ABSTRACT
The Routledge Handbook of Cultural Ecosystem Services provides an overview of Cultural Ecosystem Services (CES), which are the nonmaterial aspects of benefits that people derive from nature. These diverse and multifaceted contributions can include experiences, capabilities, and identities, among others. The Handbook addresses how these CES are valued, how they reflect human-nonhuman relationships, and what roles they can play in improved human well-being, ecosystem management, and trajectories towards sustainability.
This Handbook presents a wide array of perspectives on the roles CES can play in understanding relationships to nature, and on how those relationships might translate into policy. The Handbook includes philosophical approaches to CES, typologies and classifications of types of CES, and case studies of places, people, policies and projects engaging CES. Across seven distinctive Parts, the chapters deliver a number of important practical lessons on how to understand, measure, and value CES, and use examples and applications from around the world, including how CES apply across different biomes. The Handbook also includes a selection of compelling artworks that represent CES in different cultural contexts. The 91 authors represent 19 different countries, providing a rich range of experiences, including a strong focus on the Global South.
This book can serve as a comprehensive guide to researchers who are new to CES and wish to understand more about the field, and as a set of go-to instructions for experienced CES researchers. It can also inform policymakers who wish to better incorporate CES into their work.
The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter 1|10 pages
Introduction – cultural ecosystem services
part 1|29 pages
Approaching and defining CES
chapter 2|13 pages
Critiques of cultural ecosystem services, and ways forward that minimize them
chapter 3|14 pages
A net to hold our futures
part 2|54 pages
Understanding categories of CES and their importance
chapter 5|14 pages
Applying cultural ecosystem services
chapter 6|14 pages
Cultural ecosystem services and the natural capital of nature-based recreation and fisheries
chapter 7|12 pages
Tourism and leisure as cultural ecosystem services
part 3|48 pages
Place, identity and CES
chapter 8|10 pages
Sacred landscapes, local identity, and cultural ecosystem services in Tibetan villages, Southwest China
chapter 9|11 pages
Cultural ecosystem services of the sacred groves of Kandhamal, Odisha, India
chapter 10|12 pages
Understanding and supporting cultural ecosystem services for positive and enduring wildlife conservation and community outcomes
chapter 11|13 pages
Unlocking transformative change
part 4|68 pages
CES across ecologies
chapter 15|12 pages
Coastal and marine cultural ecosystem services
chapter 16|13 pages
Cultural ecosystem services and climate adaptation
part 5|116 pages
Methods and valuation for CES
chapter 17|15 pages
Of culture and nature
chapter 21|13 pages
Theory and techniques for mapping spatial patterns in cultural ecosystem services
chapter 24|17 pages
Deliberative methods for cultural ecosystem services
part 6|99 pages
CES in management and policy
chapter 25|13 pages
Incorporating cultural ecosystem services in the measurement of human well-being indicators for transformative environmental policy
chapter 26|13 pages
Exploring values embedded in policy options of the cultural landscapes of Japan through the Nature Futures Framework
chapter 27|15 pages
“The Fish, the Water, That Is Life”
chapter 28|13 pages
The untapped potential of cultural ecosystem services in environmental policy in Southeast Asia
chapter 30|13 pages
Cultural ecosystem services enhance investments in other ecosystem services
chapter 31|18 pages
Constraints and enablers for meaningful consideration of plural values through integration of cultural ecosystem services (CES) in decision-making
part 7|32 pages
New directions for CES
