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  • Geoff J. Wells
    Stockholm University
  • Casey M. Ryan
    University of Edinburgh
  • Anamika Das
    Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment
  • Suman Attiwilli
    Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment
  • Mahesh Poudyal
    University of Kent
  • Sharachchandra Lele
    Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment
  • Kate Schreckenberg
    King's College London
  • Brian E. Robinson
    McGill University, Montreal
  • Aidan Keane
    University of Edinburgh
  • Katherine M. Homewood
    University College London
  • Julia P.G. Jones
  • Carlos A. Torres-Vitolas
    Imperial College London
  • Janet A. Fisher
    University of Edinburgh
  • Sate Ahmad
    SCI Foundation
  • Mark Mulligan
    King's College London
  • Terence P. Dawson
    King's College London
  • Helen Adams
    King's College London
  • R. Siddappa Setty
    Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment
  • Tim M. Daw
    Stockholm University
Summary Local access to “wild,” common-pool terrestrial and aquatic resources is being diminished by global resource demand and large-scale conservation interventions. Many theories suggest the well-being of wild harvesters can be supported through transitions to other livelihoods, improved infrastructure, and market access. However, new theories argue that such benefits may not always occur because they are context dependent and vary across dimensions of well-being. We test these theories by comparing how wild harvesting and other livelihoods have been associated with food security and life satisfaction in different contexts across ∼10,800 households in the tropics. Wild harvests coincided with high well-being in remote, asset-poor, and less-transformed landscapes. Yet, overall, well-being increased with electrical infrastructure, proximity to cities, and household capitals. This provides large-scale confirmation of the context dependence of nature’s contributions to people, and suggests a need to maintain local wild resource access while investing in equitable access to infrastructure, markets, and skills.

Keywords

  • nature’s contributions to people, ecosystem services, multi-dimensional wellbeing, social-ecological systems, environmental income, conservation, international development
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)311-324
Number of pages14
JournalOne Earth
Volume7
Issue number2
Early online date27 Dec 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2024

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