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Perceived contributions of multifunctional landscapes to human well-being: Evidence from 13 European sites

Authors :
Fagerholm, Nora
Martín‐López, Berta
Torralba, Mario
Oteros‐Rozas, Elisa
Lechner, Alex M.
Bieling, Claudia
Stahl Olafsson, Anton
Albert, Christian
Raymond, Christopher M.
Garcia‐Martin, Maria
Gulsrud, Natalie
Plieninger, Tobias
Fagerholm, Nora
Martín‐López, Berta
Torralba, Mario
Oteros‐Rozas, Elisa
Lechner, Alex M.
Bieling, Claudia
Stahl Olafsson, Anton
Albert, Christian
Raymond, Christopher M.
Garcia‐Martin, Maria
Gulsrud, Natalie
Plieninger, Tobias
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Multifunctional landscapes provide critical benefits and are essential for human well-being. The relationship between multifunctional landscapes and well-being has mostly been studied using ecosystem services as a linkage. However, there is a challenge of concretizing what human well-being exactly is and how it can be measured, particularly in relation to ecosystem services, landscape values and related discussions. In this paper, we measure self-reported well-being through applying an inductive free-listing approach to the exploration of the relationships between landscape multifunctionality and human well-being across 13 rural and peri-urban sites in Europe. We developed a face-to-face online survey (n = 2,301 respondents) integrating subjective perceptions of well-being (free-listing method) with mapping perceived ecosystem service benefits (Public Participation GIS, PPGIS approach). Applying content analysis and diverse statistical methods, we explore the links between well-being (i.e. perceived well-being items such as tranquillity, social relations and health) and social-ecological properties (i.e. respondents' sociocultural characteristics and perception of ecosystem service benefits). We identify 40 different well-being items highlighting prominently landscape values. The items form five distinct clusters: access to services; tranquillity and social capital; health and nature; cultural landscapes; and place attachment. Each cluster is related to specific study sites and explained by certain social-ecological properties. Results of our inductive approach further specify pre-defined conceptualizations on well-being and their connections to the natural environment. Results suggest that the well-being contributions of multifunctional landscapes are connected to therapeutic well-being effects, which are largely neglected in the ecosystem services literature. Our results further point to the context-specific character of linkages between landscapes and human well

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1425433705
Document Type :
Electronic Resource