Ecosystem services have become a dominant paradigm for understanding how people derive well-being from ecosystems. However, the framework has been critiqued for over-emphasizing the availability of services as a proxy for benefits, and thus missing the socially-stratified ways that people access ecosystem services. We aim to contribute to ecosystem services’ theoretical treatment of access by drawing on ideas from political ecology (legitimacy) and anthropology (entanglement). We hypothesize that where customary and modern forms of resource management co-exist, changes in customary institutions will also change people’s ability to and means of benefiting from ecosystem services, with implications for well-being. We ask a) what are the const...
Ecosystem services research broadly assumes that an increased supply of nature’s goods and services ...
Indigenous and local peoples' connections with nature are not only limited to the benefits or servic...
Indigenous and local peoples’ connections with nature are not only limited to the benefits or servic...
Ecosystem services have become a dominant paradigm for understanding how people derive well-being fr...
Ecosystem services are supplied by nature but, by definition, are received by people. Ecosystem serv...
Humans have changed the climate, lands and seas, forests and coasts, in ways that may destabilize ea...
Coastal ecosystems support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people worldwide. However, t...
AbstractThe concept of Ecosystem Services (ES), widely understood as the “benefits that humans recei...
The concept of Ecosystem Services (ES), widely understood as the "benefits that humans receive from ...
Coastal ecosystems support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people worldwide. However, t...
Ecosystem services (ES) are heralded as an approach that communicates across disciplines and between...
Analyzing how humans benefit from ecosystems and understanding how benefits relate to ecosystem gove...
Coral reefs underpin a range of ecosystem goods and services that contribute to the well‐being of mi...
Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) economically reward resource managers for the provision of eco...
Political ecology Cultural identity a b s t r a c t Ecosystem services research has highlighted the ...
Ecosystem services research broadly assumes that an increased supply of nature’s goods and services ...
Indigenous and local peoples' connections with nature are not only limited to the benefits or servic...
Indigenous and local peoples’ connections with nature are not only limited to the benefits or servic...
Ecosystem services have become a dominant paradigm for understanding how people derive well-being fr...
Ecosystem services are supplied by nature but, by definition, are received by people. Ecosystem serv...
Humans have changed the climate, lands and seas, forests and coasts, in ways that may destabilize ea...
Coastal ecosystems support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people worldwide. However, t...
AbstractThe concept of Ecosystem Services (ES), widely understood as the “benefits that humans recei...
The concept of Ecosystem Services (ES), widely understood as the "benefits that humans receive from ...
Coastal ecosystems support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people worldwide. However, t...
Ecosystem services (ES) are heralded as an approach that communicates across disciplines and between...
Analyzing how humans benefit from ecosystems and understanding how benefits relate to ecosystem gove...
Coral reefs underpin a range of ecosystem goods and services that contribute to the well‐being of mi...
Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) economically reward resource managers for the provision of eco...
Political ecology Cultural identity a b s t r a c t Ecosystem services research has highlighted the ...
Ecosystem services research broadly assumes that an increased supply of nature’s goods and services ...
Indigenous and local peoples' connections with nature are not only limited to the benefits or servic...
Indigenous and local peoples’ connections with nature are not only limited to the benefits or servic...