The conservation game |
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Authors: | Mark Colyvan James Justus Helen M. Regan |
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Affiliation: | aSydney Centre for the Foundations of Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia;bDepartment of Philosophy, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA;cDepartment of Biology, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521, USA |
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Abstract: | Conservation problems typically involve groups with competing objectives and strategies. Taking effective conservation action requires identifying dependencies between competing strategies and determining which action optimally achieves the appropriate conservation goals given those dependencies. We show how several real-world conservation problems can be modeled game-theoretically. Three types of problems drive our analysis: multi-national conservation cooperation, management of common-pool resources, and games against nature. By revealing the underlying structure of these and other problems, game-theoretic models suggest potential solutions that are often invisible to the usual management protocol: decision followed by monitoring, feedback and revised decisions. The kind of adaptive management provided by the game-theoretic approach therefore complements existing adaptive management methodologies. |
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Keywords: | Game theory Adaptive management Stag hunt Tragedy of the commons Games against nature Common-pool resource management Multi-national cooperation Conservation management Resource management Prisoners&rsquo dilemma |
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