Geographic and epistemic pluralism in the sources of evidence informing international environmental science-policy platforms: Lessons learnt from the IPBES values assessment
Ikusi/ Ireki
Data
2024-09-25Egilea
Guibrunet, L.
González-Jiménez, D.
Arroyo-Robles, G.
Cantú-Fernández, M.
Contreras, V.
Flores Mendez, D.
Ocampo Castrejón, A.V.
Lliso, B.
Monroy-Sais, A.S.
Mwampamba, T.H.
Pascual, U.
Baptiste, B.
Christie, M.
Balvanera, P.
Global Sustainability: 7 (2024)
Laburpena
This article examines the challenges and opportunities to integrate diverse sources of evidence in assessments produced by international platforms working at the science–policy interface. Diversity (or pluralism) of sources of literature, both in terms of their geographic origin and disciplinary focus, is essential for assessments to inform decision-making across social–ecological contexts. Using the recently completed ‘Methodological Assessment of the Diverse Values and Valuation of Nature’ of the Intergovernmental Science–Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services as a case, we find that significant effort has been dedicated to reviewing diverse literature. We discuss three strategies to expand pluralism in future assessments.