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@Article{AraújoORBLLGFRA:2019:SoNePl,
               author = "Ara{\'u}jo, Moacyr and Ometto, Jean Pierre Henry Balbaud and 
                         Rodrigues Filho, Saulo and Bursztyn, Marcel and Lindoso, Diego P. 
                         and Litre, Gabriela and Gaivizzo, Larisa and Ferreira, J{\'u}lia 
                         L. and Reis, Rafael M. and Assad, Eduardo",
          affiliation = "{Universidade Federal de Pernambuco (UFPE)} and {Instituto 
                         Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE)} and {Universidade de 
                         Bras{\'{\i}}lia (UnB)} and {Universidade de Bras{\'{\i}}lia 
                         (UnB)} and {Universidade de Bras{\'{\i}}lia (UnB)} and 
                         {Universidade de Bras{\'{\i}}lia (UnB)} and {Universidade de 
                         Bras{\'{\i}}lia (UnB)} and {Universidade de Bras{\'{\i}}lia 
                         (UnB)} and {Universidade de Bras{\'{\i}}lia (UnB)} and {Empresa 
                         Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecu{\'a}ria (EMBRAPA)}",
                title = "The socio-ecological nexus plus approach used by the brazilian 
                         research network on global climate change",
              journal = "Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability",
                 year = "2019",
               volume = "39",
                pages = "62--70",
                month = "Aug.",
             abstract = "The Brazilian Research Network on Global Climate Change (Rede 
                         CLIMA) is an interdisciplinary network composed of 16 research 
                         groups, which interact in different levels and programs. This work 
                         aims at building climate change cause-effect research from a 
                         'Nexus+' perspective, considering the added value of flexibility 
                         and adaptability of the concept. The article draws on the Nexus 
                         literature alongside a case study in Sao Francisco River Basin, 
                         Northeast Brazil. An additional pillar to the Nexus approach is 
                         proposed here, the socio-ecological security, which can be defined 
                         as a political-territorial dimension of coupled social and 
                         ecological systems. A collaborative research-practice frame was 
                         applied to the study region, a hotspot of climate vulnerability in 
                         Brazil. Our results highlight the need for this fourth component 
                         to address socio-ecological sustainability into context.",
                  doi = "10.1016/j.cosust.2019.08.005",
                  url = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cosust.2019.08.005",
                 issn = "1877-3435",
             language = "en",
           targetfile = "araujo_socio.pdf",
        urlaccessdate = "28 mar. 2024"
}


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