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The missing pillar: Eudemonic values in the justification of nature conservation

Authors :
Jose Luis Vivero-Pol
Aleš Smrekar
K. Polajnar Horvat
Paul Knights
Wessel Ganzevoort
Marino Bonaiuto
R.J.G. van den Born
Jeroen Admiraal
Erica Molinario
Bas Arts
Carmen Porras-Gomez
W.T. de Groot
Luuk Knippenberg
Almut Beringer
Nathalie Soethe
Source :
Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 61 (2018) 5-6, Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 61(5-6), 841-856, Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 61, 841-856, Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 61, 5-6, pp. 841-856, van den Born, R, Arts, B, Admiraal, J, Knights, P, Beringer, A, Molinario, E, Polajnar Horvat, K, Porras-Gomez, C, Smrekar, A, Soethe, N, Vivero Pol, J L, Ganzevoort, W, Bonaiuto, M, Knippenberg, L & de Groot, W 2017, ' The missing pillar : Eudemonic values in the justification of nature conservation ', Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, pp. 1-16 . https://doi.org/10.1080/09640568.2017.1342612
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2017.

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 190615.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) The public justification for nature conservation currently rests on two pillars: hedonic (instrumental) values, and moral values. Yet, these representations appear to do little motivational work in practice; biodiversity continues to decline, and biodiversity policies face a wide implementation gap. In seven EU countries, we studied why people act for nature beyond professional obligations. We explore the motivations of 105 committed actors for nature in detail using life-history interviews, and trace these back to their childhood. Results show that the key concept for understanding committed action for nature is meaningfulness. People act for nature because nature is meaningful to them, connected to a life that makes sense and a difference in the world. These eudemonic values (expressing the meaningful life) constitute a crucial third pillar in the justification of nature conservation. Important policy implications are explored, e.g. with respect to public discourse and the encounter with nature in childhood. 16 p.

Details

ISSN :
13600559 and 09640568
Volume :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Planning and Management
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....15b27dcea636b0326858d29fc0775977
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/09640568.2017.1342612