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Sociocultural valuation of ecosystem services for operational ecosystem management: mapping applications by decision contexts in Europe

  • Sociocultural valuation (SCV) of ecosystem services (ES) discloses the principles, importance or preferences expressed by people towards nature. Although ES research has increasingly addressed sociocultural values in past years, little effort has been made to systematically review the components of sociocultural valuation applications for different decision contexts (i.e. awareness raising, accounting, priority setting, litigation and instrument design). In this analysis, we investigate the characteristics of 48 different sociocultural valuation applications—characterised by unique combinations of decision context, methods, data collection formats and participants—across ten European case studies. Our findings show that raising awareness for the sociocultural value of ES by capturing people’s perspective and establishing the status quo, was found the most frequent decision context in case studies, followed by priority setting and instrument development. Accounting and litigation issues were not addressed in any of the applications. WeSociocultural valuation (SCV) of ecosystem services (ES) discloses the principles, importance or preferences expressed by people towards nature. Although ES research has increasingly addressed sociocultural values in past years, little effort has been made to systematically review the components of sociocultural valuation applications for different decision contexts (i.e. awareness raising, accounting, priority setting, litigation and instrument design). In this analysis, we investigate the characteristics of 48 different sociocultural valuation applications—characterised by unique combinations of decision context, methods, data collection formats and participants—across ten European case studies. Our findings show that raising awareness for the sociocultural value of ES by capturing people’s perspective and establishing the status quo, was found the most frequent decision context in case studies, followed by priority setting and instrument development. Accounting and litigation issues were not addressed in any of the applications. We reveal that applications for particular decision contexts are methodologically similar, and that decision contexts determine the choice of methods, data collection formats and participants involved. Therefore, we conclude that understanding the decision context is a critical first step to designing and carrying out fit-for-purpose sociocultural valuation of ES in operational ecosystem management.show moreshow less

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Author details:Ariane WalzORCiDGND, Katja SchmidtGND, Ana Ruiz-FrauORCiD, Kimberly A. NicholasORCiD, Adeline Bierry, Aster de Vries Lentsch, Apostol Dyankov, Deirdre Joyce, Anja H. Liski, Nuria Marba, Ines T. RosarioGND, Samantha S. K. Scholte
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-019-01506-7
ISSN:1436-3798
ISSN:1436-378X
Title of parent work (English):Regional environmental change
Publisher:Springer
Place of publishing:Heidelberg
Publication type:Article
Language:English
Date of first publication:2019/06/20
Publication year:2019
Release date:2020/10/19
Tag:Ecosystem services; Local-to-regional scale; Operational use; Sociocultural valuation
Volume:19
Issue:8
Number of pages:15
First page:2245
Last Page:2259
Funding institution:EU-FP7 project OPERAs [FP7-ENV-697 2012-308393]
Organizational units:Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät / Institut für Geowissenschaften
DDC classification:5 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik / 55 Geowissenschaften, Geologie / 550 Geowissenschaften
Peer review:Referiert
Publishing method:Open Access
Open Access / Hybrid Open-Access
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