la Amazonia (eds. D. Pinedo y C. Soria). Ottawa: IDRC and Instituto del Bien Comun, pp. 285-305.
  7. Berkes, F. 2008. Small-scale fisheries: alternatives to conventional management. In: El Manejo de las Pesquerias en la amazonia (eds. D. Pinedo y C. Soria). Ottawa: IDRC and Instituto del Bien Comun, pp. 447-463.
  8. Sims, L. and A.J. Sinclair. 2008. Learning through participatory resource management programs: case studies from Costa Rica. Adult Education Quarterly 58: 151-168.
  9. Bonny, E. and F. Berkes. 2008. Communication traditional environmental knowledge: addressing the diversity of knowledge, audiences and media types. Polar Record 44: 243-253.
  10. Berkes, F. and I.J. Davidson-Hunt. 2008. The cultural basis for an ecosystem approach: Sharing across systems of knowledge. In: The Ecosystem Approach. Complexity, Uncertainty, and Managing for Sustainability (D. Waltner-Toews, J.J. Kay and N.-M.E. Lister, eds.) Columbia University Press, New York, pp. 109 - 124.
  11. Nayak, P. and F. Berkes. 2008. Politics of co-optation: community forest management vs. Joint Forest Management in Orissa, India. Environmental Management 41: 707-718.
  12. O'Flaherty, R. M., I. J. Davidson-Hunt, and M. Manseau. 2008. Indigenous knowledge and values in planning for sustainable forestry: Pikangikum First Nation and the Whitefeather Forest Initiative. Ecology and Society 13(1): 6. [online] URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol13/iss1/art6/
  13. Berkes, F. 2008. Commons in a multi-level world. International Journal of the Commons 2 (1): 1-6. [online] URL: http://www.thecommonsjournal.org
  14. Seixas, C.S. and B. Davy 2008. Self-organization in integrated conservation and development initiatives. International Journal of the Commons 2 (1): 99-125. [online] URL: http://www.thecommonsjournal.org

2007

  1. Diduck, A.P., Sinclair, A.J., Pratap, D., Hostetler, G. 2007. Achieving meaningful public participation in the environmental assessment of hydro development: case studies from Chamoli District, Uttarakhand, India. Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal 25: 219-231.
  2. Shukla, S. 2007. Transmission of traditional medicinal plant knowledge: Local healers of Maharashtra, India. In: Sustainable Development: Issues and Perspectives (R.N. Pati and O. Schwarz-Herion, eds.) New Delhi: D.K. Printworld, pp. 41-67.
  3. Shukla, S. and J.S. Gardner. 2007. Community-based approaches to environmental education: Lessons for socially critical education and biodiversity conservation. In: Innovative Approaches to Education for Sustainable Development (W.L. Filho, ed.) Frankfurt and Main: Peter Lang, pp. 97-115.
  4. Almudi, T., D.C. Kalikoski, J.P. Castello. 2007. Territorial control as a fisheries management instrument: the case of artisanal fisheries in the estuary of Patos Lagoon, southern Brazil. American Fisheries Society Symposium 49: 187-196.
  5. Wiber, M., F. Berkes, A. Charles and J. Kearney. 2007. A participatory approach to identifying research needs for community-based fishery management. American Fisheries Society Symposium 49: 587-594.
  6. Robson, J. P. 2007. Local approaches to biodiversity conservation: lessons from Oaxaca, southern Mexico. International Journal of Sustainable Development 10: 267-286. [pdf]
  7. Berkes, F. 2007. Community-based conservation in a globalized world. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104: 15188-15193.
  8. Armitage, D., F. Berkes and N. Doubleday, editors 2007. Adaptive Co-Management: Collaboration, Learning, and Multi-Level Governance. University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver.
  9. Armitage, D., F. Berkes and N. Doubleday 2007. Introduction: moving beyond co-management. In: Adaptive Co-Management (D. Armitage, F. Berkes and N. Doubleday, eds.) University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 1-15.
  10. Berkes, F. 2007. Adaptive co-management and complexity: exploring the many faces of co-management. In: Adaptive Co-Management (D. Armitage, F. Berkes and N. Doubleday, eds.) University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 19-37.
  11. Kearney, J. and F. Berkes 2007. The importance of community for adaptive co-management. In: Adaptive Co-Management (D. Armitage, F. Berkes and N. Doubleday, eds.) University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 191-207.
  12. Berkes, F., D. Armitage and N. Doubleday 2007. Synthesis: adapting, innovating, evolving. In: Adaptive Co-Management (D. Armitage, F. Berkes and N. Doubleday, eds.) University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 308-327.
  13. Berkes, F. and I.J. Davidson-Hunt 2007. Communities and social enterprises in the age of globalization. Journal of Enterprising Communities 1: 209-221.
  14. O?Flaherty, R.M., I. Davidson-Hunt and M. Manseau 2007. Keeping woodland caribou in the Whitefeather Forest. Sustainable Forest Management Network, SFM Network Research Note Series No. 27. [online] URL: http://www.sfmnetwork.ca/html/publication_researchnotes_e.html
  15. Hughes, T.P., L.H. Gunderson, C. Folke, A.H. Baird, D. Bellwood, F. Berkes, B. Crona, Helfgott, H. Leslie, J. Norberg, M. Nyström, P. Olsson, H. Österblom, M. Scheffer, H. Schuttenberg, R.S. Steneck, M. Tengö, M. Troell, B. Walker, J. Wilson and B. Worm 2007. Adaptive management of the Great Barrier Reef and the Grand Canyon World Heritage Areas. Ambio 36: 586-592.
  16. Grant, S., F. Berkes and J. St. Louis 2007. A history of change and reorganization: the pelagic longline fishery in Gouyave, Grenada. Gulf and Caribbean Research 19: 141-148. [pdf]
  17. Grant, S., F. Berkes and J. Brierley 2007. Understanding the local livelihood system in resource management: the pelagic longline fishery in Gouyave, Grenada. Gulf and Caribbean Research 19: 113-122. [pdf]
  18. Folke, C., L. Pritchard, Jr., F. Berkes, J. Colding and U. Svedin 2007. The problem of fit between ecosystems and institutions: Ten years later. Ecology and Society 12 (1): 30. [online] URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol12/iss1/art30/
  19. Davidson-Hunt, I.J. and R.M. O'Flaherty 2007. Researchers, indigenous peoples and place-based learning communities. Society and Natural Resources 20: 291-305.
  20. Caine, K.J., M.J. Salomons and D. Simmons 2007. partnerships for social change in the Canadian North: revisiting the insider-outsider dialectic. Development and Change 38: 449-473.
  21. Berkes, F. 2007. Understanding uncertainty and reducing vulnerability: lessons from resilience thinking. Natural Hazards 41: 283-295. 
  22. Gardner, J.S. and J. Dekens 2007. Mountain hazards and the resilience of social-ecological systems: lessons learned in India and Canada. Natural Hazards 41: 317-336.
  23. Haque, E.H., and D. Etkin 2007. People and community as constituent parts of hazards: the significance of societal dimensions on hazards analysis. Natural Hazards 41: 271-282.
  24. Grant, S. and F. Berkes 2007. Fisher knowledge as expert system: a case from the longline fishery of Grenada, the Eastern Caribbean. Fisheries Research 84: 162-170. 
  25. Berkes, F., M. Kislalioglu Berkes and H. Fast 2007. Collaborative integrated management in Canada?s north: the role of local and traditional knowledge and community-based monitoring. Coastal Management 35: 143-162. 
  26. Kearney, J., F. Berkes, A. Charles, E. Pinkerton and M. Wiber 2007. The role of participatory governance and community-based management in integrated coastal and ocean management in Canada. Coastal Management 35: 79-104. 

