2019
DOI: 10.3390/su11205760
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Supply–Demand Coupling Mechanisms for Policy Design

Abstract: Ecosystem services are important for sustaining human survival and sustainable socio-economic development. For the past two decades, ecosystem services studies have greatly promoted the application of ecosystem services science in conservation. As a scientific method to integrate multi-regional and multi-scale ecosystem service providers and beneficiaries, ecosystem service supply and demand coupling mechanisms and payments for ecosystem services programs are closely linked. In this paper, we first provide an … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…It is a complex dynamic process caused by interactions with various factors (Zhou et al, 2021). The regional ecosystem has a self‐regulation ability and can resist natural disturbance to a certain extent (Jiang et al, 2019). However, human activities break the ES supply–demand balance (Guo et al, 2018), affect regional ecological stability, and induce eco‐land evolution.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is a complex dynamic process caused by interactions with various factors (Zhou et al, 2021). The regional ecosystem has a self‐regulation ability and can resist natural disturbance to a certain extent (Jiang et al, 2019). However, human activities break the ES supply–demand balance (Guo et al, 2018), affect regional ecological stability, and induce eco‐land evolution.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The participatory approach evaluates ES and social demand from another perspective. Via social feedback, this method allows an in-depth understanding of the scientific data acquired and provides more reliable scientific support for management and policy makers, which in turn form the channel for mutual support and communication among the public, science, and the government [39]. In addition, as ES support human well-being, an essential step for connecting ES and human well-being is an understanding of the preferences of the stakeholders and their perceptions of ES [40,41].…”
Section: Stakeholder Participation In Es and Its Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The outcomes include 77 academic articles and 38 authoritative comments. (5) We feed these outcomes into the content and use co-word analysis methods to examine the opinions mined in the publications and comments of the database and platforms. (6) We then use Bibexcel and UCINET software to calculate the co-occurrence network parameters of the eight policy tools under six policy targets.…”
Section: Objective Functionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, the knowledge transfer chain for designing communication strategies among researchers and extension officers has been suggested [4]. Other examples include the improvement of ecological redline policy and institutional reforms based on the correlation between payments for ecosystem services and supply-demand coupling mechanisms [5], as well as the establishment of an agricultural policy framework by integrating the intersubjective nature of knowledge into the management of agricultural systems [6]. Nevertheless, researchers have not paid enough attention to quantitative-analysis tools.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%