A video narrated by National CASC Fish Biologist Abby Lynch explaining the Resist-Accept-Direct Framework, a decision-making tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to ecological changes resulting from climate change_._ The video is a narrated slide show with animations and photos guiding the viewer through the framework.
The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) Framework
RAD in the News
The New York Times sat down with representatives from the National Park Service to discuss how they are re-thinking their management strategies using RAD.
RAD Across the USGS
Scientists with the USGS Cooperative Research Units are applying RAD to applied fisheries and wildlife management research across the country.
The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework is a tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to socio-ecological changes, including climate change.
Responding to Changing Ecosystems
Ecosystems are transforming under climate change, with substantial shifts in ecological processes and important ecosystem services occurring at unprecedented rates. As systems approach socio-economic and ecological thresholds, our current management toolbox has proved to be incomplete for conservation and the sustainable provision of ecosystem services, including fisheries production and the wildlife habitat. Multiple approaches are therefore needed to address the varying uncertainties we face in this increasingly non-stationary world. Managers navigating ecosystem transformation can benefit from considering broader objectives beyond a traditional focus on resisting ecosystem change, by also considering whether accepting change or directing it along a preferred pathway might be more appropriate (RAD framework).
Taking Action in the Face of Change
“The RAD framework is about helping people really come to terms with the extent and pace of climate change and the discomfort that uncertainty brings. After people face the reality of climate change, they tend to come up with a much wider range of potential management actions. I think of a RAD brainstorming session like throwing a pot of freshly cooked spaghetti at the wall; if you don’t throw out some wild ideas, you’ll never find the one that sticks.” - Nicole Ward, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources
In supporting natural resource management that seeks to make strategic, forward-looking decisions in an era of change, adapting to ecosystem transformation benefits all people. Still, there is great uncertainty in the changes to come and the path forward is unclear. The scientific community can help decision-makers by increasing its understanding of how ecosystems will transform. After identifying both the desirable and unacceptable potential outcomes, managers can develop appropriate actions, all the while remaining flexible in their approach as they learn more. Today’s leadership and decision making can improve our ability to respond to ecosystem transformation by supporting efforts to understand the trajectories of change, the efficacy of current management approaches, and the best design practices for resisting and directing transformation in order to achieve desired ecosystem goals.
Additional Resources
Webinars & Workshops:
- RADical ecosystem change: Applying the RAD (Resist-Accept-Direct) framework Stewardship Network webinar (2023)
- The RAD (Resist-Accept-Direct) Climate Adaptation Framework National CASC webinar (2022)
- Resist-Accept-Direct Webinar Series USFWS National Conservation Training Center (2022)
- How the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework clarifies modern environmental stewardship challenges and fosters strategic responses Northwest Regional Invasive Species and Climate Change (NW RISCC) Network Virtual Symposium (2021)
- Managing for RADical ecosystem change: Applying the Resist, Accept, or Direct (RAD) Framework IUCN Climate Change Specialist Group webinar (2021)
- Thinking about Adaptation: Exploring the Resist-Accept-Direct Framework USFWS National Conservation Training Center training (2021)
- How the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework clarifies the challenge of modern natural resource management and supports strategic, forward-looking action. NC CASC webinar (2021)
- Are federal land managers ready and SET for stewarding ecological transformation? FedNET workshop (2019)
- Resist, Accept, or Direct? A decision framework for navigating climate change-driven ecological transformations NOAA National Marine Protected Area Center webinar (2019)
RAD has been incorporated into various USGS research projects, including many funded by the USGS Climate Adaptation Science Centers. Learn more about these projects below.
Using the Resist-Accept-Direct Framework to Manage Wildfires, Carbon Storage, and Ecological Transformations in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Crafting Ecological Scenarios to Implement the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) Framework
Cross-Park RAD Project (CPRP): A Case Study in Four National Parks Investigating How Institutional Context and Emotions Shape Manager Decisions to Resist, Accept, or Direct Change in Transforming Ecosystems
Informing Decisions to Resist, Accept, or Direct Post-fire Vegetation Transitions
Public Land Manager Decision-Making Under Ecological Transformation
Adaptation Strategies in the Face of Climate-Driven Ecological Transformation: Case Studies from Arctic Alaska and the U.S. Great Plains
Mapping the Risk of Ecological Transformation Across Pinyon Woodlands and the U.S. West
State of the Science on Ecosystem Transformation
Explore how RAD is applied through these introductory videos.
A video narrated by National CASC Fish Biologist Abby Lynch explaining the Resist-Accept-Direct Framework, a decision-making tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to ecological changes resulting from climate change_._ The video is a narrated slide show with animations and photos guiding the viewer through the framework.