2006

  1. Nayak, P.K. 2006. Adaptive community forest management: Some emerging trends in India. In: Institutional Dynamics and Stasis (L. Lebel, X. Jianchu, A. Contreras, eds.) RCSD, Chiang Mai, Thailand, pp. 89-109.
  2. Berkes, F. and I.J. Davidson-Hunt 2006. Biodiversity, traditional management systems, and cultural landscapes: examples from the boreal forest of Canada. International Social Science Journal 187: 35-47. 
  3. Berkes, F., W.V. Reid, T. Wilbanks and D. Capistrano 2006. Conclusions. In: Bridging  Scales and Knowledge Systems (W.V. Reid, F. Berkes, T. Wilbanks and D. Capistrano,  eds). Millennium Ecosystem Assessment and Island Press, Washington DC, pp. 315-331. 
  4. Reid, W.V., F. Berkes, T. Wilbanks and D. Capistrano 2006. Introduction. In: Bridging Scales and Knowledge Systems (W.V. Reid, F. Berkes, T. Wilbanks and D. Capistrano, eds). Millennium Ecosystem Assessment and Island Press, Washington DC, pp. 1-17. 
  5. Reid, W.V., F. Berkes, T. Wilbanks and D. Capistrano, editors. 2006. Bridging Scales and Knowledge Systems:  Linking Global Science and Local Knowledge in Assessments. Millennium Ecosystem Assessment and Island Press, Washington DC. [Online]
  6. Berkes, F. and N.J. Turner 2006. Knowledge, learning and the evolution of  conservation practice for social-ecological system resilience. Human Ecology 34:  479-494.5554pk67757u/">Online]
  7. Turner, N.J. and F. Berkes 2006. Coming to understanding: Developing conservation through incremental learning in the Pacific Northwest. Human Ecology 34: 495-513.]
  8. Parlee, B., F. Berkes and Teetl?it Gwich?in Renewable Resources Council 2006. Indigenous knowledge of ecological variability and commons management: a case study on berry harvesting from northern Canada. Human Ecology 34: 515-528.
  9. Davidson-Hunt, I.J. 2006. Adaptive learning networks: developing resource management knowledge through social learning forums. Human Ecology 34: 593-614.]
  10. Chapin, F. S., III, M. Hoel, S. R. Carpenter, J. Lubchenco, B. Walker, T. V. Callaghan, C. Folke, S. Levin, K.-G. Mäler, C. Nilsson, S. Barrett, F. Berkes, A.-S. Crépin, K. Danell,  T. Rosswall, D. Starrett, T. Xepapadeas  and S. A. Zimov 2006. Building resilience and adaptation to manage Arctic change. Ambio 35: 198-202.
  11. Berkes, F. and T. Adhikari 2006. Development and conservation: indigenous businesses and the UNDP Equator Initiative. International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business 3: 671-690.
  12. Cash, D.W., W.N. Adger, F. Berkes, P. Garden, L. Lebel, P. Olsson, L. Pritchard and O. Young 2006. Scale and cross-scale dynamics: governance and information in a multilevel world. Ecology and Society 11 (2): 8.
  13. Kim Nong and M. Marschke 2006. Building networks of support for community-based coastal resource management in Cambodia. In: Communities, Livelihoods and Natural Resources (S.R. Tyler, ed.) Intermediate Technology Publications and International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, pp. 151-168.
  14. Berkes, F. 2006. From community-based resource management to complex systems: the scale issue and marine commons. Ecology and Society 11(1): 45. 
  15. Marschke, M. and Berkes, F. 2006. Exploring strategies that build livelihood resilience: a case from Cambodia. Ecology and Society 11(1): 42.  
  16. Berkes, F., T.P. Hughes, R.S. Steneck, J.A. Wilson, D.R. Bellwood, B. Crona, C. Folke, L.H. Gunderson, H.M. Leslie, J. Norberg, M. Nyström, P. Olsson, H. Österblom, M. Scheffer and B. Worm 2006. Globalization, roving bandits and marine resources. Science 311: 1557-1558
  17. Shukla, S.R. and J.S. Gardner 2006. Local knowledge in community-based approaches to medicinal plant conservation: lessons from India. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 2: 20

