Ecosystem services (ES) has established itself as the predominant paradigm for framing environmental research and policy-making. Its rapid popularisation is raising concerns about the possibility that it might lead to nature commodification. These concerns have been associated with a broader agenda for the neoliberalization of conservation, but research on this area remains mostly theoretical. This paper advances the debate with an empirical study on the views of environmental professionals. The views of those who shape interpretation, uptake and implementation environmental practice are of critical importance since they give the real mark on whether any fundamental change in the current direction of environmental governance is to be expect...
The recent changes in global politics and the advancement of science and technology, have paved way ...
In reaction to traditional environmental management approaches grounded on the paradigm 'control cha...
Conservation biologists, policy makers, and citizens have identified the protection of native ecosys...
Ecosystem services (ES) has established itself as the predominant paradigm for framing environmental...
The article processing charge was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Researc...
The paper poses the anthropological question "What does man returns to the nature or how he takes ca...
This chapter examines the way commodification processes are playing out in the domain of human-natur...
AbstractCommodification of nature refers to the expansion of market trade to previously non-marketed...
New markets for the conservation of so-called ecosystem services, like the ability of a wetland to m...
The ecosystem services (ES) concept is one of the main avenues for conveying society's dependence on...
As the processes by which nature renders benefits for people, ecosystem services are fundamental to ...
AbstractEconomics – specifically, monetary valuation – has been given a pivotal role in ecosystem co...
1. By definition, ecosystem services (ES) are the “benefits that people obtain from ecosystems”, and...
Through the commodification of nature, the framing of the environment as a ‘natural resource’ or ‘ec...
Using an ecofeminist critical analysis, this paper examines the extent to which two forest-related ‘...
The recent changes in global politics and the advancement of science and technology, have paved way ...
In reaction to traditional environmental management approaches grounded on the paradigm 'control cha...
Conservation biologists, policy makers, and citizens have identified the protection of native ecosys...
Ecosystem services (ES) has established itself as the predominant paradigm for framing environmental...
The article processing charge was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Researc...
The paper poses the anthropological question "What does man returns to the nature or how he takes ca...
This chapter examines the way commodification processes are playing out in the domain of human-natur...
AbstractCommodification of nature refers to the expansion of market trade to previously non-marketed...
New markets for the conservation of so-called ecosystem services, like the ability of a wetland to m...
The ecosystem services (ES) concept is one of the main avenues for conveying society's dependence on...
As the processes by which nature renders benefits for people, ecosystem services are fundamental to ...
AbstractEconomics – specifically, monetary valuation – has been given a pivotal role in ecosystem co...
1. By definition, ecosystem services (ES) are the “benefits that people obtain from ecosystems”, and...
Through the commodification of nature, the framing of the environment as a ‘natural resource’ or ‘ec...
Using an ecofeminist critical analysis, this paper examines the extent to which two forest-related ‘...
The recent changes in global politics and the advancement of science and technology, have paved way ...
In reaction to traditional environmental management approaches grounded on the paradigm 'control cha...
Conservation biologists, policy makers, and citizens have identified the protection of native ecosys...