Raymond, Christopher
- Department of Landscape Architecture, Planning and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Review article2018Peer reviewedOpen access
Muhar, Andreas; Raymond, Christopher M.; van den Born, Riyan J. G.; Bauer, Nicole; Boeck, Kerstin; Braito, Michael; Buijs, Arjen; Flint, Courtney; de Groot, Wouter T.; Ives, Christopher D.; Mitrofanenko, Tamara; Plieninger, Tobias; Tucker, Catherine; van Riper, Carena J.
Existing frameworks for analysing interactions between social and natural systems (e.g. Social-Ecological Systems framework, Ecosystem Services concept) do not sufficiently consider and operationalize the dynamic interactions between people's values, attitudes and understandings of the human-nature relationship at both individual and collective levels. We highlight the relevance of individual and collective understandings of the human-nature relationship as influencing factors for environmental behaviour, which may be reflected in natural resource management conflicts, and review the diversity of existing social-cultural concepts, frameworks and associated research methods. Particular emphasis is given to the context-sensitivity of social-cultural concepts in decision-making. These aspects are translated into a conceptual model aiming not to replace but to expand and enhance existing frameworks. Integrating this model into existing frameworks provides a tool for the exploration of how social-cultural concepts of nature interact with existing contexts to influence governance of social-ecological systems.
human-nature relationship; social-ecological system; environmental behaviour; governance
Journal of Environmental Planning and Management
2018, Volume: 61, number: 5-6, pages: 756-777 Publisher: Informa {UK} Limited
Other Earth and Related Environmental Sciences
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09640568.2017.1327424
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/86256