| Literature DB >> 30546485 |
Maria Jose Martinez-Harms1,2, Stefan Gelcich1, Rainer M Krug3, Fleur J F Maseyk2,4, Hannah Moersberger5, Archi Rastogi6, Geoffrey Wambugu7, Cornelia B Krug8,9, Eva M Spehn10, Unai Pascual11,12,13.
Abstract
Sustainability is a key challenge for humanity in the context of complex and unprecedented global changes. Future Earth, an international research initiative aiming to advance global sustainability science, has recently launched knowledge-action networks (KANs) as mechanisms for delivering its research strategy. The research initiative is currently developing a KAN on "natural assets" to facilitate and enable action-oriented research and synthesis towards natural assets sustainability. 'Natural assets' has been adopted by Future Earth as an umbrella term aiming to translate and bridge across different knowledge systems and different perspectives on peoples' relationships with nature. In this paper, we clarify the framing of Future Earth around natural assets emphasizing the recognition on pluralism and identifying the challenges of translating different visions about the role of natural assets, including via policy formulation, for local to global sustainability challenges. This understanding will be useful to develop inter-and transdisciplinary solutions for human-environmental problems by (i) embracing richer collaborative decision processes and building bridges across different perspectives; (ii) giving emphasis on the interactions between biophysical and socioeconomic drivers affecting the future trends of investments and disinvestments in natural assets; and (iii) focusing on social equity, power relationships for effective application of the natural assets approach. This understanding also intends to inform the scope of the natural asset KAN's research agenda to mobilize the translation of research into co-designed action for sustainability.Entities:
Keywords: Ecosystem services; Human actions; Knowledge exchange; Natural capital; Sustainability
Year: 2018 PMID: 30546485 PMCID: PMC6267164 DOI: 10.1007/s11625-018-0599-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Sci ISSN: 1862-4057 Impact factor: 6.367
Definitions of the most common terms used to explain people’s relationships with nature appearing in the literature
| Terms | Definitions | Links |
|---|---|---|
| Natural assets (NA) | Biotic and abiotic components that are owned and managed leading to the flow of ecosystem services over time (Mace et al. | NA = N = E |
| Natural capital (NC) | The abiotic and biotic elements of nature, including all natural resources (such as soil, water, vegetation, species) and physical, biological, and chemical processes (Mace et al. | NA → NC |
| Natural capital stocks (NCS) | Natural capital consists of stocks of natural assets—the amount of a material in a given pool, form, or state in an ecosystem (Mace et al. | NA → NC/NCS |
| Nature (N) | Natural world with an emphasis on the diversity of living organisms and their interactions among themselves and with their environment (Díaz et al. | NA = N=E |
| Ecosystem (E) | A dynamic complex of plant, animal, and microorganism communities and their non-living environment interacting as a functional unit (MA | E → BD |
| Biodiversity (BD) | The variability amongst the different levels (ecosystem, species, genes) of ecological organization including living organisms from all sources such as inter alia, terrestrial, marin,e and other aquatic ecosystems, and the ecological complexes of which they are part (CBD | E → BD → EP → ES |
| Ecosystem functions and processes (EP) | An interaction among organisms; ecological processes frequently regulate the dynamics of ecosystems and the structure and dynamics of biological communities (Mace et al. | E → BD → EP → ES |
| Nature contributions to people (NCP) | “All the contributions, both positive and negative, of living nature (diversity of organisms, ecosystems, and their associated ecological and evolutionary processes) to people’s quality of life” (Díaz et al. | NCP → ES |
| Ecosystem services (ES) | Benefits that flow from natural capital to society (Boyd and Banzhaf | ES → B |
| Flows (F) | It is the realization of an ecosystem service to people (Mitchell et al. | E → B |
| Benefits (B) | The ways in which ecosystems improve human well-being through the provision of ecosystem services (Mitchell et al. | ES → B→V |
| Values (V) | “Values can refer to a principle associated with a given worldview or cultural context, a preference someone has for a particular state of the world, the importance of something for itself or for others, or simply a measure” (Pascual et al. | V → NCP → A |
| Nature-based solutions (NBS) | Concept to promote nature as a means for providing solutions to climate mitigation and adaptation, food security, social and economic development (Nesshöver et al. | N ← NBS |
| Ecological infrastructure (EI) | Landscape elements, ecosystems, ecosystem services, and the interconnections within and between them (Bristow et al. | N ← EI |
| Governance (G) | Describes how the process of management decisions are made or the development of how policies and strategies may be constructed (Díaz et al. | NA ← A←G |
| Human actions (A) | Principles, rules, and guidelines designed to influence and determine all major decisions | NA ← A←G |
The links column indicates how the authors of this publication interpret the relationship between the concepts, indicating if they are interchangeable (=) or whether the concepts are interrelated but not the same (→)
Fig. 1Research available in the ISI Web of Knowledge identifying the number of publications within the eight most frequently researched topics on ecosystem services representing a sample of ~ 4000 papers (a) and natural capital representing a sample of ~ 350 papers (b), derived using a topic-modelling approach (https://code.google.com/archive/p/topic-modeling-tool/) (see supplementary material for detailed methods)
Definitions of the different knowledge process stages since its production to its transformation
| Knowledge process stage | Definition |
|---|---|
| Knowledge production | New knowledge produced as an output of a process either in isolation or co-created through participation and engagement with knowledge users (Berkes |
| Knowledge transfer | One-way process implying linear delivery and reception of knowledge (Fazey et al. |
| Co-production of knowledge | It is a collaboration process aiming to bring together a diversity of knowledge systems to address a defined problem and build an integrated understanding of that problem (Armitage et al. |
| Knowledge exchange | Multiple path knowledge process implying multiple delivery and reception of knowledge with mutual benefits and mutual learning (Fazey et al. |
| Knowledge mobilization | Multiple path knowledge process of linking scientists, decision-makers, and practitioners to improve the use of knowledge in practice (Edelstein |
| Sharing knowledge | Multiple path knowledge process implying multiple delivery and reception of knowledge with mutual benefits and mutual learning with greater recognition of the value of the knowledge of those sharing the knowledge (Fazey et al. |
| Knowledge translation | Implies communication of knowledge using a language modified for knowledge actors (Fazey et al. |
| Knowledge systems | Networks of agents, practices, and institutions that organize the production, transfer, and use of knowledge (Peterson et al. |
| Knowledge actors | Individual players involved in the exchange and mobilization of knowledge (knowledge producers, intermediaries and users) (Reed et al. |
| Knowledge-action | Outcome of the knowledge expressed in change of practices (Nguyen et al. |
| Knowledge transformation | Changing the knowledge towards a different state or condition through its internalization as social constructions. (Fazey et al. |
Fig. 2Example of one of the decision support tools to connect knowledge into action. The structured decision-making process represents a flowchart outlining decisions on natural assets. The figure represents a semi-dynamic process starting with the problem formulation and defining a well-defined social–ecological context followed by setting transparent objectives that are those natural assets elements relevant for the study context and the performance measures to test those objectives. The following stages are the dynamic part of the process (setting management alternatives and scenarios, assessment of trade-offs between potential management alternatives, prioritization of alternatives and the implementation of polices), in which one could link any of these stages at any direction. The arrow connecting the trade-offs with the objectives means a decision-maker’s value with respect to multiple objectives. Adaptive management is presented as the overarching cyclical pattern, such that the final stage cycle back to the problem formulation stage based on the outcome of the previous cycle. Adapted from Gregory et al. (2012)