The Ecosystem Guild/Community Steward
The Community Steward system is one third of the ingredients necessary for The Ecosystem Guild to form the Skykomish Bio-Cultural Restoration Field Station. The Community Stewards attend to communications and relationship building among the hosts (land managers), institutional sponsors and participants. This pattern is Non-Institutional in that it is designed to build Coordination capabilities among networks of private citizens to empower Advocacy for Biocultural Restoration in Riparian Buffers. This page describes the infrastructures and protocols used by the system. These infrastructures and protocols are a key part of The Ecosystem Guild system, that aims to rebuild community-managed Commons, in Washington State and beyond, by maximizing interoperability across private and public spheres.
Relationships
- broader: conservation lands;commons
- broader: vegetation;river delta;sediment dynamics
- involves organization: non-institutional
- located in: skykomish
- related to: Alnus
- related to: The Polycene
- related to: advocacy
- related to: biocultural restoration
- related to: cereghino 2015 working buffers info sheet
- related to: commons
- related to: coordination
- related to: ecosystem guild
- related to: glyphosate
- related to: grimsby et al 2007 knotweed sexual or clonal
- related to: imazapyr
- related to: multiple scale analysis
- related to: polygonum
- related to: populus
- related to: reiner farm
- related to: riparian buffers
- related to: skykomish field stationknotweed control experiments
- related to: snohomish county
- related to: the ecosystem guildsite steward apprenticeship
- related to: urgenson et al 2009 giant knotweed implications
- related to: washington state
Source: The Ecosystem Guild/Community Steward on Salish Sea Wiki