2005

  1. Nayak, P.K. and C.E. Haque. 2005. Institutional approaches in natural resources management and sustainability: Lessons from joint forest management policy of India. International Journal on Environmental Consumerism 1 (1): 37-46.
  2. Berkes, F. and N. Turner 2005. Knowledge, learning and the resilience of social-ecological systems. In: Managing the Commons: Conservation of Biodiversity (L. Merino and J. Robson, eds.) Instituto Nacional de Ecologia, Mexico City, pp. 21-31. [pdf]
  3. Davidson-Hunt, I.J., P. Jack, E. Mandamin and B. Wapioke. 2005. Iskatewizaagegan (Shoal Lake) Plant Knowledge: An Anishinaabe (Ojibway) Ethnobotany of Northwestern Ontario. Journal of Ethnobiology 25:189-227 [pdf]
  4. Berkes, F. 2005. The scientist as facilitator or adaptive co-manager? Common Property Resource Digest No. 75: 4-5.
  5. Berkes, F. and C.S. Seixas 2005. Building resilience in lagoon social-ecological systems: a local-level perspective. Ecosystems 8: 967-974.
  6. Huntington, H.P., S. Fox, F. Berkes, I. Krupnik et al. 2005. The changing Arctic: Indigenous perspectives. Chapter 3, Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 61-98.
  7. Nuttall, M., F. Berkes, B. Forbes, G. Kofinas, T. Vlassova and G. Wenzel 2005. Hunting, herding, fishing and gathering: Indigenous peoples and renewable resource use in the Arctic. Chapter 12, Arctic Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 649-690.
  8. Vieira, P.F., F. Berkes, C.S. Seixas 2005. Gestao Integrada e Participativa de Recursos Naturais. Associação Brasileira de Pesquisa e Ensino em Ecologia e Desenvolvimento (APED) Editora, Florianópolis, Brazil, 415 pp. (Integrated Participatory Management of Natural Resources. Published in Portuguese by APED, the Brazilian Association of Teaching and Research in Ecology and Development.)
  9. Parlee, B., F. Berkes and the Teetl?it Gwich?in Renewable Resources Council 2005. Health of the land, health of the people:
    a case study on Gwich?in berry harvesting from northern Canada. EcoHealth 2: 127-137.
  10. Berkes, F. 2005. Traditional ecological knowledge. In: Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature (B.R. Taylor, ed.) Thoemmes Continuum, London and New York, pp. 1646-1649.[pdf]
  11. Berkes, F. 2005. James Bay Cree and the Hydro-Quebec controversy. In: Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature (B.R. Taylor, ed.) Thoemmes Continuum, London and New York, pp. 895-897.[pdf]
  12. Grant, S. and J. Rennie. 2005. Is CPUE an indicator of stock abundance: case of Gouyave surface longline fishery. Proceedings of the Gulf and Caribbean Fishing Institute, 56: 915-212.[]
  13. Berkes, F. 2005. Why keep a community-based focus in times of global interactions? Keynotes of the 5th International Congress of Arctic Social Sciences (ICASS), University of Alaska Fairbanks, May, 2004. Topics in Arctic Social Sciences 5: 33-43.[pdf]
  14. Berkes, F., R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, editors, 2005. Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North. University of Calgary Press, Calgary, 396 pp.
  15. Berkes, F., R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, editors, 2005. Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North. Plain Language Version (prepared by M. Schuegraf). Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg.[pdf]
  16. Berkes, F. and H. Fast 2005. Introduction. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 1-19.[pdf]
  17. Myers, H., H. Fast, M. Kislalioglu Berkes and F. Berkes 2005. Feeding the family in times of change. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 23-45.[pdf]
  18. Thompson , S. 2005. Sustainability and vulnerability: Aboriginal Arctic food security in a toxic world. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 47-69.[pdf]
  19. Cobb, D., M. Kislalioglu Berkes and F. Berkes 2005. Ecosystem-based management and marine environmental quality indicators in northern Canada. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 71-93.[pdf]
  20. Fast, H., D.B. Chiperzak, K.J. Cott and G.M. Elliott 2005. Integrated management planning in Canada?s western Arctic: An adaptive consultation process. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 95-117.[pdf]
  21. Schlag, M.P. and H. Fast 2005. Marine stewardship and Canada?s Oceans Agenda in the western Canadian Arctic: A role for youth. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 119-138.[pdf]
  22. Manseau, M., B. Parlee and G.B. Ayles 2005. A place for traditional ecological knowledge in resource management. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 141-164.[pdf]
  23. Parlee, B., M. Manseau and Lutsel K?e Dene First Nation 2005. Understanding and communicating about ecological change: Denesoline indicators of ecosystem health. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 165-182.[pdf]
  24. Berkes, F., N. Bankes, M. Marschke, D. Armitage and D. Clark 2005. Cross-scale institutions and building resilience in the Canadian North. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 225-247.[pdf]
  25. Kristofferson, A.H. and F. Berkes 2005. Adaptive co-management of Arctic char in Nunavut Territory. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 249-268.[pdf]
  26. Diduck, A., N. Bankes, D.C. Clark and D. Armitage 2005. Unpacking social learning in social-ecological systems: case studies of polar bear and narwhal management in northern Canada. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 269-290.[pdf]
  27. Huebert, R., M. Manseau and A. Diduck 2005. Conclusion: integration, innovation, and participation. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary, pp. 363-372.[pdf]
  28. Manseau, M., Parlee, B, Bill, L., Kendrick, A., and Rainbow Bridge Communications (producers) 2005. Watching, listening, learning, understanding changes in the environment. Community-based monitoring in northern Canada. Video. In: Breaking Ice: Renewable Resource and Ocean Management in the Canadian North (F. Berkes, R. Huebert, H. Fast, M. Manseau and A. Diduck, eds.) University of Calgary Press, Calgary.
  29. Marschke, M. and F. Berkes 2005. Local level sustainability planning for livelihoods: a Cambodian experience. International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology 12: 21-33.[pdf]
  30. Carlsson, L. and F. Berkes 2005. Co-management: Concepts and methodological implications. Journal of Environmental Management 75: 65-76.[pdf]
  31. Berkes, F. 2005. Commons theory for marine resource management in a complex world. In: Indigenous Use and Management of Marine Resources (N. Kishigami and J.M. Savelle, eds.) Senri Ethnological Studies 67: 13-31.[pdf]
  32. Parlee, B., M. Manseau and Lutsel K?e Dene First Nation. 2005. Using traditional knowledge to adapt to ecological change: Denesoline monitoring of caribou movements. Arctic 58: 26-37. [pdf]
  33. Kendrick, A., P.O?B. Lyver and the Lútsël K?é Dëne First Nation 2005. Dënesôline (Chipewyan) Knowledge of Hazu Ts?i ÆEtthén (Barren Ground Caribou. Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus) Movements. Arctic 58: 175-191. [pdf]

2004

Nayak, P.K. 2004. Adaptive community forest management: An alternate paradigm. Forests, Trees and Livelihoods 14: 199-216.

King, L. 2004. Competing knowledge systems in the management of fish and forests in the Pacific Northwest. International Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics 4: 161-177.[pdf].

Grant, S. 2004. Caribbean women in fishing economies. Proceedings of the 55th Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute 68-77. [pdf].

