- Land Use and Ecosystem Services
- Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
- Economic and Environmental Valuation
- Forest Management and Policy
- Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
- Coastal and Marine Management
- Environmental and Cultural Studies in Latin America and Beyond
- Diverse Aspects of Tourism Research
- Marine and fisheries research
- Global trade, sustainability, and social impact
- Marine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies
- Regional Development and Innovation
- Wildlife Conservation and Criminology Analyses
- Environmental and Ecological Studies
- Agriculture, Land Use, Rural Development
- Sustainability and Climate Change Governance
- Fish Ecology and Management Studies
- Economics of Agriculture and Food Markets
- Marine and coastal plant biology
- Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
- Social Issues and Sustainability
- Environmental Education and Sustainability
- Sustainable Agricultural Systems Analysis
- Species Distribution and Climate Change
- Polar Research and Ecology
Austral University of Chile
2015-2025
Center for Dynamic Research on High Latitude Marine Ecosystems
2016-2025
Universidad de Los Lagos
2023-2024
Fundación Miguel Lillo
2020-2022
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
2021
Center for Climate and Resilience Research
2016-2018
University of Chile
2015
Fundación Chile
2008-2014
Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
2004
Small-scale fisheries (SSF) are critical to food systems and livelihoods. However, the relation between resilience, outcomes of proximate distal drivers potential space for transformative changes have been largely unexplored. Such knowledge is key understanding how fishery resources, institutions actors respond to, learn from, diverse change social-ecological crises, as well design policies aimed at building resilience in SSF. This paper provides a new heuristic model analyze factors that...
Nahuelhual, L., F. Benra, Rojas, G. Ignacio Díaz, and A. Carmona. 2016. Mapping social values of ecosystem services: What is behind the map? Ecology Society 21(3):24.http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-08676-210324
Growing concern about the loss of ecosystem services (ES) promotes their spatial representation as a key tool for internalization ES framework into land use policies. Paradoxically, mapping approaches meant to inform policy decisions focus on magnitude and distribution biophysical supply ES, largely ignoring social mechanisms by which these influence human wellbeing. If affecting demand, enhancing it or reducing it, are taken more account, then policies effective. By developing applying new...