Payments for Environmental Services (PES) has become a popular means to neoliberalize biodiversity conservation throughout the world. Yet research on PES is increasingly focused on debating exactly how neoliberal programmes really are, documenting complexities in PES implementation and concluding that few programmes are very market-based in practice. While we agree that ideal neoliberal implementation of PES does not and cannot exist, we argue that focusing (only) on micro-politics misunderstands the importance of analysing PES as a form of neoliberal conservation. The question is not just whether PES is innately neoliberal but how it functions within a broader neoliberal political economy. By focusing on the overarching governance and powe...
Payments for Environmental Services (PES) constitute an innovative economic intervention to countera...
The world over, neoliberal modes of conservation are hybridising with, or even replacing, other form...
Payments for environmental services (PES) schemes have been implemented in several developed and dev...
Payments for Environmental Services (PES) has become a popular means to neoliberalize biodiversity c...
In this response to Van Hecken et al. (2018), we seek to clarify the analysis (Fletcher and Büscher,...
In this commentary we respond to Fletcher and Büscher's (2017) recent article in this journal on Pay...
Neoliberal conservation describes a dynamic wherein prominent organizations around the world concern...
Payments for ecosystem/environmental services (PES) interventions aim to subject ecosystem conservat...
Payments for ecosystem services (PES) is a conservation mechanism that aims to commodify ecosystems ...
In high-income nations, the concept of PES has gained traction largely because it complements ongoin...
This paper critically engages with the role of conservation practitioners as ‘expert intermediaries’...
Recent critiques of 'payments for ecosystem services' (PES) and other market-based instruments for e...
Payments for Environmental Services (PES) constitute an innovative economic intervention to countera...
In a recent Forum Essay in Pacific Conservation Biology, the well known ecologist Harry Recher argue...
Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) are becoming increasingly widespread as they are being promote...
Payments for Environmental Services (PES) constitute an innovative economic intervention to countera...
The world over, neoliberal modes of conservation are hybridising with, or even replacing, other form...
Payments for environmental services (PES) schemes have been implemented in several developed and dev...
Payments for Environmental Services (PES) has become a popular means to neoliberalize biodiversity c...
In this response to Van Hecken et al. (2018), we seek to clarify the analysis (Fletcher and Büscher,...
In this commentary we respond to Fletcher and Büscher's (2017) recent article in this journal on Pay...
Neoliberal conservation describes a dynamic wherein prominent organizations around the world concern...
Payments for ecosystem/environmental services (PES) interventions aim to subject ecosystem conservat...
Payments for ecosystem services (PES) is a conservation mechanism that aims to commodify ecosystems ...
In high-income nations, the concept of PES has gained traction largely because it complements ongoin...
This paper critically engages with the role of conservation practitioners as ‘expert intermediaries’...
Recent critiques of 'payments for ecosystem services' (PES) and other market-based instruments for e...
Payments for Environmental Services (PES) constitute an innovative economic intervention to countera...
In a recent Forum Essay in Pacific Conservation Biology, the well known ecologist Harry Recher argue...
Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) are becoming increasingly widespread as they are being promote...
Payments for Environmental Services (PES) constitute an innovative economic intervention to countera...
The world over, neoliberal modes of conservation are hybridising with, or even replacing, other form...
Payments for environmental services (PES) schemes have been implemented in several developed and dev...