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Communicating about Fire
Year of Publication
2024
Publication Type
Federal-level strategies or guidance for addressing wildfire risk encourage adaptation activities that span progressively larger scales, often focusing on landscape-level action that necessitates coordination between decision-makers and socially diverse communities.
Solastalgia to Soliphilia: Cultural Fire, Climate Change, and Indigenous Healing
Year of Publication
2023
Publication Type
Wildly destructive fires, wind driven through unmanaged and untended lands, take lives and homes and the solace of familiar places. Ash blankets the remains, trauma takes hold, but even when the smoke clears and communities begin to heal, there is a loss beyond words. These wildfires reveal the ways many are lacking relationships with the land.
Megafire: An ambiguous and emotive term best avoided by science
Year of Publication
2023
Publication Type
Background
As fire regimes are changing and wildfire disasters are becoming more frequent, the term megafire is increasingly used to describe impactful wildfires, under multiple meanings, both in academia and popular media.
The Fire Adapted Communities Pathways Tool: Facilitating Social Learning and a Science of Practice
Year of Publication
2023
Publication Type
Wildfire science, policy, and practice lack systematic means for “tailoring” fire adaptation practices to socially diverse human populations and in ways that aggregate existing lessons.
Detecting, Monitoring and Foreseeing Wildland Fire Requires Similar Multiscale Viewpoints as Meteorology and Climatology
Year of Publication
2023
Publication Type
Achieving sustainable coexistence with wildfires in the Anthropocene requires skilful integrated fire observations, fire behaviour predictions, forecasts of fire risk, and projections of change to fire climates.
The Shared Stewardship Strategy in the Southern United States: Lessons Learned
Year of Publication
2023
Publication Type
The USDA Forest Service’s Shared Stewardship strategy, announced initially in 2018, is built on a vision of advancing federal partnerships with states and other entities to better accomplish shared forest management priorities at the landscape scale.
The Marshall Fire: Scientific and policy needs for water system disaster response
Year of Publication
2023
Publication Type
The 2021 Marshall Fire was the costliest fire in Colorado's history and destroyed more than 1,000 homes and businesses. The disaster displaced over 40,000 people and damaged six public drinking water systems. A case study was developed to better understand decisions, resources, expertise, and response limitations during and after the wildfire. The fire caused all water systems to lose power.
Governing wildfires: toward a systematic analytical framework
Year of Publication
2022
Publication Type
Despite recent research, a systematic approach to understanding wildfire governance is lacking. This article addresses this deficit by systematically reviewing governance theories and concepts applied so far in the academic literature on wildfires as a step toward achieving their more effective and holistic management.
A Characterization of Fire-Management Research: A Bibliometric Review of Global Networks and Themes
Year of Publication
2022
Publication Type
Although humans have interacted with wildfires for millennia, a science-based approach to fire management has evolved in recent decades. This paper reviews the development of firemanagement research, focusing on publications that use this term in their title, abstract, or keywords identified on the Scopus platform.
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