Chapin, F.S. III, G. Peterson, F. Berkes, T. V. Callaghan, P. Angelstam, M. Apps, C. Beier, Y. Bergeron, A.-S. Crepin, T. Elmqvist, C. Folke, B. Forbes, N. Fresco, G. Juday, J. Niemelä, A. Shvidenko and G. Whiteman. 2004. Resilience and vulnerability of northern regions to social and environmental change. Ambio 33: 344-349.[pdf]

Elmqvist, T., F. Berkes, C. Folke, P. Angelstam, A.-S. Crépin and J. Niemelä. The dynamics of ecosystems, biodiversity management and social institutions at high northern latitudes. Ambio (2004) 33: 350-355.[pdf]

Moller, H., F. Berkes, P.O. Lyver and M. Kislalioglu 2004. Combining science and traditional ecological knowledge: monitoring populations for co-management. Ecology and Society 9 (3): 2. [online]

Olsson, P., C. Folke and F. Berkes 2004. Adaptive co-management for building resilience in social-ecological systems. Environmental Management 34: 75-90. [pdf]

Wiber, M., F. Berkes, A. Charles and J. Kearney 2004. Participatory research supporting community-based fishery management. Marine Policy 28: 459-468. [pdf]

Bingeman, K., F. Berkes and J. S. Gardner 2004. Institutional responses to development pressures: resilience of social-ecological systems in Himachal Pradesh, India. International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology 11: 99-115. [pdf]

Berkes, F. 2004. Rethinking community-based conservation. Conservation Biology 18: 621-630. [pdf]

Seixas, C.S. and F. Berkes 2004. Stakeholder conflicts and solutions across political scales: The Ibiriquera Lagoon, Brazil. In: Challenging Coasts: Transdisciplinary Excursions into Integrated Coastal Zone Development (L.E. Visser, ed.) Amsterdam University Press, pp. 180-210.

Nichols, T., F. Berkes, D. Jolly, N.B Snow, and the Community of Sachs Harbour 2004. Climate change and sea ice: Local observations from the Canadian western Arctic. Arctic 57: 68-79. [pdf]

Lobe, K. and F. Berkes 2004. The padu system of community-based fisheries management: change and local institutional innovation in south India. Marine Policy 28: 271-281. [pdf]

Seixas, C. and E. Troutt 2004. Socio-economic and ecological feedbacks in lagoon fisheries: management principles for a co-evolutionary setting. Interciencia 29; 362-368. [pdf]

Vijaya Sherry Chand, S. R. Shukla, Biodiversity Contests?: Indigenously Informed and Transformed Environmental Education, Applied Environmental Education and Communication: An International Journal, Volume 2, Issue 4, Jan 2003, Pages 229 ? 236. [pdf]

2003

  1. LaRochelle, S. and F. Berkes 2003. Traditional ecological knowledge and practice for edible wild plants: biodiversity use by the Raramuri in the Sierra Tarahumara, Mexico. International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology 10: 361-375. [pdf]
  2. Davidson-Hunt, I. and F. Berkes 2003. Learning as you journey: Anishinaabe perception of social-ecological environments and adaptive learning. Conservation Ecology 8 (1): 5. [online]
  3. Kendrick, A. 2003. Community Perceptions of the Beverly-Qamanirjuaq Caribou Management Board. In Robert Anderson and Robert Bone (eds) Natural Resources and Aboriginal Peoples in Canada: Readings, Cases and Commentary. Captus Press.
  4. Marschke, M. and Kim Nong 2003. Adaptive co-management: lessons from coastal Cambodia. Canadian Journal of Development Studies 24 (3): 369-383. [pdf]
  5. Berkes, F. 2003. Alternatives to conventional management: Lessons from small-scale fisheries. Environments 31: 5-19. [pdf]
  6. Davidson-Hunt, I.J. 2003. Indigenous lands management, cultural landscapes and Anishinaabe people of Shoal Lake, Northwestern Ontario, Canada. Environments 31: 21-42. [pdf]
  7. Kendrick, A. 2003. The flux of trust: caribou co-management in northern Canada. Environments 31: 43-59. [pdf]
  8. Blakney, S. 2003. Aboriginal forestry in New Brunswick: conflicting paradigms. Environments 31: 61-78. [pdf]
  9. Turner, N.J., I.J. Davidson-Hunt and M. O?Flaherty. 2003. Living on the edge: Ecological and cultural edges as sources of diversity for social-ecological resilience. Human Ecology 31: 439-463. [pdf]
  10. Berkes, F., J. Anderson, C. Duffield, J.S. Gardner, A.J. Sinclair and G. Stevens 2003. Participatory management and sustainability: Evolving policy and practice in a mountain environment. In: The Integrity Gap: Canada?s Environmental Policy and Institutions (E. Lee and A. Perl, eds.) UBC Press, Vancouver, pp. 133-166. [pdf]
  11. Seixas, C. and F. Berkes. 2003. Learning from fishers: local knowledge for management design and assessment. In: Conservação da diversidade biológica e cultural em zonas costeiras: enfoques e experiências na America Latina e no Caribe (P.F. Vieira, ed.) APED, Florianópolis, Brazil, pp. 333-367.
  12. Dudgeon, R.C. and F. Berkes 2003. Local understandings of the land: Traditional ecological knowledge and indigenous knowledge. In: Nature Across Cultures (H. Selin, ed.) Kluwer, Dordrecht, pp. 75-96. [pdf]
  13. Berkes, F., J. Colding and C. Folke, editors, 2003. Navigating Social-Ecological Systems: Building Resilience for Complexity and Change. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. 393 pp.
  14. Berkes, F., J. Colding and C. Folke 2003. Introduction. In: Navigating Social-Ecological Systems (F. Berkes, J. Colding and C. Folke, eds.) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 1-29.
  15. Davidson-Hunt, I.J. and F. Berkes 2003. Nature and society through the lens of resilience. In: Navigating Social-Ecological Systems (F. Berkes, J. Colding and C. Folke, eds.) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 53-82.
  16. Gadgil, M., P. Olsson, F. Berkes and C. Folke 2003. Exploring the role of local ecological knowledge in ecosystem management: three case studies. In: Navigating Social-Ecological Systems (F. Berkes, J. Colding and C. Folke, eds.) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 189-209.
  17. Seixas, C. and F. Berkes 2003. Dynamics of social-ecological changes in a lagoon fishery in southern Brazil. In: Navigating Social-Ecological Systems (F. Berkes, J. Colding and C. Folke, eds.) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 271-298.
  18. Folke, C., J. Colding and F. Berkes 2003. Building resilience and adaptive capacity in social-ecological systems. In: Navigating Social-Ecological Systems (F. Berkes, J. Colding and C. Folke, eds.) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 352-387.
  19. Bingeman, K. 2003. Women's participation in forest management decisions in the Upper Kullu Valley, Himachal Pradesh, India. Himalayan Research Bulletin 21 (2): 53-61. [pdf]
  20. Seixas, C. and E. Troutt 2003. Evolution of a Brazilian shrimp market. Ecological Economics 46: 399-417.[pdf]

Folke, C. and 24 contributors (including F. Berkes). 2002. Resilience for Sustainable Development: Building Adaptive Capacity in a World of Transformations. International Council for Scientific Unions (ICSU), Rainbow Series No. 3. Paris. Also as report for the Swedish Environmental Advisory Council 2002:1

Jolly, D., Berkes, F., Castleden, J., Nichols, T. and the Community of Sachs Harbour 2002. "We can't predict the weather like we used to." Inuvialuit observations of climate change, Sachs Harbour, western Canadian Arctic. In: The Earth Is Faster Now: Indigenous Observations of Arctic Environmental Change (I. Krupnik and D. Jolly, eds.) Fairbanks AK: ARCUS, pp. 93-125.

