39 research outputs found

    The resilience of indigenous knowledge in small-scale African agriculture: key drivers

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    The successful use of indigenous knowledge (IK) in development practice in rural Africa over the last couple of decades has proved to be elusive and disappointing. Using empirical field data from northern Malawi, this study suggests that the two key drivers for farmers in this area are household food security and the maintenance of soil fertility. Indigenous ways of knowing underpin the agricultural system which has been developed, rather than the adoption of more modern, ‘scientific’ ways, to deliver against these drivers. Such IKs, however, are deeply embedded in the economic, social and cultural environments in which they operate

    Resilience of small-scale societies: a view from drylands.

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    To gain insights on long-term social-ecological resilience, we examined adaptive responses of small-scale societies to dryland-related hazards in different regions and chronological periods, spanning from the mid-Holocene to the present. Based on evidence from Africa (Sahara and Sahel), Asia (south margin of the Thar desert), and Europe (South Spain), we discuss key traits and coping practices of small-scale societies that are potentially relevant for building resilience. The selected case studies illustrate four main coping mechanisms: mobility and migration, storage, commoning, and collective action driven by religious beliefs. Ultimately, the study of resilience in the context of drylands emphasizes the importance of adaptive traits and practices that are distinctive of small-scale societies: a strong social-ecological coupling, a solid body of traditional ecological knowledge, and a high degree of internal cohesion and self-organization.SP2016http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol21/iss2/art53

    Benefits of restoring ecosystem services in urban areas

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    Cities are a key nexus of the relationship between people and nature and are huge centers of demand for ecosystem services and also generate extremely large environmental impacts. Current projections of rapid expansion of urban areas present fundamental challenges and also opportunities to design more livable, healthy and resilient cities (e.g. adaptation to climate change effects). We present the results of an analysis of benefits of ecosystem services in urban areas. Empirical analyses included estimates of monetary benefits from urban ecosystem services based on data from 25 urban areas in the USA, Canada, and China. Our results show that investing in ecological infrastructure in cities, and the ecological restoration and rehabilitation of ecosystems such as rivers, lakes, and woodlands occurring in urban areas, may not only be ecologically and socially desirable, but also quite often, economically advantageous, even based on the most traditional economic approaches.Peer reviewe

    Health and climate related ecosystem services provided by street trees in the urban environment

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    Ecosystem services and the commodification of nature

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    This chapter examines the way commodification processes are playing out in the domain of human-nature relationships. More specifically, it looks at how and to what extent this phenomenon has been facilitated by the concept of ecosystem services, a generic term of wide use in the environmental science and policy to denote the tangible and intangible benefits humans obtain from nature. The chapter explores the connection between the underlying tenets of the ecosystem services framework and the commodification process and discusses its most salient formulation in the form of Payments for Ecosystem Services. The chapter places this phenomenon in the context of the broader trend of neoliberalization of nature conservation and discusses its potential risks. The chapter finally discusses the idea of de-commodification and explores options through which a harmful expansion of markets into human-nature relationships may be contained or reversed
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