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Accounting for Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability: Linking Ecosystem Services to Human Well-Being
One of society’s greatest challenges is to sustain natural resources while promoting economic growth and quality of life. In the face of this challenge, society must measure the effectiveness of programs established to safeguard the environment. The impetus for demonstrating positive results from go...
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Published in: | Environmental science & technology 2010-03, Vol.44 (5), p.1530-1536 |
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container_issue | 5 |
container_start_page | 1530 |
container_title | Environmental science & technology |
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creator | Jordan, Stephen J Hayes, Sharon E Yoskowitz, David Smith, Lisa M Summers, J. Kevin Russell, Marc Benson, William H |
description | One of society’s greatest challenges is to sustain natural resources while promoting economic growth and quality of life. In the face of this challenge, society must measure the effectiveness of programs established to safeguard the environment. The impetus for demonstrating positive results from government-sponsored research and regulation in the United States comes from Congress (General Accountability Office; GAO) and the Executive Branch (Office of Management and Budget; OMB). The message is: regulatory and research programs must demonstrate outcomes that justify their costs. Although the concept is simple, it is a complex problem to demonstrate that environmental research, policies, and regulations cause measurable changes in environmental quality. Even where changes in environmental quality can be tracked reliably, the connections between government actions and environmental outcomes seldom are direct or straightforward. In this article, we describe emerging efforts (with emphasis on the role of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; EPA) to frame and measure environmental outcomes in terms of ecosystem services and valuessocietally and ecologically meaningful metrics for gauging how well we manage environmental resources. As examples of accounting for outcomes and values, we present a novel, low-cost method for determining relative values of multiple ecosystem services, and describe emerging research on indicators of human well-being. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1021/es902597u |
format | article |
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subjects | Applied sciences Conservation of Natural Resources - statistics & numerical data Economic growth Ecosystem Ecosystems Environmental Monitoring - statistics & numerical data Environmental quality Environmental science Exact sciences and technology Global environmental pollution Health Humans Natural resources Pollution Quality of life Social Responsibility Sustainable development United States United States Environmental Protection Agency |
title | Accounting for Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability: Linking Ecosystem Services to Human Well-Being |
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