Berkes, F. 2002. Epilogue: Making sense of Arctic environmental change? In: The Earth Is Faster Now: Indigenous Observations of Arctic Environmental Change (I. Krupnik and D. Jolly, eds.) Fairbanks AK: ARCUS, pp. 335-349.

Berkes, F. 2002. Cross-scale institutional linkages: Perspectives from the bottom up. In: The Drama of the Commons (E. Ostrom, T. Dietz, N. Dolsak, P.C. Stern, S. Stonich and E.U. Weber, eds.) National Academy Press, Washington, DC, pp. 293-321. [Online] http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10287.html

Berkes, F. and C. Folke 2002. Back to the future: Ecosystem dynamics and local knowledge. In: Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems (L.H. Gunderson and C.S. Holling, eds.) Island Press, Washington, DC, pp. 121-146

Berkes, F. 2001. One of 25 contributors to the Guide to Sustainable Development and Environmental Policy (N. Mirovitskaya and W. Ascher, eds.) Duke University Press, Durham and London.

Berkes, F. and D. Jolly 2001. Adapting to climate change: Social-ecological resilience in a Canadian western Arctic community. Conservation Ecology 5 (2): 18. [Online] http://www.consecol.org/vol5/iss2/art18

Riedlinger, D. and F. Berkes 2001. Contributions of traditional knowledge to understanding climate change in the Canadian Arctic. Polar Record 37: 315-328

Berkes, F., J. Mathias, M. Kislalioglu and H. Fast 2001. The Canadian Arctic and the Oceans Act: The development of participatory environmental research and management. Ocean & Coastal Management 44: 451-469

Davidson-Hunt, I. and F. Berkes 2001. Changing resource management paradigms, traditional ecological knowledge, and non-timber forest products. In: Forest Communities in the Third Millennium (I. Davidson-Hunt, L.C. Duchesne and J.C. Zasada, eds.) USDA Forest Service, St. Paul MN, pp. 78-92.

Berkes, F. and I. Davidson-Hunt 2001. Changing practice of indigenous knowledge research. Proceedings of the International Conference on Tropical Ecosystems (K.N. Ganeshaiah, R.U. Shaanker and K.S. Bawa, eds.) Oxford - IBH, New Delhi, pp. 58-61.

Dressler, W., F. Berkes and J. Mathias 2001. Beluga hunters in a mixed economy: Managing the impacts of nature-based tourism in the Canadian Western Arctic. Polar Record 37: 35-48.

Berkes, F., R. Mahon, P. McConney, R.C. Pollnac and R.S. Pomeroy 2001. Managing Small-Scale Fisheries: Alternative Directions and Methods. International Development Research Centre, Ottawa. 308 pp. This book is downloadable chapter by chapter. Click on Natural Resources in IDRC site: https://idrc-crdi.ca/

Berkes, F., 2001. Religious traditions and biodiversity. In: Encyclopedia of Biodiversity, Volume 5, pp. 109-120 (S. Levin, ed.) Academic Press, San Diego.

Berkes, F., J. Colding and C. Folke 2000. Rediscovery of traditional ecological knowledge as adaptive management. Ecological Applications 10: 1251-1262.

Berkes, F., J.S. Gardner and A.J. Sinclair 2000. Comparative aspects of mountain land resources management and sustainability: Case studies from India and Canada. International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology 7: 375-390.

Berkes, F. 1999. Are East African pastoralists truly conservationists? Comment. Current Anthropology 40: 62: 637-638.

Berkes, F. 1999. Twenty-five years in community-based coastal resources management. Out of the Shell (IDRC Coastal Resources Research Network Newsletter) 7 (2): 5-7.

Fast, H. and Berkes, F. 1999. Climate change, northern subsistence and and land-based economics. In: D. Wall et al., eds. Securing Northern Futures. Canadian Circumpolar Institute Press, Edmonton, pp. 9-19.

Berkes, F. 1999. Sacred Ecology. Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Resource Management. Taylor & Francis, Philadelphia and London.

Berkes, F. 1999. Role and significance of "tradition" in indigenous knowledge. Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor 7 (1): 19.

Treseder, L., J. Honda-McNeil, M. Berkes, F. Berkes, J. Dragon, C. Notzke, T. Schramm and R.J. Hudson 1999. Northern Eden: Community-Based Wildlife Management in Canada. International Institute for Environment and Development, London. 68 pp.

Fast, H. and Berkes, F. 1998. Climate change, northern subsistence and land-based economies. In: Canada Country Study: Climate Impacts and Adaptation, Volume 8: National Cross-Cutting Issues (N. Mayer and W. Avis, editors) Ottawa: Environment Canada, pp. 206-226. www.ec.gc.ca/climate/ccs/pdfs/volume8/vol8ch8.pdf

Berkes, F. and C. Folke, editors 1998. Linking Social and Ecological Systems. Management Practices and Social Mechanisms for Building Resilience. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. (Includes four chapters authored or co-authored by Berkes.)

Berkes, F., M. Kislalioglu, C. Folke and M. Gadgil 1998. Exploring the basic ecological unit: Ecosystem-like concepts in traditional societies. Ecosystems 1: 409-415.

Berkes, F., I. Davidson-Hunt and K. Davidson-Hunt 1998. Diversity of common property resource use and diversity of social interests in the western Indian Himalaya. Mountain Research and Development 18: 19-33

Duffield, C., J.S. Gardner, F. Berkes and R.B. Singh 1998. Local knowledge in the assessment of resource sustainability: Case studies in Himachal Pradesh and British Columbia, Canada. Mountain Research and Development 18: 35-49.

Berkes, F. 1998. IASCP Presidential address. Dialogues of the commons: Emerging directions for jointly used natural resources. Common Property Resource Digest No. 46: 17-20.

Berkes, F. 1998. Nature of traditional ecological knowledge and the Canada-wide experience. Terra Borealis 1: 1-3.

Berkes, F. 1997. New and not-so-new directions in the use of the commons: Co-management. Common Property Resource Digest No. 42: 5-7 (Reproduced in Collaborative Management News (IUCN), No.2, January 1998).

Pomeroy, R.S. and F. Berkes 1997. Two to tango: The role of government in fisheries co-management. Marine Policy 21: 465-480.

Ohmagari, K. and F. Berkes 1997. Transmission of indigenous knowledge and bush skills among the Western James Bay Cree women of subarctic Canada. Human Ecology 25: 197-222.

