Merging capabilities and livelihoods: analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well-being

Especially poor people in developing countries depend on biological resources to manage their livelihoods and to generate income. Because these resources are usually public goods, their use is often subjected to what is known as the tragedy of the commons, potentially leading to resource depletion,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Juri Lienert, Paul Burger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2015-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss2/art20/
_version_ 1818928015638265856
author Juri Lienert
Paul Burger
author_facet Juri Lienert
Paul Burger
author_sort Juri Lienert
collection DOAJ
description Especially poor people in developing countries depend on biological resources to manage their livelihoods and to generate income. Because these resources are usually public goods, their use is often subjected to what is known as the tragedy of the commons, potentially leading to resource depletion, environmental degradation, and loss of biodiversity, which consequently undermines the availability and capacity of resources to contribute to residents' well-being in the long run. We suggest addressing this typical sustainability issue from a new angle. Against the backdrop of identifiable shortcomings within two popular analytic approaches, the capability approach (CA) and the sustainable livelihood approach (SLA), we argue for an improved sustainability framework for analyzing the issue in question. Although we view the CA as encompassing our core ideas regarding human well-being, we propose to enrich it by merging it with the SLA to more adequately include social and environmental capital. To test the framework's usefulness, we apply it to a case study on the use of medicinal and aromatic plants in the rural livelihood context of Nepal. Thereby, we reveal not only that the creation of capabilities is strongly dependent on the set of capital assets available, particularly in the form of natural capital, but also that the framework provides new perspectives: What matters is developing livelihood strategies that increase people's opportunity spaces rather than focusing only on those that compensate for missing capabilities or enable people to cope with shocks and vulnerability.
first_indexed 2024-12-20T03:22:11Z
format Article
id doaj.art-473313dcd4a54a91b329db02b485f4cf
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1708-3087
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-20T03:22:11Z
publishDate 2015-06-01
publisher Resilience Alliance
record_format Article
series Ecology and Society
spelling doaj.art-473313dcd4a54a91b329db02b485f4cf2022-12-21T19:55:12ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872015-06-012022010.5751/ES-07405-2002207405Merging capabilities and livelihoods: analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well-beingJuri Lienert0Paul Burger1University of Basel, Department of Social Sciences, Sustainability Research GroupUniversity of Basel, Department of Social Sciences, Sustainability Research GroupEspecially poor people in developing countries depend on biological resources to manage their livelihoods and to generate income. Because these resources are usually public goods, their use is often subjected to what is known as the tragedy of the commons, potentially leading to resource depletion, environmental degradation, and loss of biodiversity, which consequently undermines the availability and capacity of resources to contribute to residents' well-being in the long run. We suggest addressing this typical sustainability issue from a new angle. Against the backdrop of identifiable shortcomings within two popular analytic approaches, the capability approach (CA) and the sustainable livelihood approach (SLA), we argue for an improved sustainability framework for analyzing the issue in question. Although we view the CA as encompassing our core ideas regarding human well-being, we propose to enrich it by merging it with the SLA to more adequately include social and environmental capital. To test the framework's usefulness, we apply it to a case study on the use of medicinal and aromatic plants in the rural livelihood context of Nepal. Thereby, we reveal not only that the creation of capabilities is strongly dependent on the set of capital assets available, particularly in the form of natural capital, but also that the framework provides new perspectives: What matters is developing livelihood strategies that increase people's opportunity spaces rather than focusing only on those that compensate for missing capabilities or enable people to cope with shocks and vulnerability.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss2/art20/capability approachsustainability analysissustainable livelihood approachuse of biological resourcesvaluationwell-being
spellingShingle Juri Lienert
Paul Burger
Merging capabilities and livelihoods: analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well-being
Ecology and Society
capability approach
sustainability analysis
sustainable livelihood approach
use of biological resources
valuation
well-being
title Merging capabilities and livelihoods: analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well-being
title_full Merging capabilities and livelihoods: analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well-being
title_fullStr Merging capabilities and livelihoods: analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well-being
title_full_unstemmed Merging capabilities and livelihoods: analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well-being
title_short Merging capabilities and livelihoods: analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well-being
title_sort merging capabilities and livelihoods analyzing the use of biological resources to improve well being
topic capability approach
sustainability analysis
sustainable livelihood approach
use of biological resources
valuation
well-being
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol20/iss2/art20/
work_keys_str_mv AT jurilienert mergingcapabilitiesandlivelihoodsanalyzingtheuseofbiologicalresourcestoimprovewellbeing
AT paulburger mergingcapabilitiesandlivelihoodsanalyzingtheuseofbiologicalresourcestoimprovewellbeing