Living in harmony with nature is achievable only as a non-ideal vision
Living in harmony with nature is achievable only as a non-ideal vision
The UN Global Biodiversity Framework aligns with previous UN visions in equating human wellbeing with living in harmony with nature, setting goals for achieving it by 2050. The UN has yet to articulate fully what we can look forward to when we aspire to this vision. Living in harmony invokes an ideal state of being, yet nature embodies a perpetual struggle for existence. Here we argue that harmony with nature can engage only as a non-ideal vision, insofar as wellbeing requires an endlessly evolving relationship with nature. As an ideal model, the UN vision forces an unhelpful focus on current distance from the ideal state, which distracts from contemporary challenges. As a non-ideal progressive integration with nature’s processes and cycles, harmony serves as attribute not state. The non-ideal vision underpins engagement with restoring sustainable levels of natural capital, it accommodates a plurality of approaches to conserving nature, and it aligns with Earth-centred governance that embeds economies in nature, and with the principle of enforceable rights of nature. To date, this dynamic relationship with nature is a constitutional right for citizens of only four countries: Ecuador, Bolivia, São Tomé and Príncipe, and the Philippines. For other countries, essential elements of the relationship of people with nature remain bound to political ideologies. The eventual success of the UN in enabling collective action sufficient for planetary wellbeing depends on it having an achievable vision for harmony with nature’s processes and cycles, capable of functioning as a constitutional right.
Convention on biological diversity, IPBES, Rights of nature, United Nations, Value of nature
Doncaster, C. Patrick
0eff2f42-fa0a-4e35-b6ac-475ad3482047
Bullock, James M.
1905d5ee-f9cd-4752-b0aa-5ae5662b35e9
February 2024
Doncaster, C. Patrick
0eff2f42-fa0a-4e35-b6ac-475ad3482047
Bullock, James M.
1905d5ee-f9cd-4752-b0aa-5ae5662b35e9
Doncaster, C. Patrick and Bullock, James M.
(2024)
Living in harmony with nature is achievable only as a non-ideal vision.
Environmental Science and Policy, 152, [103658].
(doi:10.1016/j.envsci.2023.103658).
Abstract
The UN Global Biodiversity Framework aligns with previous UN visions in equating human wellbeing with living in harmony with nature, setting goals for achieving it by 2050. The UN has yet to articulate fully what we can look forward to when we aspire to this vision. Living in harmony invokes an ideal state of being, yet nature embodies a perpetual struggle for existence. Here we argue that harmony with nature can engage only as a non-ideal vision, insofar as wellbeing requires an endlessly evolving relationship with nature. As an ideal model, the UN vision forces an unhelpful focus on current distance from the ideal state, which distracts from contemporary challenges. As a non-ideal progressive integration with nature’s processes and cycles, harmony serves as attribute not state. The non-ideal vision underpins engagement with restoring sustainable levels of natural capital, it accommodates a plurality of approaches to conserving nature, and it aligns with Earth-centred governance that embeds economies in nature, and with the principle of enforceable rights of nature. To date, this dynamic relationship with nature is a constitutional right for citizens of only four countries: Ecuador, Bolivia, São Tomé and Príncipe, and the Philippines. For other countries, essential elements of the relationship of people with nature remain bound to political ideologies. The eventual success of the UN in enabling collective action sufficient for planetary wellbeing depends on it having an achievable vision for harmony with nature’s processes and cycles, capable of functioning as a constitutional right.
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Accepted/In Press date: 14 December 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 December 2023
Published date: February 2024
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Funding Information:
We thank Ian H. Townend, Becks Spake, Evelyn Piña-Covarrubias and Stephanie Jones for discussions, and J. Baird Callicott and five reviewers for constructive criticism of earlier drafts. The work was supported by grant 521900106 from the University of Southampton Interdisciplinary Research Pump Priming Fund.
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© 2023 The Authors
Keywords:
Convention on biological diversity, IPBES, Rights of nature, United Nations, Value of nature
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Local EPrints ID: 486119
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486119
ISSN: 1462-9011
PURE UUID: ea9fa10e-fc33-4a2d-9771-a24713f13e5e
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Date deposited: 10 Jan 2024 17:30
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:41
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James M. Bullock
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