| Literature DB >> 30220917 |
Christopher D Ives1,2, David J Abson2, Henrik von Wehrden2, Christian Dorninger2, Kathleen Klaniecki2, Joern Fischer2.
Abstract
Calls for humanity to 'reconnect to nature' have grown increasingly louder from both scholars and civil society. Yet, there is relatively little coherence about what reconnecting to nature means, why it should happen and how it can be achieved. We present a conceptual framework to organise existing literature and direct future research on human-nature connections. Five types of connections to nature are identified: material, experiential, cognitive, emotional, and philosophical. These various types have been presented as causes, consequences, or treatments of social and environmental problems. From this conceptual base, we discuss how reconnecting people with nature can function as a treatment for the global environmental crisis. Adopting a social-ecological systems perspective, we draw upon the emerging concept of 'leverage points'-places in complex systems to intervene to generate change-and explore examples of how actions to reconnect people with nature can help transform society towards sustainability.Entities:
Keywords: Human–nature relationship; Social–ecological systems; Sustainability; Transformation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30220917 PMCID: PMC6132401 DOI: 10.1007/s11625-018-0542-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Sci ISSN: 1862-4057 Impact factor: 6.367
Fig. 1Conceptualisation of different types of human–nature connections, along a spectrum from people’s inner to outer worlds (x-axis), and their relevance at different scales of social aggregation (y-axis). While presented as independent categories here in this figure, in reality, each type of human–nature connection may interact with the others
Descriptions of different types of nature connection
| Connection | Description | Analytical scale | Key literature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Material | Consumption of goods/materials from nature (e.g., food, fibre) | Can be analysed for individuals or societies. Often connected to system characteristics. Needs to be spatially explicit (e.g., material flows within or between focal landscapes) | Material flow analysis |
| Experiential | Direct interaction with natural environments (e.g., parks, forests). Note that qualities of connections may vary substantially | Normally measured for individuals, but can be aggregated to the societal scale | Soga and Gaston ( |
| Cognitive | Knowledge or awareness of the environment and attitudes/values towards nature | Individual | Bradley et al. ( |
| Emotional | Feelings of attachment to or empathy towards nature | Individual | Emotional affinity towards nature scale |
| Philosophical | Perspective or world view on what nature is, why it matters, and how humans ought to interact with it (e.g., master, participant, steward) | Relevant to individuals, as well as to dominant views at the societal scale | Van den Born ( |
Fig. 2Hypothesised mechanisms by which interventions for reconnecting people with nature can bring about system change. More externally-defined connections to nature (e.g., material and experiential connections) are more likely to influence system parameters (such as resource stocks and flows), while internally-defined connections (such as philosophical perspectives and emotional responses to nature) are more likely to influence the underlying goals and values embodied in a system. We note that connections to nature may affect system properties in more complex ways than are represented here, and system attributes and different types of interventions are likely to interact