Autores
Isabel MD Rosa, Henrique M Pereira, Simon Ferrier, Rob Alkemade, Lilibeth A Acosta, H Resit Akcakaya, Eefje Den Belder, Asghar M Fazel, Shinichiro Fujimori, Mike Harfoot, Khaled A Harhash, Paula A Harrison, Jennifer Hauck, Rob JJ Hendriks, Gladys Hernández, Walter Jetz, Sylvia I Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen, HyeJin Kim, Nicholas King, Marcel TJ Kok, Grygoriy O Kolomytsev, Tanya Lazarova, Paul Leadley, Carolyn J Lundquist, Jaime García Márquez, Carsten Meyer, Laetitia M Navarro, Carsten Nesshöver, Hien T Ngo, Karachepone N Ninan, Maria G Palomo, Laura M Pereira, Garry D Peterson, Ramon Pichs, Alexander Popp, Andy Purvis, Federica Ravera, Carlo Rondinini, Jyothis Sathyapalan, Aafke M Schipper, Ralf Seppelt, Josef Settele, Nadia Sitas, Detlef Van Vuuren
Fecha de publicación
2017/10
Revista
Nature Ecology & Evolution
Volumen
1
Número
10
Páginas
1416-1419
Editor
Nature Publishing Group
Descripción
Scenarios are powerful tools to envision how nature might respond to different pathways of future human development and policy choices 1. Most scenarios developed for global environmental assessments have explored impacts of society on nature, such as biodiversity loss, but have not included nature as a component of socioeconomic development 2. They ignore policy objectives related to nature protection and neglect nature’s role in underpinning development and human well-being. This approach is becoming untenable because targets for human development are increasingly connected with targets for nature, such as in the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. The next generation of scenarios should explore alternative pathways to reach these intertwined targets, including potential synergies and trade-offs between nature conservation and other development goals, as well as address …
Artículos de Google Académico
IMD Rosa, HM Pereira, S Ferrier, R Alkemade… - Nature Ecology & Evolution, 2017