Ecosystem services as technology of globalization: On articulating values in urban nature

The paper demonstrates how ecosystem services can be viewed and studied as a social practice of value articulation. With this follows that when ecosystem services appear as objects of calculated value in decision-making they are already tainted by the social and cannot be viewed as merely reflecting...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEcological economics Vol. 86; pp. 274 - 284
Main Authors Ernstson, Henrik, Sörlin, Sverker
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.02.2013
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Summary:The paper demonstrates how ecosystem services can be viewed and studied as a social practice of value articulation. With this follows that when ecosystem services appear as objects of calculated value in decision-making they are already tainted by the social and cannot be viewed as merely reflecting an objective biophysical reality. Using urban case studies of place-based struggles in Stockholm and Cape Town, we demonstrate how values are relationally constructed through social practice. The same analysis is applied on ecosystem services. Of special interest is the TEEB Manual that uses a consultancy report on the economic evaluation of Cape Town's ‘natural assets’ to describe a step-by-step method to catalog, quantify and price certain aspects of urban nature. The Manual strives to turn the ecosystem services approach into a transportable method, capable of objectively measuring the values of urban nature everywhere, in all cities in the world. With its gesture of being universal and objective, the article suggests that the ecosystem services approach is a technology of globalization that de-historicizes and de-ecologizes debates on urbanized ecologies, effectively silencing other—and often marginalized—ways of knowing and valuing. The paper inscribes ecosystem services as social practice, as part of historical process, and as inherently political. A call is made for critical ethnographies of how ecosystem services and urban sustainability indicators are put into use to change local decision-making while manufacturing global expertise. ► Values of urban nature can be viewed as articulated through social practice. ► Ecosystem services (ESS) is a practice gesturing to be universal and objective. ► ESS risks silencing certain ways of valuing, while privileging particular expertise. ► The ESS approach fits with a historical shift in governing, towards neoliberalism. ► Ethnographic accounts of value articulation of urban nature is needed.
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ISSN:0921-8009
1873-6106
1873-6106
DOI:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2012.09.012