ISBN-13: 9780415825399 / Angielski / Twarda / 2013 / 224 str.
ISBN-13: 9780415825399 / Angielski / Twarda / 2013 / 224 str.
Humankind benefits from a multitude of resources and processes that are supplied by natural ecosystems, and collectively these benefits are known as ecosystem services. Interest in this topic has grown exponentially over the last decade, as economists have tried to quantify these benefits to justify ecosystem management interventions. Yet, as this book demonstrates, the implications for justice and injustice have rarely been explored and works on environmental justice are only now addressing the importance of ecosystem services.
The authors establish important new middle ground in arguments between conservationists and critics of market-based interventions such as Payment for Ecosystem Services. Neither can ecosystem management be separated from justice concerns, as conservationists like to believe, nor is it in fundamental opposition to justice, as critics like to put it. Management interventions tend to create justices and injustices simultaneously. The book develops this novel interpretation of justice in ecosystem management through analyses of prominent governance interventions and the conceptual underpinnings of the ecosystem services framework. Key examples described are river basin management and REDD for forest ecosystems.
The analyses demonstrate that interventions create opportunities for enhancing social justice, yet also reveal critical design features that cause presumably technical interventions to generate injustices.