The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework is a decision-making tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to ecological changes resulting from climate change.
The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework is a decision-making tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to ecological changes resulting from climate change.
Academic articles in a variety of journals have developed and discussed the RAD framework. Read these publications below.
External Publications
Partners outside the USGS also publish articles discussing RAD. Find a selection of these publications below.
The dynamic feasibility of resisting (R), accepting (A), or directing (D) ecological change
Reimagining large river management using the Resist–Accept–Direct (RAD) framework in the Upper Mississippi River
A brave new world: Managing for biodiversity conservation under ecosystem transformation
Resisting-accepting-directing: Ecosystem management guided by an ecological resilience assessment
Resist, accept, and direct responses to biological invasions: A social–ecological perspective
Ecological and social strategies for managing fisheries using the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework
Resist-accept-direct (RAD) considerations for climate change adaptation in fisheries: The Wisconsin experience
A Resist-Accept-Direct decision-support tool for walleye Sander vitreus (Mitchill) management in Wisconsin
Resisting ecosystem transformation through an intensive whole-lake fish removal experiment
Navigating ecological transformation: Resist-accept-direct as a path to a new resource management paradigm
RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems
A science agenda to inform natural resource management decisions in an era of ecological transformation
Lake Class and Walleye Natural Resources Information
The goal of this tool is that users of the tool can use the information provided here to inform their decisions (or their advice to those with decision-making authority) about whether to Resist, Accept, or Direct in walleye fisheries in Wisconsin.
Learn more about RAD and it's use in management decisions through USGS news articles on the topic. To stay up-to-date on RAD news coming out of the USGS Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CASCs), sign up for the CASC newsletter.
Interested in being a part of a growing community of practice on RAD? Consider joining our "RADish" community email list that invites members to share RAD-relevant communications, such as articles, upcoming events, and discussion topics with other members of the group.
RADish Community Distribution List
The “RADish” distribution list serves the community of practice around the RAD (Resist-Accept-Direct) framework. We strive to maintain an inclusive and professional community engaged in RAD-relevant discussions only. Please review our Community Guidelines before subscribing to the list.
RAD Community of Practice
A growing community of practice, including the Federal Navigating Ecological Transformation (FedNET) and the American Fisheries Society and the Wildlife Society's ecosystem transformation working groups, is helping incorporate the RAD framework into ecosystem management decisions.
The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework is a tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to socio-ecological changes, including climate change.
Responding to Changing Ecosystems
Ecosystems are transforming under climate change, with substantial shifts in ecological processes and important ecosystem services occurring at unprecedented rates. As systems approach socio-economic and ecological thresholds, our current management toolbox has proved to be incomplete for conservation and the sustainable provision of ecosystem services, including fisheries production and the wildlife habitat. Multiple approaches are therefore needed to address the varying uncertainties we face in this increasingly non-stationary world. Managers navigating ecosystem transformation can benefit from considering broader objectives beyond a traditional focus on resisting ecosystem change, by also considering whether accepting change or directing it along a preferred pathway might be more appropriate (RAD framework).
Taking Action in the Face of Change
“The RAD framework is about helping people really come to terms with the extent and pace of climate change and the discomfort that uncertainty brings. After people face the reality of climate change, they tend to come up with a much wider range of potential management actions. I think of a RAD brainstorming session like throwing a pot of freshly cooked spaghetti at the wall; if you don’t throw out some wild ideas, you’ll never find the one that sticks.” - Nicole Ward, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources
In supporting natural resource management that seeks to make strategic, forward-looking decisions in an era of change, adapting to ecosystem transformation benefits all people. Still, there is great uncertainty in the changes to come and the path forward is unclear. The scientific community can help decision-makers by increasing its understanding of how ecosystems will transform. After identifying both the desirable and unacceptable potential outcomes, managers can develop appropriate actions, all the while remaining flexible in their approach as they learn more. Today’s leadership and decision making can improve our ability to respond to ecosystem transformation by supporting efforts to understand the trajectories of change, the efficacy of current management approaches, and the best design practices for resisting and directing transformation in order to achieve desired ecosystem goals.