Rosenberg, D.M., F. Berkes, R.A. Bodaly, R.E. Hecky, C.A. Kelly and J.W.M. Rudd 1997. Large-scale impacts of hydroelectric development. Environmental Reviews 5: 27-54.

Berkes, F. and J.S. Gardner, editors 1997. Sustainability of Mountain Environments in India and Canada. Report of a Project under the CIDA-SICI Partnership Programme. Natural Resources Institute, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg. (Includes three chapters co-authored by Berkes.)

Berkes, F. and T. Henley 1997. Usefulness of traditional knowledge: Myth or reality? Policy Options 18 (3): 55-56.

Berkes, F. and T. Henley 1997. Co-management and traditional knowledge: Threat or opportunity? Policy Options 18 (2): 29-31.

Berkes, F. 1996. Social systems, ecological systems, and property rights. In: Rights to Nature, (S. Hanna, C. Folke and K.-G. Maler, eds.), Island Press, Washington, DC, pp. 87-107. (Reprinted in: Common Property: Readings and Resources for Community-based Natural Resource Management Researchers (C. Thompson and S. Langill, compilers) International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, 1999.)

Berkes, F., and H. Fast 1996. Aboriginal peoples: The basis for policy-making towards sustainable development. In: Achieving Sustainable Development (A. Dale and J.B. Robinson, eds.). University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 204-264.

Berkes, F. 1996. Questions in the Canadian North. World Conservation 2/96: 20.

Preston, R.J., F. Berkes and P.J. George 1995. Perspectives on sustainable development in the Moose River Basin. In: Papers of the Twenty-Sixth Algonquian Conference (D.H. Pentland, ed.). University of Manitoba Press, Winnipeg, pp. 379-393.

Berkes, F. 1995. Contributor to Chapters 11 and 13. Global Biodiversity Assessment (V.H. Heywood, exec. ed.), UNEP and Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Berkes, F. 1995. Indigenous knowledge and resource management systems: A native Canadian case study from James Bay. In: Property Rights in a Social and Ecological Context (S. Hanna and M. Munasinghe, eds.) The World Bank, Washington, DC, pp. 99-109.

Folke, C. and F. Berkes 1995. Mechanisms to link property rights to ecological systems. In: Property Rights and the Environment: Social and Ecological Issues (S. Hanna and M. Munasinghe, eds.) The World Bank, Washington, DC, pp. 121-137.

Berkes, F. 1995. "Tragedy of the Commons" and "Hardin, Garrett". In: Conservation and Environmentalism. An Encyclopedia (R. Paehlke, ed.). Garland, New York and London, pp. 342-3 and 637-8.

Berkes, F. 1995. Community-based management of common property resources. Encyclopedia of Environmental Biology Vol. 1, Academic Press, San Diego, pp. 371-373.

Berkes, F., C. Folke and M. Gadgil. 1995. Traditional ecological knowledge, biodiversity, resilience and sustainability. In: Biodiversity Conservation (C.A. Perrings, K.G. Mäler, C. Folke, B.O. Jansson & C.S. Holling, eds.) Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, pp. 281-299.

Berkes, F., A. Hughes, P.J. George, R.J. Preston, B.D. Cummins and J.Turner 1995. The persistence of aboriginal land use: Fish and wildlife harvest areas in the Hudson and James Bay Lowland, Ontario. Arctic 48: 81-93.

George, P.J., F. Berkes, R.J. Preston. 1995. Aboriginal harvesting in the Moose River basin: A historical and contemporary analysis. Canadian Review of Sociology andAnthropology 32: 69-90.

Berkes, F. and A.H. Smith 1995. Coastal marine property rights: The second transformation. In: Philippine Coastal Resources under Stress M.A. Juinio-Menez and G.F. Newkirk, eds.) Coastal Resources Research Network, Dalhousie University, Halifax, and University of the Philippines, Quezon City, pp. 103-113.

Berkes, F. 1995. Community-based management and co-management as tools for empowerment. In: Empowerment towards Sustainable Development (N. Singh and V. Titi, eds.) Fernwood, Halifax, and Zed Books, London, pp. 138-146.

Berkes, F. 1995. The role of co-management in conservation planning. In : The Churchill: A Canadian Heritage River (P. Jonker, ed.) University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, pp. 202-208.

Berkes, F., P.J. George, R.J. Preston, A. Hughes, J. Turner and B.D. Cummins 1994. Wildlife harvesting and sustainable regional native economy in the Hudson and James Bay Lowland, Ontario. Arctic 47: 350-360. (Abridged version published in: Canadian Journal of Economics 25: S356-S360, 1996.)

Berkes, F. 1994. Co-management: bridging the two solitudes. Northern Perspectives 22 (2-3): 18-20.

Berkes, F. 1994. Property rights and coastal fisheries. In: Community Management and Common Property of Coastal Fisheries in Asia and the Pacific (R.S. Pomeroy, ed.). ICLARM Conference Proceedings, Manila, pp. 51-62.

Berkes, F. and C. Folke 1994. Investing in cultural capital for the sustainable use of natural capital. In: Investing in Natural Capital: The Ecological Economics Approach to Sustainability (A.M. Jansson, M. Hammer, C. Folke and R. Costanza, eds.). ISEE/Island Press, Washington, D.C., pp. 128-149.

Berkes, F. 1993. Application of ecological economics to development: The institutional dimension. Proceedings of a Workshop. IREE/CIDA, Ottawa, pp. 61-71

Berkes, F. 1993. Traditional ecological knowledge in perspective. In: Traditional Ecological Knowledge: Concepts and Cases. (J.T. Inglis, ed.). Canadian Museum of Nature/International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, pp.1-9.

Berkes, F. 1993. Cree fishermen of the eastern subarctic: stewards of the commons. In: Environmental Stewardship: Studies in Active Earthkeeping (S. Lerner, ed.). University of Waterloo, Geography Publication Series no. 39, pp. 157-172.

Gadgil, M., F. Berkes and C. Folke 1993. Indigenous knowledge for biodiversity conservation. Ambio 22: 151-156.

Smith, A.J. and F. Berkes 1993. Community-based use of mangrove resources in St. Lucia. International Journal of Environmental Studies 43: 123-132.

Berkes, F and C. Folke 1992. A systems perspective on the interrelations between natural, human-made and cultural capital. Ecological Economics 5: 1-8. (Reprinted in Carrying Capacity Briefing Book, CCN, Washington DC, 1996. Spanish translation: Gaceta Ecologica [Mexico] 46: 13-19, 1997.)

Berkes, F. 1992. Success and failure in marine coastal fisheries of Turkey. In: Making the Commons Work (D.W. Bromley, ed.) Institute for Contemporary Studies Press, San Francisco pp. 161-182.

