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9 - Can Geodesign Be Used to Facilitate Boundary Management for Planning and Implementation of Nature-based Solutions?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2020

Neil Sang
Affiliation:
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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Summary

Ecosystem-based approaches are vital to addressing environmental issues and are crucial to buffering human communities against the adverse effects of climate change (Jones et al., 2012). The impacts of ecosystem-based projects have been considered within a range of societal challenge areas, such as wetland management (Max Finlayson et al., 2011), as well as across cross-cutting challenges of biodiversity conservation, public health and well-being (Kloos & Renaud, 2016). In most instances, researchers have drawn upon the ecosystem services framework for assessing the biophysical or economic value of ecosystem-based approaches (Liquete et al., 2015; Green et al., 2016), and for examining the potential for synergies and trade-offs between bundles of ecosystem services (Mouchet et al., 2017).

Type
Chapter
Information
Modelling Nature-based Solutions
Integrating Computational and Participatory Scenario Modelling for Environmental Management and Planning
, pp. 305 - 340
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

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