Additional Resources
Webinars & Workshops:
- RADical ecosystem change: Applying the RAD (Resist-Accept-Direct) framework Stewardship Network webinar (2023)
- The RAD (Resist-Accept-Direct) Climate Adaptation Framework National CASC webinar (2022)
- Resist-Accept-Direct Webinar Series USFWS National Conservation Training Center (2022)
- How the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework clarifies modern environmental stewardship challenges and fosters strategic responses Northwest Regional Invasive Species and Climate Change (NW RISCC) Network Virtual Symposium (2021)
- Managing for RADical ecosystem change: Applying the Resist, Accept, or Direct (RAD) Framework IUCN Climate Change Specialist Group webinar (2021)
- Thinking about Adaptation: Exploring the Resist-Accept-Direct Framework USFWS National Conservation Training Center training (2021)
- How the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework clarifies the challenge of modern natural resource management and supports strategic, forward-looking action. NC CASC webinar (2021)
- Are federal land managers ready and SET for stewarding ecological transformation? FedNET workshop (2019)
- Resist, Accept, or Direct? A decision framework for navigating climate change-driven ecological transformations NOAA National Marine Protected Area Center webinar (2019)
RAD has been incorporated into various USGS research projects, including many funded by the USGS Climate Adaptation Science Centers. Learn more about these projects below.
Using the Resist-Accept-Direct Framework to Manage Wildfires, Carbon Storage, and Ecological Transformations in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Crafting Ecological Scenarios to Implement the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) Framework
Cross-Park RAD Project (CPRP): A Case Study in Four National Parks Investigating How Institutional Context and Emotions Shape Manager Decisions to Resist, Accept, or Direct Change in Transforming Ecosystems
Informing Decisions to Resist, Accept, or Direct Post-fire Vegetation Transitions
Public Land Manager Decision-Making Under Ecological Transformation
Adaptation Strategies in the Face of Climate-Driven Ecological Transformation: Case Studies from Arctic Alaska and the U.S. Great Plains
Mapping the Risk of Ecological Transformation Across Pinyon Woodlands and the U.S. West
State of the Science on Ecosystem Transformation
Explore how RAD is applied through these introductory videos.
A video narrated by National CASC Fish Biologist Abby Lynch explaining the Resist-Accept-Direct Framework, a decision-making tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to ecological changes resulting from climate change_._ The video is a narrated slide show with animations and photos guiding the viewer through the framework.
A video narrated by National CASC Fish Biologist Abby Lynch explaining the Resist-Accept-Direct Framework, a decision-making tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to ecological changes resulting from climate change_._ The video is a narrated slide show with animations and photos guiding the viewer through the framework.
The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework is a decision-making tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to ecological changes resulting from climate change.
The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework is a decision-making tool that helps resource managers make informed strategies for responding to ecological changes resulting from climate change.
Academic articles in a variety of journals have developed and discussed the RAD framework. Read these publications below.
External Publications
Partners outside the USGS also publish articles discussing RAD. Find a selection of these publications below.
The dynamic feasibility of resisting (R), accepting (A), or directing (D) ecological change
Reimagining large river management using the Resist–Accept–Direct (RAD) framework in the Upper Mississippi River
A brave new world: Managing for biodiversity conservation under ecosystem transformation
Resisting-accepting-directing: Ecosystem management guided by an ecological resilience assessment
Resist, accept, and direct responses to biological invasions: A social–ecological perspective
Ecological and social strategies for managing fisheries using the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework
Resist-accept-direct (RAD) considerations for climate change adaptation in fisheries: The Wisconsin experience
A Resist-Accept-Direct decision-support tool for walleye Sander vitreus (Mitchill) management in Wisconsin
Resisting ecosystem transformation through an intensive whole-lake fish removal experiment
Navigating ecological transformation: Resist-accept-direct as a path to a new resource management paradigm
RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems
A science agenda to inform natural resource management decisions in an era of ecological transformation
Lake Class and Walleye Natural Resources Information
The goal of this tool is that users of the tool can use the information provided here to inform their decisions (or their advice to those with decision-making authority) about whether to Resist, Accept, or Direct in walleye fisheries in Wisconsin.
Learn more about RAD and it's use in management decisions through USGS news articles on the topic. To stay up-to-date on RAD news coming out of the USGS Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CASCs), sign up for the CASC newsletter.
Interested in being a part of a growing community of practice on RAD? Consider joining our "RADish" community email list that invites members to share RAD-relevant communications, such as articles, upcoming events, and discussion topics with other members of the group.
RADish Community Distribution List
The “RADish” distribution list serves the community of practice around the RAD (Resist-Accept-Direct) framework. We strive to maintain an inclusive and professional community engaged in RAD-relevant discussions only. Please review our Community Guidelines before subscribing to the list.
RAD Community of Practice
A growing community of practice, including the Federal Navigating Ecological Transformation (FedNET) and the American Fisheries Society and the Wildlife Society's ecosystem transformation working groups, is helping incorporate the RAD framework into ecosystem management decisions.