Manylion y Prosiect
Disgrifiad
There has been a recent explosion of interest in market mechanisms to capture global ecosystem service values. An argument in their favour is that they can, in principle, benefit the poor by increasing the value of their resources. However, the effect on poverty is not easily predicted and depends on a) the structure and distribution of payments (how and when payments are made, and to whom) and b) how land-use changes driven by the payments influence the supply of locally important ecosystem services and livelihood options to poor people.
Our central research question...
How can international ecosystem service payment schemes (specifically for carbon sequestration/storage and biodiversity conservation) most effectively reduce poverty in low income countries, given bio-physical, economic and political realities?
This question is of vital importance as there have been few, if any, detailed multi-dimensional assessments of either existing programmes or the conditions needed for optimal programme design. We focus on a single ecosystem (tropical forest) in a single low income country (Madagascar) to achieve a uniquely complete analysis. Links to global structures involved in developing international payment for ecosystem services schemes (PES) ensure the results will be influential more widely.
Major land-use changes which international payments are incentivizing include: reduced deforestation, targeted restoration or reforestation (through fire and grazing management or replanting) and changes in rules, or enforcement of rules, governing access to harvesting wild products. Welfare impacts on the poor will be different under these different approaches, and they vary in their potential for producing global benefits.
Our central research question...
How can international ecosystem service payment schemes (specifically for carbon sequestration/storage and biodiversity conservation) most effectively reduce poverty in low income countries, given bio-physical, economic and political realities?
This question is of vital importance as there have been few, if any, detailed multi-dimensional assessments of either existing programmes or the conditions needed for optimal programme design. We focus on a single ecosystem (tropical forest) in a single low income country (Madagascar) to achieve a uniquely complete analysis. Links to global structures involved in developing international payment for ecosystem services schemes (PES) ensure the results will be influential more widely.
Major land-use changes which international payments are incentivizing include: reduced deforestation, targeted restoration or reforestation (through fire and grazing management or replanting) and changes in rules, or enforcement of rules, governing access to harvesting wild products. Welfare impacts on the poor will be different under these different approaches, and they vary in their potential for producing global benefits.
| Teitl byr | p4ages: Can capturing global ecosystem service values reduce poverty |
|---|---|
| Statws | Wedi gorffen |
| Dyddiad cychwyn/gorffen dod i rym | 1/09/13 → 30/09/20 |
Ôl bys
Archwilio’r pynciau ymchwil mae a wnelo'r prosiect hwn â nhw. Mae’r labelau hyn yn cael eu cynhyrchu’n seiliedig ar y dyfarniadau/grantiau sylfaenol. Gyda’i gilydd maen nhw’n ffurfio ôl bys unigryw.
Allbwn ymchwil
- 10 Erthygl
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Forest regeneration can positively contribute to local hydrological ecosystem services: implications for forest landscape restoration
van Meerveld, I., Jones, J. P. G., Ghimire, C. P., Zwartendijk, B. W., Lahitiana, J., Ravelona, M. & Mulligan , M., Ebr 2021, Yn: Journal of Applied Ecology. 58, 4, t. 755-765 11 t.Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolyn › Erthygl › adolygiad gan gymheiriaid
Mynediad agoredFfeil262 Wedi eu Llwytho i Lawr (Pure) -
Human migration to the forest frontier: implications for land use change and conservation management
Jones, J. P. G., Mandimbiniaina, R., Kelly, R., Ranjatson, P., Rakotojoelina, B., Schreckenberg, K. & Poudyal, M., Meh 2018, Yn: Geo: Geography and Environment. 5, 1, e00050.Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolyn › Erthygl › adolygiad gan gymheiriaid
Mynediad agoredFfeil330 Wedi eu Llwytho i Lawr (Pure) -
Who bears the cost of forest conservation?
Poudyal, M., Jones, J. P. G., Rakotonarivo, O. S., Hockley, N., Gibbons, J. M., Mandimbiniaina, R., Rasoamanana, A., Andrianantenaina, N. S. & Ramamonjisoa, B. S., 5 Gorff 2018, Yn: PeerJ. 6, e5106.Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolyn › Erthygl › adolygiad gan gymheiriaid
Mynediad agoredFfeil297 Wedi eu Llwytho i Lawr (Pure)
Setiau Data Ymchwil
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Household survey and discrete choice experiment for investigating the opportunity cost of conservation restrictions in eastern Madagascar
Poudyal, M. (Lluniwr), Rakotonarivo, O. (Lluniwr), Rasoamanana, A. (Lluniwr), Mandimbiniaina, R. (Lluniwr), Spencer, N. (Lluniwr), Hockley, N. (Lluniwr) & Jones, J. P. G. (Lluniwr), Prifysgol Bangor University, 9 Medi 2016
Dangosydd eitem ddigidol (DOI): 10.5255/UKDA-SN-852435
Set ddata
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Household survey investigating the social impacts of biodiversity offsets in Madagascar
Jones, J. (Lluniwr) & Bidaud, C. (Lluniwr), Prifysgol Bangor University, 7 Meh 2016
Dangosydd eitem ddigidol (DOI): 10.5255/UKDA-SN-852341
Set ddata