为什么要在危机时刻重新与自然联系?生态系统有助于恢复力和福祉的人回到希腊的土地

IF 4.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
K. Benessaiah, K. M. Chan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候变化、生态系统退化、经济、政治和社会动荡等多重危机严重影响着人们的福祉。生态系统服务(或自然对人类的贡献)在危机期间发挥着关键作用,需要进一步阐明。大多数研究都集中在生态系统在危机时期提供的物质利益上,很少关注相互交织的无形、非物质维度。然而,在需要的时候,这些无形的生态系统效益往往对人们的复原力和福祉至关重要。我们通过对欧洲经济危机期间希腊回归土地运动的案例研究,研究了自然在危机时期对恢复力和幸福感的作用。我们对76个回到土地上的家庭进行了半结构化访谈,以了解为什么人们寻求与自然重新联系,以及他们的经历是什么。我们的研究结果表明,与自然的重新连接提供了物质生态系统效益,如食物和收入,通常来自以前被低估的生态系统(如废弃的果园),以及非物质生态系统效益,如心理健康,安全感,平静和独立的感觉,帮助人们应对危机并适应和转型到新的社会生态环境。参与者报告说,重新与自然联系也改变了他们的关系价值观。人们提到获得新的视角、意义以及与他人和自然世界的关系。虽然危机严重影响了人们的物质生活,但重新与自然联系有助于人们应对危机,但也促使人们对什么是美好生活进行了深刻的重新评估,导致他们的主观幸福感和关系幸福感发生了变化。这提高了他们的行动能力和计划未来的能力(他们的机构)。总体而言,我们的研究强调了危机期间与自然及其多维生态系统利益的重新联系如何对个人的恢复力、福祉及其与环境的关系产生变革性影响。我们的研究表明,不仅需要重视生态系统服务的物质效益,还需要重视影响幸福感和恢复力的物质、主观和相关维度的无形、非物质效益。在《华尔街日报》博客上阅读免费的《简明语言摘要》。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Why reconnect to nature in times of crisis? Ecosystem contributions to the resilience and well‐being of people going back to the land in Greece
Abstract Multiple crises, including climate change, ecosystem degradation, economic, political and social upheavals, severely impact people's well‐being. Ecosystem services (or nature's contributions to people) play a key role during crisis that needs to be further elucidated. Most research focusses on the material benefits that ecosystems provide in times of crisis, paying less attention to intertwined intangible, nonmaterial dimensions. Yet, these intangible ecosystem benefits are often crucial for people's resilience and well‐being in times of need. We examine the role that nature plays for resilience and well‐being in times of crisis through a case study of Greece's back‐to‐the‐land movement during the European economic crisis. We conducted semistructured interviews with 76 households that had gone back‐to‐the‐land to understand why people sought to reconnect to nature and what their experiences were. Our results show that reconnecting to nature provided material ecosystem benefits such as food and income often from previously undervalued ecosystems (e.g. abandoned orchards) as well as nonmaterial ecosystem benefits such as mental health, feelings of safety, calm and independence that helped people cope with the crisis and adapt and transform to new socio‐ecological contexts. Participants reported that reconnecting to nature also changed their relational values. People mentioned gaining new perspectives, meanings and relationships with others and the natural world. While the crisis significantly affected people's material well‐being, reconnecting with nature helped people cope with crisis but also prompted a profound reevaluation of what constitutes a good life, leading to changes in their subjective and relational well‐being. This enhanced their capacity to act and plan for the future (their agency). Overall, our research emphasizes how reconnecting to nature and its multidimensional ecosystem benefits during crises can have transformative effects on individuals' resilience, well‐being and their relationships with the environment. Our research shows that not only material benefits of ecosystem services need to be valued but also intangible, nonmaterial benefits that affect material, subjective and relational dimensions of well‐being and resilience. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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来源期刊
People and Nature
People and Nature Multiple-
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
9.80%
发文量
103
审稿时长
12 weeks
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