Helen Ding
World Resources Institute
31 Papers
143 Citations
Helen Ding is an academic researcher from World Resources Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ecosystem services & Forest ecology. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 29 publications. Previous affiliations of Helen Ding include Université catholique de Louvain & University of Padua.
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Papers
A Hybrid Approach to the Valuation of Climate Change Effects on Ecosystem Services: Evidence from the European Forests
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a systematic attempt to assess economic value of climate change impact on forest ecosystems and human welfare and confirm that climate change will be responsible for a re-distribution of welfare among the European countries, signalling the potential for a(n) agreement(s) among these same countries focus on the reallocation of potential trade-offs among the countries.
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The Economic Valuation of Marine Ecosystems
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the motivation for an economic valuation of marine ecosystems and argued that the economic value of marine ecosystem services and biodiversity can make sense if and only if important guidelines are observed.
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The 18 benefits of using ecosystem services classification systems
John Finisdore,Charles Rhodes,Roy Haines-Young,Simone Maynard,Jeffrey Wielgus,Anthony Dvarskas,Joël Houdet,Fabien Quétier,Karl A. Lamothe,Helen Ding,François Soulard,George Van Houtven,Petrina Rowcroft +12 more
TL;DR: 18 benefits of using ES classification knowledge were found, including allowing ES to be defined more easily and precisely, easing the transfer of knowledge among studies, and avoiding the need to recreate ES identification systems.
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A standard framework for assessing the costs and benefits of restoration: introducing The Economics of Ecosystem Restoration (TEER)
B. Bodin,Valentina Garavaglia,Nathanaël Pingault,Helen Ding,Sarah Jane Wilson,Alexandre Meybeck,Vincent Gitz,Sara d'Andrea,Christophe Besacier +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a standard framework to assess the costs and benefits of restoration projects and specific restoration interventions, and the associated template for data collection, which was tested for usability during a piloting phase, is the first output of The Economics of Ecosystem Restoration (TEER), a multi-partner initiative under the aegis of the UN Decade on Ecosystem restoration.
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