Twenty years of ecosystem services: How far have we come and how far do we still need to go?
Date
Authors
Costanza, Robert
de Groot, Rudolph
Braat, Leon
Kubiszewski, Ida
Fioramonti, Lorenzo
Sutton, Paul
Farber, Stephen
Grasso, Monica
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
It has been 20 years since two seminal publications about ecosystem services came out: an edited book by Gretchen Daily and an article in Nature by a group of ecologists and economists on the value of the world’s ecosystem services. Both of these have been very highly cited and kicked off an explosion of research, policy, and applications of the idea, including the establishment of this journal. This article traces the history leading up to these publications and the subsequent debates, research, institutions, policies, on-the-ground actions, and controversies they triggered. It also explores what we have learned during this period about the key issues: from definitions to classification to valuation, from integrated modelling to public participation and communication, and the evolution of institutions and governance innovation. Finally, it provides recommendations for the future. In particular, it points to the weakness of the mainstream economic approaches to valuation, growth, and development. It concludes that the substantial contributions of ecosystem services to the sustainable wellbeing of humans and the rest of nature should be at the core of the fundamental change needed in economic theory and practice if we are to achieve a societal transformation to a sustainable and desirable future.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Ecosystem Services
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31
Downloads
File
Description