Tomas Buitendijk , Ashley Cahillane , John Brannigan , Tasman P. Crowe
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引用次数: 0
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.
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.