Abrams, JesseGreiner, MichelleTimberlake, ThomasSchultz, Courtney A.Evans, Alexander M.Huber-Stearns, Heidi2020-10-292020-10-292020https://hdl.handle.net/1794/258472 pagesRecent federal forest and wildfire policies have increasingly united around a vision of restoring resilient landscapes in the face of increasingly destructive wildfires driven by altered forest conditions and climate change. The process of revising forest plans guiding national forest management presents opportunities to reorient management informed by concepts of resilience. This Joint Fire Science Program-funded research used case studies of three recently completed national forest plan revision processes to determine whether and how USDA Forest Service staff were able to plan for resilient outcomes. The lessons from our comparative analysis are relevant for forest managers and key stakeholders attempting to plan in pursuit of more resilient landscapes.en-USCreative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-USForest resilienceForest restorationForests and forestry--Climatic factorsForests and forestry--Fire managementUnited States. Forest ServicePlanning and managing for resilience : lessons from national forest plan revisionsOther