Abstract
Current public debates about the environment often assume a clear relationship between resource availability and population growth: more people mean fewer resources. Over the past 3 decades scholars in the social and natural sciences have disassembled the notion of carrying capacity to demonstrate that relationships between humans and their ecosystems are more open fluid and complex than the concept allows. Despite scholarly recognition of the problems with carrying capacity the term and its underlying logic endures. By reframing the concept as a folk model the authors continue to highlight ecological relationships and advance arguments for conservation but also acknowledge the complexity of human-environment links which formal applications of carrying capacity ignore. (authors)
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