Key features for more successful place-based sustainability research on social-ecological systems: a Programme on Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS) perspective

This paper presents a conceptual framework that unpacks the links between ecosystems to the well-being of different people, and sheds light on factors affecting ecosystem service elasticity.

Photo: Oskar Henriksson/Azote

The relationship between ecosystem quality and human well-being is variable, complex, and context-dependent, and we still lack understanding of how ecosystem services enhance multidimensional human well-being, and how well-being is affected by ecosystem change. In this paper, in the PECS special issue in Ecology and Society, Daw et al. (2016) introduce the core concept of “ecosystem service elasticity”, which captures how human well-being changes in response to increases or declines in ecosystem quality. To interrogate ecosystem service elasticity, they present a conceptual framework that maps the social and ecological links between ecosystems and the well-being of different beneficiaries. The framework is then applied to five different regulating, provisioning, and cultural ecosystem services studied in East Africa by the SPACES project. While requiring an interdisciplinary effort, the authors suggest that ecosystem service elasticity and the framework can be used to identify opportunities to reduce the vulnerability of different social actors to ecosystem change, or enhance the contribution of ecosystem services to well-being.

PROJECTS:
SPACES

PUBLISHED IN:
Ecology and Society

YEAR: 2016