Abstract
Social-Ecological Systems (SES) resilience has become the mainstream analytical framework for understanding the interactions between the social and environmental dynamics of change. However, issues around the role of power and agency, which have been described as blind spots by critics, have raised concerns regarding its application to real-world empirical cases. We explore how Ribot and Peluso’s Theory of Access can be applied to address critical theoretical gaps in SES by examining how its structural and relational access mechanisms relate to diversity, feedbacks and connectivity which are central to the dynamics of SES. Testing this through two different case studies, on land use issues in Mexico and marine fisheries in the United Kingdom, we illustrate how an analysis focused on access deepens our understanding of resilience. We argue that the insights provided by the Theory of Access contribute to an improved theorization of the “social” in social-ecological resilience.
Correction Statement
This article has been republished with minor changes. These changes do not impact the academic content of the article.
Acknowledgments
All the data and information that supports this paper was obtained from the authors´ dissertations at the School of International Development of the University of East Anglia. The kindness of the key informants from Cromer, UK, and San Francisco Oxtotilpan, México, was paramount for achieving the author´s doctorate and this article. The authors would like to thank the four anonymous reviewers for their inputs and corrections and to Catherine Locke for reviewing the first drafts of this paper.