< Back to previous page

Project

Payments for Ecosystem Services and land use dynamics: motivational and institutional interactions - case studies from rural Nicaragua.

During the last decade, the conservation tool of 'Payments for Ecosystem Services' (PES) has attracted growing attention in both academic and policy circles. The approach looks appealing: land users, often poorly motivated to protect nature on their land, may be encouraged to do so through direct and conditional payments from interested consumers/buyers (e.g. local urban water users paying upstream farmers for land conservation). PES mechanisms are also increasingly seen as promising tools for rural poverty alleviation in developing countries. PES schemes are, however, not uncontested. Despite the growing literature on PES, there is still a theoretical and empirical knowledge gap on the socio-environmental and political-economic consequences of PES schemes and on the way payment incentives influence individual and collective decisions on land use and sustained pro-environment behaviour. Through comparative case studies in Nicaragua, the research project contributes to a more comprehensive and holistic agenda on the appropriateness and socio-ecological consequences of PES schemes.
Date:1 Oct 2013 →  30 Sep 2016
Keywords:LAND USE SYSTEMS, NICARAGUA, ENVIRONMENTAL BEHAVIOUR
Disciplines:Agriculture, land and farm management, Applied economics, Economic development, innovation, technological change and growth