Bitte benutzen Sie diese Kennung, um auf die Ressource zu verweisen: https://doi.org/10.48548/pubdata-1566
Langanzeige der Metadaten
ElementWert
RessourcentypDissertation
TitelA better future for people and nature: a social-ecological systems approach to ecosystem restoration
DOI10.48548/pubdata-1566
Handle20.500.14123/1643
Autor*inFrietsch, Marina  0000-0001-5992-314X
Gutachter*inMartín-López, Berta  0000-0003-2622-0135
Bieling, Claudia  0000-0001-5001-4150  1068562307
Linstädter, Anja  0000-0003-0038-9557  1051445965
Betreuer*inMartín-López, Berta  0000-0003-2622-0135
AbstractThe restoration of degraded ecosystems is increasingly recognized as a key strategy to respond to interconnected social-ecological challenges such as climate change and biodiversity loss. To this end, ecosystem restoration practice encompasses a wide range of activities which seek to halt and reverse the degradation of ecosystems and thereby contribute to ecosystem integrity and human well-being. Notwithstanding continuous scientific and practical advances in ecosystem restoration, many restoration projects do not deliver desired ecological and social outcomes. Specifically, many restoration projects lack long-term orientation and there exists limited guidance for restoration practitioners and policy-makers for how to prioritize diverse approaches and goals. In addition, restoration projects are often not embedded in their social-ecological context. Although the potential of integrating social-ecological systems thinking into ecosystem restoration is increasingly being recognized, the operationalization of this perspective for restoration remains little explored. By combining conceptual considerations with empirical work in western and central Rwanda, this dissertation applies a social-ecological systems perspective to ecosystem restoration. Paper I integrates key restoration and social-ecological systems literature to inform the enhancement of adaptive capacity of restoration sites. Paper II proposes a framework for navigating dynamically shifting social and ecological restoration goals. Paper III examines the relevance and application of international restoration principles in local-scale restoration in the study area. Paper IV explores visions for the future of restoration in Rwanda. Together, the four papers advance the operationalization of a social-ecological systems perspective on ecosystem restoration. Across the four papers, four lessons for ecosystem restoration emerge. The lessons are related to (i) the importance of time in ecological and social restoration processes, (ii) the role of people who shape and are affected by ecosystem restoration, (iii) the value of a strong ecological science foundation for ecosystem restoration, and (iv) the benefits of applying social-ecological systems thinking to ecosystem restoration. These four general lessons as well as the specific findings of each paper entail diverse implications for ecosystem restoration science, policy, and practice. First, ecosystem restoration science can contribute to shifting discourses on restoration approaches, scales, and goals by providing context-specific, accessible knowledge. Second, ecosystem restoration policy can promote supportive governance systems, sustainable financing schemes, and coordination across scales. Finally, ecosystem restoration practice can open up spaces for people to interact and exchange diverse types of knowledge at all stages of a restoration project drawing on different inter-and transdisciplinary formats. Together, ecosystem restoration science, policy, and practice can realize the potential of ecosystem restoration to enhance ecological integrity and human well-being.
SpracheEnglisch
SchlagwörterEcosystem; Restoration; Social-ecological System; Rwanda
DDC333 :: Boden- und Energiewirtschaft
Datum der Disputation2024-12-16
Jahr der Veröffentlichung in PubData2025
Art der VeröffentlichungErstveröffentlichung
Datum der Erstveröffentlichung2025-01-16
EntstehungskontextForschung
Fakultät / AbteilungFakultät Nachhaltigkeit
Verfügbar ab / seit2025-01-16T10:23:59Z
Archivierende Einrichtung Medien- und Informationszentrum (Leuphana Universität Lüneburg  02w2y2t16)
Grad-verleihende InstitutionLeuphana Universität Lüneburg
Veröffentlicht durchMedien- und Informationszentrum, Leuphana Universität Lüneburg
  Zugehörige Ressourcen
Dateien zu dieser Ressource:
Datei Beschreibung GrößeFormat 

Frietsch_A_better_future_for_people_and_nature_Diss.pdf
MD5: 6e1384b80cecbeb2e1867025def3c0b7
Lizenz: 
open-access    accessible on 2025-12-16


8.16 MB

Adobe PDF

Alle Ressourcen in diesem Repository sind urheberrechtlich geschützt, soweit nicht anderweitig angezeigt.

Ansichten
Zitationsformate
Datensatz Exporte
Zugriffsstatistik

Seitenaufruf(e): 41

Download(s): 0