Valuing plurality: Environmental humanities approaches to ecosystem services and Nature's Contributions to People

IF 4.9 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Environmental Science & Policy Pub Date : 2024-09-20 DOI:10.1016/j.envsci.2024.103907
Tomas Buitendijk , Ashley Cahillane , John Brannigan , Tasman P. Crowe
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Abstract

Ecosystem services and Nature’s Contributions to People frameworks allow policymakers and other stakeholders to understand and value the different benefits received by society from processes in the natural environment. However, they face challenges when assessing cultural and/or non-quantifiable services and contributions, and their linked benefits. They can also fall short when incorporating plural conceptions of value and their knowledge frameworks, including those of Indigenous People and/or local communities. Finally, with regard to future ecosystem management, they tend to rely on linear rather than speculative, idealistic assessments of future human-ecosystem interactions. In this Perspective article, we show how these challenges can be met by developing a cross-disciplinary dialogue with the field of environmental humanities. We demonstrate that incorporating environmental humanities principles and methods can improve ecosystem services and Nature’s Contributions to People frameworks by making cultural and intangible services/contributions and their benefits amenable to more inclusive assessment, based on a relational, ecocentric (re-)evaluation of human-nature relationships. The environmental humanities encourage the use of both Indigenous Knowledges and grassroots knowledges and offer non-linear ways of thinking about future ecosystem management, for example using speculative imaginaries. In exchange, dialogue with ecosystem services and Nature’s Contributions to People frameworks offers a further pathway to impact for the environmental humanities. We conclude by recommending multiple instruments that put the dialogue between ecosystem services, Nature’s Contributions to People, and the environmental humanities into practice.

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重视多元化:生态系统服务和自然对人类贡献的环境人文方法
生态系统服务和大自然对人类的贡献框架使政策制定者和其他利益相关者能够了解和重视社会从自然环境过程中获得的不同效益。然而,在评估文化和/或不可量化的服务和贡献及其相关效益时,它们面临着挑战。在纳入多元价值概念及其知识框架(包括土著人和/或当地社区的概念和框架)时,它们也会出现不足。最后,关于未来的生态系统管理,它们往往依赖于对未来人类-生态系统互动的线性评估,而非推测性、理想化的评估。在这篇 "视角 "文章中,我们展示了如何通过与环境人文领域开展跨学科对话来应对这些挑战。我们表明,纳入环境人文学科的原则和方法可以改进生态系统服务和大自然对人类的贡献框架,使文化和无形服务/贡献及其益处适合于更具包容性的评估,其基础是对人与自然关系的关系式、以生态为中心的(重新)评估。环境人文学科鼓励使用土著知识和基层知识,并提供非线性的方式来思考未来的生态系统管理,例如使用推测性想象。作为交换,与生态系统服务和大自然对人类的贡献框架的对话为环境人文学科的影响提供了另一条途径。最后,我们建议将生态系统服务、"大自然对人类的贡献 "和环境人文学科之间的对话付诸实践的多种工具。
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来源期刊
Environmental Science & Policy
Environmental Science & Policy 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
10.90
自引率
8.30%
发文量
332
审稿时长
68 days
期刊介绍: Environmental Science & Policy promotes communication among government, business and industry, academia, and non-governmental organisations who are instrumental in the solution of environmental problems. It also seeks to advance interdisciplinary research of policy relevance on environmental issues such as climate change, biodiversity, environmental pollution and wastes, renewable and non-renewable natural resources, sustainability, and the interactions among these issues. The journal emphasises the linkages between these environmental issues and social and economic issues such as production, transport, consumption, growth, demographic changes, well-being, and health. However, the subject coverage will not be restricted to these issues and the introduction of new dimensions will be encouraged.
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