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D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
47
Citations
12707
World Ranking
4348
National Ranking
106

Overview

Tim M. Daw is affiliated with Stockholm University in Sweden and has contributed extensively to the field of Environmental Science. Their research covers a range of topics primarily within environmental and marine studies, focusing on sustainability, ecosystem management, and policy intersections.

The scientist's work includes publications in several subfields such as:

  • Global and Planetary Change
  • Ecology
  • Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
  • Sociology and Political Science
  • General Health Professions

Key topics that have been the focus of their research include:

  • Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
  • Sustainability and Climate Change Governance
  • Coastal and Marine Management
  • Land Use and Ecosystem Services
  • Marine and fisheries research
  • Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies
  • Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management

Tim M. Daw's notable recent papers include:

  • "Reconciling well-being and resilience for sustainable development" (2021, Nature Sustainability)
  • "Four ways blue foods can help achieve food system ambitions across nations" (2023, Nature)
  • "Lessons from bright-spots for advancing knowledge exchange at the interface of marine science and policy" (2022, Journal of Environmental Management)
  • "Navigating Complexities: Agent-Based Modeling to Support Research, Governance, and Management in Small-Scale Fisheries" (2020, Frontiers in Marine Science)
  • "The Development of a Framework for the Integrated Assessment of SDG Trade-Offs in the Sundarban Biosphere Reserve" (2021, Water)

Frequent publication venues for Tim M. Daw include:

  • SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Climate Risk Management
  • Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)
  • Research Square (Research Square)
  • Nature Sustainability

The scientist has collaborated regularly with several co-authors, such as:

  • Emilie Lindkvist
  • Elizabeth Drury O'Neill
  • Geoff Wells
  • Beatrice Crona
  • Max Troell

Best Publications

  • Toward Principles for Enhancing the Resilience of Ecosystem Services

    Reinette Biggs;Reinette Biggs;Maja Schlüter;Maja Schlüter;Duan Biggs;Duan Biggs;Duan Biggs;Erin L. Bohensky

  • Applying the ecosystem services concept to poverty alleviation: the need to disaggregate human well-being

    Tim Daw;Katrina Brown;Sergio Rosendo;Robert Pomeroy

  • Comanagement of coral reef social ecological systems

    Joshua E. Cinner;Tim R. McClanahan;M. Aaron MacNeil;Nicholas A. J. Graham

  • Vulnerability of coastal communities to key impacts of climate change on coral reef fisheries.

    Joshua E Cinner;Tim R McClanahan;Nicholas A. J. Graham;Tim M. Daw

  • Advancing sustainability through mainstreaming a social–ecological systems perspective

    Joern Fischer;Toby A Gardner;Elena M Bennett;Patricia Balvanera

  • Lag effects in the impacts of mass coral bleaching on coral reef fish, fisheries, and ecosystems.

    Nicholas A. J. Graham;Shaun K. Wilson;Shaun K. Wilson;Simon Jennings;Nicholas V. C. Polunin

  • Socioeconomic Factors that Affect Artisanal Fishers’ Readiness to Exit a Declining Fishery

    J.E. Cinner;T. Daw;T.R. McCLANAHAN

  • Linking Social and Ecological Systems to Sustain Coral Reef Fisheries

    Joshua E. Cinner;Timothy R. McClanahan;Tim M. Daw;Nicholas A.J. Graham

  • Marine reserves as linked social–ecological systems

    Richard Pollnac;Patrick Christie;Joshua E. Cinner;Tracey Dalton

  • Participatory scenario planning in place-based social-ecological research: insights and experiences from 23 case studies

    Elisa Oteros-Rozas;Elisa Oteros-Rozas;Elisa Oteros-Rozas;Berta Martín-López;Tim M. Daw;Erin L. Bohensky

  • Evaluating taboo trade-offs in ecosystems services and human well-being.

    Tim M. Daw;Tim M. Daw;Sarah Coulthard;William W. L. Cheung;William W. L. Cheung;Katrina Brown

  • Fisheries science and sustainability in international policy: a study of failure in the European Union's Common Fisheries Policy

    Timothy Daw;Tim Gray

  • Climate change and capture fisheries: potential impacts, adaptation and mitigation

    T. Daw;W.N. Adger;K. Brown;M.C. Badjeck

  • Conservation action in a changing climate

    T.R. McClanahan;J.E. Cinner;J.M. Maina;N.A.J. Graham

  • To Fish or not to Fish: Factors at multiple scales affecting artisanal fishers' readiness to exit a declining fishery

    Tim M. Daw;Tim M. Daw;Joshua E. Cinner;Timothy R. McClanahan;Katrina Brown

  • Elasticity in ecosystem services: exploring the variable relationship between ecosystems and human well-being

    Tim M. Daw;Christina C. Hicks;Katrina Brown;Tomas Chaigneau

  • Transforming management of tropical coastal seas to cope with challenges of the 21st century

    Peter F Sale;Tundi Agardy;Cameron H Ainsworth;Blake E Feist

  • Responding to change: Using scenarios to understand how socioeconomic factors may influence amplifying or dampening exploitation feedbacks among Tanzanian fishers

    Joshua E. Cinner;Carl Folke;Tim Daw;Christina C. Hicks

  • Transitions toward co-management: The process of marine resource management devolution in three east African countries

    J. E. Cinner;T. M. Daw;T. M. Daw;T. R. McClanahan;N. Muthiga

  • Accounting for the Impact of Conservation on Human Well-Being

    E. J. Milner-Gulland;J. A. Mcgregor;M. Agarwala;M. Agarwala;G. Atkinson

Frequent Co-Authors

Katrina Brown
Katrina Brown University of Exeter
Joshua E. Cinner
Joshua E. Cinner James Cook University
Tim R. McClanahan
Tim R. McClanahan Wildlife Conservation Society
Beatrice Crona
Beatrice Crona Stockholm University
Nicholas A. J. Graham
Nicholas A. J. Graham Lancaster University
Carl Folke
Carl Folke Stockholm University
Christina C. Hicks
Christina C. Hicks Lancaster University
Joseph Maina
Joseph Maina Macquarie University
Reinette Biggs
Reinette Biggs Stellenbosch University

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