Details zur Publikation

Kategorie Textpublikation
Referenztyp Buchkapitel
DOI 10.1016/bs.aecr.2022.04.009
Titel (primär) Governance to manage the complexity of nature's contributions to people co-production
Titel (sekundär) Pluralism in ecosystem governance
Autor Isaac, R.; Kachler, J.; Winkler, K.J.; Albrecht, E.; Felipe-Lucia, M.R.; Martín-López, B.
Herausgeber Holzer, J.M.; Baird, J.; Hickey, G.M.
Quelle Advances in Ecological Research
Erscheinungsjahr 2022
Department iDiv; ESS
Band/Volume 66
Seite von 293
Seite bis 321
Sprache englisch
Topic T5 Future Landscapes
Keywords Institutions; Anthropogenic assets; Human assets; Coproduction; Nature's benefits to people
Abstract Nature's contributions to people (NCP) support people's quality of life and are generated by an interplay of both natural and anthropogenic capitals, known as NCP co-production, which also includes ecosystem services. A governance system of formal and informal institutions on different yet interlinked spatial, administrative, and temporal scales influences the management of these capitals underpinning the co-production of NCP. While the field of NCP governance is well established, the role of governance on natural and anthropogenic capitals in NCP co-production is under-researched, which might undermine its integration into decision-making. Here, we analyse how governance of anthropogenic capitals influencing NCP co-production has been researched in the scientific literature. We conducted two systematic literature reviews of publications on ecosystem service governance and ecosystem service and NCP co-production. We distinguish different modes of governance directed at NCP co-production following the classification described by Primmer et al. (2015)—hierarchical, scientific-technical, (adaptive)-collaborative governance and the governing of strategic behaviour. These governance modes resemble the pluralism in ecosystem services governance as they involve various actors and governance approaches. We tie these governance modes to the anthropogenic capitals (human, social, physical, or financial) involved in NCP co-production at the respective administrative, spatial, and temporal scales. Our results show that the literature refers to a variety of combinations of governance modes and anthropogenic capitals involved in NCP co-production. Anthropogenic capitals are mostly studied in multiple governance modes, with material NCP being the most commonly NCP investigated. Our results highlight a major research gap in the NCP co-production literature, which currently neglects the role of governance when assessing the interplay of anthropogenic and natural capitals.
dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=26197
Isaac, R., Kachler, J., Winkler, K.J., Albrecht, E., Felipe-Lucia, M.R., Martín-López, B. (2022):
Governance to manage the complexity of nature's contributions to people co-production
In: Holzer, J.M., Baird, J., Hickey, G.M. (eds.)
Pluralism in ecosystem governance
Advances in Ecological Research 66
Academic Press / Elsevier, London, p. 293 - 321 10.1016/bs.aecr.2022.04.009