T
Tamara U. Wall
Researcher at Desert Research Institute
Publications - 18
Citations - 1167
Tamara U. Wall is an academic researcher from Desert Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stakeholder & Coproduction. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 15 publications receiving 922 citations. Previous affiliations of Tamara U. Wall include National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration & University of Montana.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Moving toward the Deliberate Coproduction of Climate Science Knowledge
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present five approaches to collaborative research that can be used to structure a coproduction process that each suit different types of research or management questions, decision-making contexts, and resources and skills available to contribute to the process of engagement.
Journal Article
Moving Toward the Deliberate Co-Production of Climate Science Knowledge
Journal ArticleDOI
Foundations of translational ecology
Carolyn A. F. Enquist,Stephen T. Jackson,Gregg M. Garfin,Frank W. Davis,Leah R. Gerber,Jeremy S. Littell,Jennifer L. Tank,Adam J. Terando,Tamara U. Wall,Benjamin S. Halpern,J. Kevin Hiers,Toni Lyn Morelli,Elizabeth McNie,Nathan L. Stephenson,Matthew A. Williamson,Connie A. Woodhouse,Laurie Yung,Mark W. Brunson,Kimberly R. Hall,Lauren M. Hallett,Dawn M. Lawson,Max A. Moritz,Koren R. Nydick,Amber Pairis,Andrea J. Ray,Claudia M. Regan,Hugh D. Safford,Hugh D. Safford,Mark W. Schwartz,M. Rebecca Shaw +29 more
TL;DR: Carolyn AF Enquist*, Stephen T Jackson, Gregg M Garfin, Frank W Davis, Leah R Gerber, Jeremy A Littell, Jennifer L Tank, Adam J Terando, Tamara U Wall, Benjamin Halpern, J Kevin Hiers, Toni Lyn Morelli, Elizabeth McNie, Nathan L Stephenson, Matthew A Williamson, Connie A Woodhouse, Laurie Yung, Mark W Brunson, Kimberly R Hall, Lauren M Hallett, Dawn M Lawson, Max A Moritz, Koren Nydick, Amber Pairis, Andrea J
Journal ArticleDOI
Developing Evaluation Indicators to Improve the Process of Coproducing Usable Climate Science
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors synthesize the social science theory of coproduction of knowledge, the metrics currently used to evaluate usable or actionable science in several federal agencies, and insights from experienced climate researchers and program managers to develop a set of 45 indicators supporting an evaluation framework for coproduced usable climate science.