Linking equity, power, and stakeholders' roles in relation to ecosystem services

被引:39
|
作者
Vallet, Ameline [1 ,2 ]
Locatelli, Bruno [3 ,4 ]
Levrel, Harold [2 ]
Dendoncker, Nicolas [5 ]
Barnaud, Cecile [6 ]
Quispe Conde, Yesica [7 ]
机构
[1] Univ Paris Saclay, Univ Paris Sud, CNRS, AgroParisTech,Ecol Systemat Evolut, Orsay, France
[2] Univ Paris Saclay, Ecole Ponts ParisTech, AgroParisTech, Cirad,CNRS,EHESS,CIRED, Nogent Sur Marne, France
[3] Univ Montpellier, Forests & Soc, CIRAD, Montpellier, France
[4] CIFOR, Lima, Peru
[5] Univ Namur, Transit Inst, Inst Life Earth & Environm, Dept Geog, Namur, Belgium
[6] Univ Toulouse, DYNAFOR, INPT, INRA, Toulouse, France
[7] SUNASS Apurimac, Abancay, Apurimac, Peru
来源
ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY | 2019年 / 24卷 / 02期
关键词
adaptive comanagement; ecosystem management; ecosystem services governance; environmental justice; landscape sustainability; trade-off; ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE; TRADE-OFFS; RESOURCE; GOVERNANCE; NETWORKS; BENEFITS; CONSEQUENCES; ADAPTATION; VALUATION; FRAMEWORK;
D O I
10.5751/ES-10904-240214
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The issues of power and equity are gaining attention in research on ecosystem services (ESs). Stakeholders benefiting from ESs are not necessarily able or authorized to participate in ES management. Thus, we have proposed an analytical framework to identify and qualify stakeholders' roles in relation to ES flows. Building on existing frameworks in the ES literature, we aimed to unravel the different direct and indirect management contributions to ES flows and link them to ES benefits. Direct management targets the functioning of ecosystems, the flows of services, and the benefits received by society, whereas indirect management facilitates, controls, or restricts the activities of direct managers. We applied this framework to the Maririo watershed (Peru) to describe stakeholders' roles using a set of 8 ESs. We have discussed the implications of our findings in terms of equity and power distribution. We conducted faceto-face semistructured interviews with representatives of 52 watershed stakeholders to understand how they managed and benefited from ESs. We used statistical analysis (permutation tests) to detect significant differences in the number of received and managed ESs among stakeholder sectors, i.e., civil society, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), business, and the public sector, and scales, from local to national levels. Indirect forms of ES management were more frequent than direct ones for all ESs. Water quantity, water quality, and agricultural production were managed by the largest number of stakeholder types. The differences in the number of stakeholder types benefiting from and managing ESs could result from intentional choices, e.g., preferences for local benefits. We also found clear differences in the identity of stakeholders who managed or benefited from ESs. Local stakeholders and the business sector benefited from a higher number of ESs, and public organizations and NGOs were most involved in ES management. More equitable governance of ESs should aim to integrate more diverse stakeholders into decision making. Further empirical research could use our framework to explore the factors determining stakeholders' roles and power distribution. There is a particular need to understand how rights, endowments, and entitlements, as well as spatial configuration, underpin inequities in different social and cultural contexts.
引用
收藏
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Marine ecosystem services: Linking indicators to their classification
    Hattam, Caroline
    Atkins, Jonathan P.
    Beaumont, Nicola
    Boerger, Tobias
    Bohnke-Henrichs, Anne
    Burdon, Daryl
    de Groot, Rudolf
    Hoefnagel, Ellen
    Nunes, Paulo A. L. D.
    Piwowarczyk, Joanna
    Sastre, Sergio
    Austen, Melanie C.
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2015, 49 : 61 - 75
  • [22] Linking Ecosystem Services with Cultural Landscape Research
    Schaich, Harald
    Bieling, Claudia
    Plieninger, Tobias
    GAIA-ECOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES FOR SCIENCE AND SOCIETY, 2010, 19 (04): : 269 - 277
  • [23] Disaggregating the evidence linking biodiversity and ecosystem services
    Taylor H. Ricketts
    Keri B. Watson
    Insu Koh
    Alicia M. Ellis
    Charles C. Nicholson
    Stephen Posner
    Leif L. Richardson
    Laura J. Sonter
    Nature Communications, 7
  • [24] Linking soils to ecosystem services - A global review
    Adhikari, Kabindra
    Hartemink, Alfred E.
    GEODERMA, 2016, 262 : 101 - 111
  • [25] Linking Ecosystem Services, Rehabilitation, and River Hydrogeomorphology
    Thorp, James H.
    Flotemersch, Joseph E.
    Delong, Michael D.
    Casper, Andrew F.
    Thoms, Martin C.
    Ballantyne, Ford
    Williams, Bradley S.
    O'Neill, Brian J.
    Haase, C. Stephen
    BIOSCIENCE, 2010, 60 (01) : 67 - 74
  • [26] Linking ecosystem services to livelihoods in southern Africa
    Wisely, Samantha M.
    Alexander, Kathleen
    Mahlaba, Themb'a
    Cassidy, Lin
    ECOSYSTEM SERVICES, 2018, 30 : 339 - 341
  • [27] Linking inequalities and ecosystem services in Latin America
    Laterra, Pedro
    Nahuelhual, Laura
    Vallejos, Maria
    Berrouet, Lina
    Arroyo Perez, Erika
    Enrico, Lucas
    Jimenez-Sierra, Cecilia
    Mejia, Kathya
    Meli, Paula
    Rincon-Ruiz, Alexander
    Salas, Danilo
    Spiric, Jovanka
    Villegas, Juan Camilo
    Villegas-Palacio, Clara
    ECOSYSTEM SERVICES, 2019, 36
  • [28] Disaggregating the evidence linking biodiversity and ecosystem services
    Ricketts, Taylor H.
    Watson, Keri B.
    Koh, Insu
    Ellis, Alicia M.
    Nicholson, Charles C.
    Posner, Stephen
    Richardson, Leif L.
    Sonter, Laura J.
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2016, 7
  • [29] Frontiers in Cultural Ecosystem Services: Toward Greater Equity and Justice in Ecosystem Services Research and Practice
    Gould, Rachelle K.
    Bremer, Leah L.
    Pascua, Pua'Ala
    Meza-Prado, Kelly
    BIOSCIENCE, 2020, 70 (12) : 1093 - 1107
  • [30] Linking ecosystem pressures and marine macroinvertebrate ecosystem services in mangroves and seagrasses
    Santos, Alice Resende
    Bento, Marta
    Broszeit, Stefanie
    Paula, Jose
    Correia, Alexandra Marcal
    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2024, 732 : 15 - 32