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From Human-Nature Dualism Towards More Integration in Socio-ecosystems Studies

Isabelle Boulangeat, Sandrine Allain, Émilie Crouzat, Stéphane Girard, Céline Granjou, Clara Poirier, Jean François Ruault, Yoan Paillet, Isabelle Arpin

202221 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Statement In the management of natural resources and biodiversity, humans and nature have traditionally been considered as two distinct systems, one controlling the other. The concept of socio-ecosystems allows a more integrated approach, in which humans and nature are recognized as interdependent. However, this new perspective does not necessarily eliminate a distinction between humans and nature, or even a hierarchy of humans over nature. This chapter aims to raise awareness of the potential human–nature dualism in socio-ecosystem approaches. Other research fields have adopted different approaches regarding human–nature integration versus dualism, offering a window on the advantages and limitations of various positions. We also discuss how methodological choices are important to translate human–nature integration or dichotomy depending on the study aim.

Topics & Concepts

DualismInterdependencePerspective (graphical)Natural (archaeology)EpistemologyHierarchySociologyComputer scienceGeographyPolitical scienceSocial scienceArtificial intelligencePhilosophyLawArchaeologyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesGeographies of human-animal interactionsEnvironmental Philosophy and Ethics