Kislalioglu, M. and F. Berkes 1992. Biological Diversity. Rev.Ed. Environmental Foundation of Turkey, Ankara. 130pp. (in Turkish with English summary).

Berkes, F. and M. Kislalioglu 1991. Community-based management and sustainable development. La Recherche Face a la Peche Artisanale, (J.R. Durand, J. Lemoalle, J. Weber, eds.). Editions de l'ORSTOM, Paris, pp. 567-574.

Smith, A.H. and F. Berkes 1991. Solutions to the "tragedy of the commons": Sea urchin management in St. Lucia, West Indies. Environmental Conservation 18: 131-136.

Gadgil, M. and F. Berkes 1991. Traditional resource management systems. Resource Management and Optimization 8: 127-141.

Berkes, F., P.J. George and R.J. Preston 1991. Co-management: The evolution in theory and practice of the joint administration of living resources. Alternatives 18(2): 12-18.

Berkes, F. and D. Pocock 1990. Diversity of Great Lakes fisheries in the Canadian Great Lakes. Society and Natural Resources 3: 173-186.

Berkes, F., Feeny, D., F. Berkes, B.J. McCay and J.M. Acheson 1990. The tragedy of the commons: Twenty-two years later. Human Ecology 18: 1-19. (Reprinted in: Green Planet Blues: Environmental Politics from Stockholm to Rio , K. Conca, M. Alberty and G.D. Dabelko, eds., Westview, Boulder, 1995, pp. 53-62. Green Planet Blues, second edition, 1998, pp. 55-64. Also reprinted in: Managing the Commons. Second Edition, J.A. Baden and D.S. Noonan, eds., Indiana University Press, Bloomington, 1998, pp. 76-94. Japanese translation, Ecosophia 1 (1), 1998). Spanish translation: Gaceta Ecologica [Mexico] 46: 13-19, 1998. Also reproduced in Environmental Valuation and Policy, The Open University, UK, 2000.)

Berkes, F. and D. Feeny 1990. Paradigms lost: Changing views on the use of common property resources. Alternatives 17(2): 48-55.

Berkes, F. 1990. The James Bay hydroelectric project. Alternatives 17(3): 20. (Reprinted in: Social Conflict and Environmental Law, A. Greenbaum et al., eds., Captus Press, North York, 1994, pp. 374-5).

Berkes, F. 1990. Native subsistence fisheries: A synthesis of harvest studies in Canada. Arctic 43: 35-42.

Berkes, F. 1990. Impacts of James Bay development. In: Effets des Amenagements Hydroelectriques sur le milieu (C.E. Delisle et M.A. Bouchard, eds.), Canadian Society of Environmental Biologists, Montreal, pp. 623-636.

Kislalioglu, M. and F. Berkes 1990. La Grande 2 Reservoir NAM-28:20 pp.; Caniapiscau Reservoir NAM-35: 12pp. In: Data Book on World Lake Environments. ILEC/UNEP, Otsu, Japan.

Kislalioglu, M. and F. Berkes 1990. Ecology and Environmental Sciences. Revised edition. (First edition, 1985.) Remzi Publishers, Istanbul, 350 pp. (in Turkish with English summary).

Berkes, F., editor. 1989. Common Property Resources: Ecology and Community-Based Sustainable Development. Belhaven Press, London, 302 pp. (Includes four chapters authored or co-authored by F. Berkes.) Reprinted as paperback, 1992.

Kislalioglu, M. and F. Berkes 1989. Environment and Ecology. Remzi Publishers, Istanbul, 284 pp. (in Turkish). Seventh revised printing, 1999.

Berkes, F. 1989. Co-management and the James Bay Agreement. In: Co-operative Management of Local Fisheries (E.Pinkerton, ed.) University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 189-208.

Rettig, R.B., F. Berkes and E. Pinkerton 1989. The future of fisheries co-management: A multi-disciplinary assessment. In: Co-operative Management of Local Fisheries (E. Pinkerton, ed.) University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver, pp. 273-289.

Berkes, F., D. Feeny, B.J. McCay and J.M. Acheson 1989. The benefits of the commons. Nature 340: 91-93. (Reprinted in: Common Property: Readings and Resources for Community-based Natural Resource Management Researchers (C. Thompson and S. Langill, compilers) International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, 1999. Spanish translation published in: Hombre y Ambiente 11: 111-123, 1989).

Berkes F. and M. Kislalioglu 1989. A comparative study of yield, investment and energy use in small-scale fisheries: some considerations for resource planning. Fisheries Research 7: 207-224.

Berkes, F. 1989. Red humour. Alternatives 16 (2): 21.

Berkes, F. 1989. Local-level resource management studies and programs: The Great Lakes region and Ontario. In: Community-Based Resource Management in Canada: An Inventory of Research and Projects (F.G. Cohen and A.J. Hanson, eds.) Canada/MAB Report 21, pp. 97-118.

Berkes, F. 1988. The intrinsic difficulty of predicting impacts: Lessons from the James Bay hydro project. Environmental Impact Assessment Review 8: 201-220.

Berkes, F. 1988. Subsistence fishing in Canada: a note on terminology. Arctic 41: 319-320.

Berkes, F. 1988. Environmental philosophy of the Cree people of James Bay. In: Traditional Knowledge and Renewable Resource Management in Northern Regions. (M. Freeman and L. Carbyn, eds.) Boreal Institute for Northern Studies, University of Alberta, Edmonton, pp. 7-21.

Drolet, C.A., A. Reed, M. Breton and F. Berkes 1987. Sharing wildlife management responsibilities with native groups: Case histories in Northern Quebec. Transactions of the 52nd North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference pp. 389-398.

Berkes, F. and A. Kence 1987. Fisheries and the Prisoner's Dilemma game: Conditions for the evolution of cooperation among users of common property resources. METU Journal of Pure and Applied Sciences 20: 209-227.

Berkes, F. and D. Pocock 1987. Quota management and "people problems": A case history of Canadian Lake Erie fisheries. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 116: 494-502.

Berkes, F. 1987. The common property resource problem and the fisheries of Barbados and Jamaica. Environmental Management 11: 225-235

Whillans, T.H., G.R. Francis, A.P. Grima, H.A. Regier and F. Berkes 1987. Stemming a dirty tide: Long Point Bay, Lake Erie. International Journal of Environmental Studies 29: 41-52.

Berkes, F. 1987. Common property resource management and Cree Indian fisheries in subarctic Canada. In: The Question of the Commons (B.J. McCay and J.M. Acheson, eds.), Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson, pp. 66-91.

