twitter

Wednesday, 12 August 2015

The strange case of cultural services: Limits of the ecosystem services paradigm

Volume 108, December 2014, Pages 208–214
Methodological and Ideological Options

The strange case of cultural services: Limits of the ecosystem services paradigm 



Highlights

We assess the limitations of cultural services in the ecosystem services paradigm.
We apply the cultural services concept to American Indian environmental values.
Economic approaches are seldom appropriate for valuing cultural services.
Stewardship offers a better framework than ecosystem services in this context.

Abstract

As interest in the concept of ecosystem services (ES) has grown, so has its scope. This paper considers some limitations of the ES paradigm by examining one category of ES:cultural services, including the environmental basis for esthetic, spiritual, and recreational experiences, cultural heritage, sense of place, and ways of life. It examines whether cultural ES can be assessed in terms of purely individual benefits or if social/collective considerations must be included; and whether the concept of ‘services’ even provides an appropriate framework for understanding such values. To pursue these questions I consider the recent literature on the assessment and valuation of ‘cultural services’ and assess the adequacy of this perspective against several examples from American Indian communities of the Pacific Northwest. Three characteristics of these situations from Indian Country are problematic for an ES framework: the social construction of environmental experience, the symbolic character of environmental knowledge, and the multidimensionality of environmental value. On the basis of this analysis, I propose a model of culturally reflexive stewardship as potentially a more productive and theoretically consistent framework for characterizing such socially constructed environmental values and practices.

Keywords

  • Cultural ecosystem services; 
  • Culture; 
  • Environmental value; 
  • Native North America;
  • Stewardship; 
  • Sustainability science
The views expressed are the author's, and do not represent the policies of the U.S. Department of the Interior.