Weaving notions of justice into urban ecosystem services research and practice

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2020.03.021Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • This study develops an ecosystem service justice model from an urban perspective.

  • Infrastructure, institutions and perceptions filter ecosystem services in ways that impact social justice.

  • Spatial justice concerns for ecosystem services account at once for down-scale and inter-scale relations.

  • Temporal justice concerns for ecosystem services link past, present and future conditions of social-ecological systems.

Abstract

In a rising urban age planning for cities around the globe is increasingly based on assessments of ecosystem services, making enhanced considerations of ecosystem service justice critically important. Yet, justice remains a ‘blind spot’ in urban ecosystem service models and research, which can be traced back to the ecological and economic legacies of the concept itself. This legacy reproduces the normative focus on natural capital as a guarantee of sustaining ecosystem services, enforces a static understanding of nature that insufficiently considers human agency, and conceptualizes ecosystem service flows from nature to humans in a way that does not reflect the social-ecological structure and constantly shifting priorities of the urban realm. In response, this conceptual paper aims at broadening the analytical foundation for justice in urban ecosystem service assessments by presenting a model that links the co-production of urban ecosystem services (including infrastructure, institutions, and perceptions) with established lines of recognition, procedural, and distributional justice. It further highlights the need to embed these classical dimensions of justice within both spatial (downscaled and inter-scalar approaches) and temporal (interrelated past, present, and future conditions) justice frames. Relying on urban environmental, social, spatial and temporal justice theory as well ecosystem service scholarship, we outline theoretical entry points and provide practical examples for weaving notions of justice into urban ecosystem service research and practice, while highlighting future research needs.

Keywords

Ecosystem services
Environmental justice
Spatial justice
Temporal justice
Equity
Plural values

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