Collective Decision Making for Ecological Restoration (1.0.0)
Ecological restoration, particularly in urban contexts, is a complex collective decision-making process that involves a diversity of stakeholders and experts, each with their own perceptions about what landscapes should and can look like, how to get them to the desired state, and on what timeline. CoDMER can be used to investigate how structural and behavioral factors can influence collective decision making processes and outcomes in the context of ecological restoration. It is informed by existing literature on collective decision making and empirical data from the Chicago Wilderness region.
Release Notes
Version 1.0
Associated Publications
Watkins, C., Massey, D., Brooks, J., Ross, K., Zellner, M. L. (in review). “Understanding the mechanisms of collective decision-making in ecological restoration: An agent-based model of actors and organizations.” Ecology and Society.
This release is out-of-date. The latest version is
1.1.0
Collective Decision Making for Ecological Restoration 1.0.0
Submitted by
Dean Massey
Published Dec 30, 2011
Last modified Feb 23, 2018
Ecological restoration, particularly in urban contexts, is a complex collective decision-making process that involves a diversity of stakeholders and experts, each with their own perceptions about what landscapes should and can look like, how to get them to the desired state, and on what timeline. CoDMER can be used to investigate how structural and behavioral factors can influence collective decision making processes and outcomes in the context of ecological restoration. It is informed by existing literature on collective decision making and empirical data from the Chicago Wilderness region.
Release Notes
Version 1.0