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Values held by Swedish primary school students towards forest ecosystems and the relevance for a nature’s contribution to people approach

Goodwin, Sean ; Brogaard, Sara LU and Krause, Torsten LU (2019) In Ecosystems and People 15(1). p.331-346
Abstract
How the concept of value is defined within ecosystem services operates as a filter through which important ecosystem features are identified by the specific benefits they provide to society and individuals. This value narrative reflects intrinsic and instrumental concepts which have been challenged by the Nature’s Contribution to People approach in additionally highlighting the importance of relational values, stemming from socio-cultural and ethical dimensions of human relationships with nature and ecosystems. Perceived as important for the interface between ecosystems and society, relational values are yet to be operationalised in ecosystem assessment processes. This study addresses the question of how this can be done by using a mixed... (More)
How the concept of value is defined within ecosystem services operates as a filter through which important ecosystem features are identified by the specific benefits they provide to society and individuals. This value narrative reflects intrinsic and instrumental concepts which have been challenged by the Nature’s Contribution to People approach in additionally highlighting the importance of relational values, stemming from socio-cultural and ethical dimensions of human relationships with nature and ecosystems. Perceived as important for the interface between ecosystems and society, relational values are yet to be operationalised in ecosystem assessment processes. This study addresses the question of how this can be done by using a mixed method approach encompassing quantitative and qualitative data and methodologies. Our study focuses on how school children aged 10-12 years in Sweden (n=400) value forest ecosystem services, and further hints at the contextual factors that mediate their value perception. Children are an important demographic for reasons of intergenerational equity, and because of the temporal inertia of intensively managed forest ecosystems in Sweden. Our results show that students display complex notions of value encompassing intrinsic, instrumental and relational values alike, highlighting the importance of a broader discussion on the valuation of ecosystems through mixed methods approaches. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Sweden, school children, forest ecosystem services, values, education
in
Ecosystems and People
volume
15
issue
1
pages
331 - 346
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:85075246251
ISSN
2639-5916
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5a36933f-d538-4bf7-9910-848323d96035
date added to LUP
2019-06-24 09:03:47
date last changed
2022-04-26 02:06:58
@article{5a36933f-d538-4bf7-9910-848323d96035,
  abstract     = {{How the concept of value is defined within ecosystem services operates as a filter through which important ecosystem features are identified by the specific benefits they provide to society and individuals. This value narrative reflects intrinsic and instrumental concepts which have been challenged by the Nature’s Contribution to People approach in additionally highlighting the importance of relational values, stemming from socio-cultural and ethical dimensions of human relationships with nature and ecosystems. Perceived as important for the interface between ecosystems and society, relational values are yet to be operationalised in ecosystem assessment processes. This study addresses the question of how this can be done by using a mixed method approach encompassing quantitative and qualitative data and methodologies. Our study focuses on how school children aged 10-12 years in Sweden (n=400) value forest ecosystem services, and further hints at the contextual factors that mediate their value perception. Children are an important demographic for reasons of intergenerational equity, and because of the temporal inertia of intensively managed forest ecosystems in Sweden. Our results show that students display complex notions of value encompassing intrinsic, instrumental and relational values alike, highlighting the importance of a broader discussion on the valuation of ecosystems through mixed methods approaches.}},
  author       = {{Goodwin, Sean and Brogaard, Sara and Krause, Torsten}},
  issn         = {{2639-5916}},
  keywords     = {{Sweden; school children; forest ecosystem services; values; education}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{331--346}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Ecosystems and People}},
  title        = {{Values held by Swedish primary school students towards forest ecosystems and the relevance for a nature’s contribution to people approach}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/98512712/Goodwin_Brogaard_and_Krause_2019_Values_held_by_Swedish_primary_school_students_towards_forest_ecosystems_and_the_relevance_for_a_nature_s_contributions_to_people_approach.pdf}},
  volume       = {{15}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}