Abstract

Both the concepts of ecosystem services and social enterprise have gained popularity as means of addressing social and environmental issues in recent years. But while research on ecosystem services has focused on non-governmental organisation and local community-led approaches, the role of social enterprises has received less attention. In Scotland, social enterprises play an important role in delivering social and environmental justice, as well as reaping economic benefits through forest-based practices. These practices are often small-scale and attract participants from local communities. But despite this prominence their motivations and the challenges they face remain largely unexplored. This research attempts to integrate both concepts mainly using field observations and interviews, and to reinforce the findings with the existing literature. It explores the motivations and challenges of social enterprises in sustaining forest ecosystem services through a case study, and discusses their potential within the context of current policy. The research suggests that social enterprises are equipped to tackle a range of social and environmental issues. The enterprise under investigation aims to improve participants’ wellbeing and employability, as well as to provide public education and promote environmental awareness. But these efforts are often hindered by the difficulties of high requirements of the manager and staff members in balancing multiple objectives and most importantly, of managing financial risks. The research concludes that a practical method of assessing cultural ecosystem services as well as the use of innovative funding norms may resolve these challenges, allowing social enterprises to fill the current policy gap and create synergies in the fields of ecosystem services and social enterprise.

Highlights

  • The Origin and Development of Ecosystem ServicesThe concept of ecosystem services has sparked widespread interest in recent years

  • The definition of social enterprise may have led to this issue but, more importantly, the current funding policy may have failed to take a comprehensive look at their outcomes, as the interviewee suggested: It struggles with the concept of social and environmental enterprise so sometimes [...] The forest stewardship and forest ecosystem service aspects of our work which we enable to happen are not counted as part of our outputs (Former manager)

  • By synthesising the primary data collected from the case study in Scotland and the secondary data drawn from existing literature and UK/Scottish Government policy documents, this paper summarises the motivations and challenges of forest-based social enterprises in delivering forest ecosystem services

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Summary

Introduction

The Origin and Development of Ecosystem ServicesThe concept of ecosystem services has sparked widespread interest in recent years. The most popular definition of ecosystem services arguably comes from the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA) which states that ‘‘ecosystem services are the benefits people obtain from ecosystems, including provisioning, regulating, cultural and supporting services’’ (MA 2005). It has been the key driver in raising awareness and acceptance of ecosystem services and has attracted great interest in the goods and services that nature contributes to human society and wellbeing (Chaudhary et al 2015). In Europe, the Common International Classification of Ecosystem Services (CICES) (Haines-Young and Potschin 2018)—a uniform definition of consistent ecosystem services categories—has been supported and developed by the European Environment Agency (EEA) to standardise the classification of ecosystem services since 2009. The intention is not to create a fixed classification as it is still evolving, but rather to develop a framework capable of accommodating data from different areas

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