Periodic Reporting for period 4 - RELATE (Environmental Spaces and the Feel-Good Factor: Relating Subjective Wellbeing to Biodiversity)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2022-04-01 al 2023-05-31
RELATE was founded on the use of cutting-edge mixed methods. Indeed, the entire premise of the project was interdisciplinary, integrating ecology, human geography, environmental psychology and economics. Up until when RELATE started, much of the research on human-nature relationships has been primarily initiated within specific disciplines, with very little cross-disciplinary work conducted to meaningfully address both the social and ecological intricacies of human-nature relationships.
With RELATE, I pioneered and established a completely new approach to investigating this challenging and important problem, innovating within this genuinely interdisciplinary space. During the course of the project, the team worked with ~10,000 members of the British public. This involved sectors of society often underrepresented in research, such as the elderly, ethnic minorities, and people from lower-income households. We tackled the following three objectives: (1) explore how people relate to different biodiversity attributes, both positively and negatively, across all classes of cultural ecosystem services and types of human-nature experience; (2) quantify variation in how people value, or not, different biodiversity attributes using a range of monetary and non-monetary valuation techniques; and (3) understand how co-occurrence between biodiversity and people may change across space and time, and the impact this may have on human-biodiversity relationships.
Objective 1. This objective has been tackled through systematic reviews of the existing literature and a series of four participatory workshops. The systematic reviews have incorporated a wealth of both qualitative and quantitative evidence. The systematic reviews evolved into a much large endeavour than originally envisaged, covering both blue and green environmental spaces, and many additional academic expert partners across Europe. The findings were co-produced into a policy brief with World Health Organisation. The workshops generated particularly extensive, rich and top-quality datasets, with the quantitative and qualitative information offering an extensive interpretative account of the diverse ways people relate to, experience and culturally construct biodiversity attributes in the context of their wellbeing.
Objective 2. This objective was tackled through a diverse array of mixed methods, including the participatory workshops mentioned above. Additionally, we have developed and validated BIO-WELL, a new self-reported human wellbeing psychometric scale. There has been considerable interest in the development and application of the scale from across the policy and practice communities, from both conservation and public health perspectives. Consequently, we have developed an R package and shinyapp to support the use and interpretation of BIO-WELL by end-users. BIO-WELL has also been translated into 30 languages. We also undertook a comprehensive interrogation of the environmental economics literature to examine long-term temporal shifts in the monetary values people place on biodiversity. Although a diversity of cultural ecosystem services and forest types have been studied over the years, the existing evidence-base is biased towards high-income countries and recreational forest use. Finally, we used national-scale questionnaires, involving >7000 participants, to quantify people’s values for biodiversity attributes, bring together BIO-WELL and choice experiments (a methodological technique from environmental economics).
Objective 3. This objective was tackled through the approaches already mentioned above. From a temporal perspective, we particularly focused on seasonality. We have innovated methodologically by using the participatory workshops to inform the choice of attributes and levels that were used in seasonal choice experiments; normally, the attributes and levels are decided by experts/researchers. By combining our monetary (choice experiments) and non-monetary valuation (BIO-WELL) methods, we found that people’s willingness-to-pay for local forest creation is influenced by the wellbeing (measured via BIO-WELL) that participants get from existing forests. This is a particularly important message for policy/practice decision-makers. Finally, we have explored how species and/or traits (e.g. textures, smells) that elicit human wellbeing responses vary spatially and seasonally across Britain (the RELATE study system). High ‘quality’ forests (those that have the most species traits that support human wellbeing) are unequally distributed, with individuals living in more deprived areas generally having lower quality forest nearby.