Nina Burkardt (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Social and Economic Analysis (SEA) Branch
Joint Fire Science Program Evaluation
NexView: Empowering decision makers to assess the impacts of development on social-ecological systems in the Lower Mekong River Basin by increasing access with integrated and visualized data, models, and decision making tools
Collaboration and Alternative Dispute Resolution in the Bureau of Land Management
Social and Ecological Resilience in Southwestern Colorado
Colorado Plateau Futures: Understanding Agents of Change on the Colorado Plateau to Facilitate Collaborative Adaptation
Building Social and Ecological Resilience to Climate Change in Southwestern Colorado: Phase 2
Policy Analysis and Decision Support
How and Why Upper Colorado River Basin Land, Water, and Fire Managers Choose to Use Drought Tools (or Not)
Negotiation Skills for Natural Resource Professionals: Building a Foundation
The Fort Collins Science Center's Social and Economic Analysis (SEA) Branch has been conducting and publishing research on multi-party natural resource negotiation since the 1980s. This research has led to the development of the basic negotiation training courses. This course is a mix of lecture, hands-on training, and discussion. Please join us and other natural resource professiona
Strategies and Tactics for the Experienced Natural Resource Negotiator
In 2021, the advanced negotiation course, "Strategies and Tactics for Experienced Natural Resource Negotiator", will not be offered.
Understanding Fluid Injection Induced Seismicity
Online survey responses from users of the Joint Fire Science Program Fire Science Exchange Network from February 2021
A gender and social vulnerability assessment approach
The Science Application for Risk Reduction (SAFRR) Scenario Retrospective 2006–21
Navigating the space between policy and practice: Toward a typology of collaborators in a federal land management agency
2021 assessment of the Joint Fire Science Program’s Fire Science Exchange Network
A typology of drought decision making: Synthesizing across cases to understand drought preparedness and response actions
Navigating climate adaptation on public lands: How views on ecosystem change and scale interact with management approaches
Natural resource management decision-making under climate uncertainty: Building social-ecological resilience in southwestern Colorado
Ecological drought: Accounting for the non-human impacts of water shortage in the Upper Missouri Headwaters Basin, Montana, USA
A survey of Bureau of Land Management employees on collaboration and alternative dispute resolution
Coping with earthquakes induced by fluid injection
U.S. Geological Survey core science systems strategy: characterizing, synthesizing, and understanding the critical zone through a modular science framework
Disputes over science and dispute resolution approaches - A survey of Bureau of Reclamation employees
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.
Science and Products
Social and Economic Analysis (SEA) Branch
Joint Fire Science Program Evaluation
NexView: Empowering decision makers to assess the impacts of development on social-ecological systems in the Lower Mekong River Basin by increasing access with integrated and visualized data, models, and decision making tools
Collaboration and Alternative Dispute Resolution in the Bureau of Land Management
Social and Ecological Resilience in Southwestern Colorado
Colorado Plateau Futures: Understanding Agents of Change on the Colorado Plateau to Facilitate Collaborative Adaptation
Building Social and Ecological Resilience to Climate Change in Southwestern Colorado: Phase 2
Policy Analysis and Decision Support
How and Why Upper Colorado River Basin Land, Water, and Fire Managers Choose to Use Drought Tools (or Not)
Negotiation Skills for Natural Resource Professionals: Building a Foundation
The Fort Collins Science Center's Social and Economic Analysis (SEA) Branch has been conducting and publishing research on multi-party natural resource negotiation since the 1980s. This research has led to the development of the basic negotiation training courses. This course is a mix of lecture, hands-on training, and discussion. Please join us and other natural resource professiona
Strategies and Tactics for the Experienced Natural Resource Negotiator
In 2021, the advanced negotiation course, "Strategies and Tactics for Experienced Natural Resource Negotiator", will not be offered.
Understanding Fluid Injection Induced Seismicity
Online survey responses from users of the Joint Fire Science Program Fire Science Exchange Network from February 2021
A gender and social vulnerability assessment approach
The Science Application for Risk Reduction (SAFRR) Scenario Retrospective 2006–21
Navigating the space between policy and practice: Toward a typology of collaborators in a federal land management agency
2021 assessment of the Joint Fire Science Program’s Fire Science Exchange Network
A typology of drought decision making: Synthesizing across cases to understand drought preparedness and response actions
Navigating climate adaptation on public lands: How views on ecosystem change and scale interact with management approaches
Natural resource management decision-making under climate uncertainty: Building social-ecological resilience in southwestern Colorado
Ecological drought: Accounting for the non-human impacts of water shortage in the Upper Missouri Headwaters Basin, Montana, USA
A survey of Bureau of Land Management employees on collaboration and alternative dispute resolution
Coping with earthquakes induced by fluid injection
U.S. Geological Survey core science systems strategy: characterizing, synthesizing, and understanding the critical zone through a modular science framework
Disputes over science and dispute resolution approaches - A survey of Bureau of Reclamation employees
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.