Berkes, F. 1986. Marine inshore fishery management in Turkey. In: Proceedings of the Conference on Common Property Resource Management. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., pp. 63-83.

Berkes, F. and M.M.R. Freeman 1986. Human ecology and resource use. In: Canadian Inland Seas (I.P. Martini, ed.) Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 425-455.

Berkes, F. and A.B. Shaw 1986. Ecologically sustainable development: A Caribbean fisheries case study. Canadian Journal of Development Studies 7: 175-196.

Berkes, F. 1986. Local-level management and the commons problem: A comparative study of Turkish coastal fisheries. Marine Policy 10: 215-229.

Berkes, F. 1986. Common property resources and hunting territories. Anthropologica 28: 145-162.

Berkes, F. 1986. Chisasibi Cree hunters and missionaries: Humour as evidence of tension. In: Actes du Dix- Septième Congrès des Algonquinistes (W. Cowan, ed.) Carleton University, Ottawa, pp. 15-26.

Whillans, T.H. and F. Berkes 1986. Use and abuse, conflict and harmony: The Great Lakes fishery in transition. Alternatives 12(3): 10-18.

Berkes, F. 1985. The common property resource problem and the creation of limited property rights. Human Ecology 13: 187-208.

Berkes, F. 1985. Fishermen and the "tragedy of the commons". Environmental Conservation 12: 199-206.

Berkes, F. ed. 1985. Environmental impact of major hydroelectric projects in Canada. Special Issue, Bulletin of the Canadian Society of Environmental Biologists, vol. 42, no. 2, pp. 18-65.

Berkes, F. 1984. Competition between commercial and sport fishermen: an ecological analysis. Human Ecology 12: 413-429.

Berkes, F. 1984. Alternative styles in living resources management: The case of James Bay, Quebec. Environments 16(3): 114-123.

Berkes, F. and D. Pocock 1983. The Ontario Native Fishing Agreement in perspective, a study in user-group ecology. Environments 15 (3): 17-26.

Berkes, F., G. Perizzolo and D. Pocock 1983. Fishing effort and processing capacity: Resource management implications. Environments 15 (1): 1-8.

Berkes, F. 1983. Quantifying the harvest of native subsistence fisheries. In: Boreal Forest Ecosystems Conference Proceedings (R.W. Wein, et al., eds.), ACUNS, Ottawa, pp.346-363.

Berkes, F. 1982. Preliminary impacts of the James Bay hydroelectric project, Quebec, on estuarine fish and fisheries. Arctic 35:524-530.

Berkes, F. 1982. Energy subsidies and native domestic (subsistence) fisheries. Naturaliste Canadien 109: 1011-1019.

Berkes, F. 1982. Waterfowl management and northern native peoples with reference to Cree hunters of James Bay. Musk-Ox 30:23-35.

Berkes, F. and T. Gonenc 1982. A mathematic model on the exploitation of northern lake whitefish with gill nets. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 2:176-183.

Berkes, F. 1982. Monk seals on the southwest coast of Turkey. In: Mammals in the Seas, FAO Fisheries Series No. 5, Volume IV, pp. 237-242.

Berkes, F. 1981. Fisheries of the James Bay area and northern Quebec: A case study in resource management. In: Renewable Resources and the Economy of the North (M.M.R. Freeman, ed.), ACUNS/MAB, Ottawa, pp. 143-160.

Berkes. F. 1981. The role of self-regulation in living resources management in the North. In: Renewable Resources and the Economy of the North (M.M.R. Freeman, ed.), ACUNS/MAB, Ottawa, pp. 166-178.

Berkes, F. and D. Pocock 1981. Self-regulation of commercial fisheries of the Outer Long Point Bay, Lake Erie. Journal of Great Lakes Research 7:111-116.

Berkes, F. 1981. Some environmental and social impacts of the James Bay hydroelectric project, Canada. Journal of Environmental Management 12: 157-172.

Berkes, F. 1980. The mercury problem: an examination of the scientific basis for policy-making. In: Resources and the Environment (O.P. Dwivedi, ed), McClelland and Stewart, Toronto, pp. 269-287.

Berkes, F. 1980. Issues and perspectives on fish and wildlife management in the James Bay area. Bulletin of the Canadian Society of Environmental Biologists 37 (2): 95-101.

Berkes, F. et al. 1979. Distribution and ecology of Monachus monachus on Turkish coasts. In: The Mediterranean Monk Seal (K. Ronald and R. Duguy, eds.), Pergamon Press, Oxford, pp. 113-127.

Berkes, F. 1979. An investigation of Cree Indian domestic fisheries in northern Quebec. Arctic 32: 46-70.

Berkes, F. and M. MacKenzie 1978. Cree fish names from eastern James Bay, Quebec. Arctic 31: 489-495.

Berkes, F. 1978. Management of recreational fisheries in northern Quebec: policies versus tools. Canadian Public Policy 4:460-473.

Berkes, F. and C.S. Farkas 1978. Eastern James Bay Cree Indians: Changing patterns of wild food use and nutrition. Ecology of Food and Nutrition 7:155-172.

Sergeant, D., K. Ronald, J. Boulva and F. Berkes 1978. The recent status of Monachus monachus, the Mediterranean monk seal. Biological Conservation 14: 259-287.

Berkes, F. 1978. On seals and fishermen. Ilgi 26: 6-8.

Berkes, F. 1978. Arctic view of the "white man". Science Forum 11 (2): 29-31.

Berkes, F. 1977. Turkish dolphin fisheries. Oryx 14; 163-167.

Berkes, F. 1977. Fishery resource use in a sub-arctic Indian community. Human Ecology 5:289-307.

Berkes, F. 1977. Ecological significance of the neglecta form of Thysanoessa inermis (Kroyer). Crustaceana (Leiden) 33: 39-46.

Berkes, F. 1977. Production of the euphausiid crustacean Thysanoessa raschii in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Journal of Fisheries Research Board of Canada 32:443-446.

Berkes, F. 1976. Ecology of euphausiids in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada 33: 1894-1905.

Smith, E.C., F. Berkes and J.A. Spence 1975. Mercury levels in fish in the La Grande River area, northern Quebec. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 13: 673-677.

Berkes, F. and B. Schleifer 1976. University undergraduates in elementary school environmental education. Journal of Environmental Education 7(4): 18-23.

Berkes, F., ed. 1973. James Bay Forum. Public Hearing on the James Bay Project. Montreal.

Butler, M.J.A. and F. Berkes 1973. Biological aspects of oil pollution in marine environment: a review. In: Canadian Maritime Oil Exploration, Exploitation, and Transport: A Multidisciplinary Study (M.A. Loutfi, ed.) Prepared for Environment Canada, McGill University, Montreal.