AbstractIn Malaysia, second largest palm oil producer worldwide, logging companies, palm oil corporations, and even responsible citizens can now compensate their biodiversity impacts by purchasing Biodiversity Conservation Certificates in an emerging new biodiversity market: the Malua BioBank. Biodiversity markets are part of a wider trend of marketisation and neoliberalisation of biodiversity governance; introduced and promoted as (technical) win–win solutions to counter biodiversity loss and enable sustainable development. The existing neoliberalisation and nature literature has tended to analyse these processes as consequences of an inherent drive of capital to expand accumulation and submit ever more areas of nature to the neoliberal ma...
During the last three decades, the arena of biodiversity conservation has largely aligned itself wit...
1. Globally, governments and regulators face an ongoing trade‐off between meeting economic developme...
Pricing and market exchange, we are now often told, are the only routes through which biological div...
In Malaysia, second largest palm oil producer worldwide, logging companies, palm oil corporations, a...
AbstractIn Malaysia, second largest palm oil producer worldwide, logging companies, palm oil corpora...
Market-based strategies are promoted as neoliberal governance solutions to environmental problems, f...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the National Academy of ...
In the same way there are markets for carbon, there is now a market for sustainability. Ostensibly p...
Globally, governments and regulators face an ongoing trade‐off between meeting economic development ...
In response to high-profile activist campaigns raising public awareness of the destructive effects o...
Most programmes which incentivise the supply of public goods such as biodiversity conservation on pr...
The emergence of market mechanisms for the protection of biodiversity and ecosystem services in rece...
Many conservationists have become enamoured with mainstream economic concepts and approaches, descr...
In this paper we discuss differences in the ways transnational conservationists and Melanesian farme...
During the last decade, conservation banking mechanisms have emerged in the environmental discourse ...
During the last three decades, the arena of biodiversity conservation has largely aligned itself wit...
1. Globally, governments and regulators face an ongoing trade‐off between meeting economic developme...
Pricing and market exchange, we are now often told, are the only routes through which biological div...
In Malaysia, second largest palm oil producer worldwide, logging companies, palm oil corporations, a...
AbstractIn Malaysia, second largest palm oil producer worldwide, logging companies, palm oil corpora...
Market-based strategies are promoted as neoliberal governance solutions to environmental problems, f...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the National Academy of ...
In the same way there are markets for carbon, there is now a market for sustainability. Ostensibly p...
Globally, governments and regulators face an ongoing trade‐off between meeting economic development ...
In response to high-profile activist campaigns raising public awareness of the destructive effects o...
Most programmes which incentivise the supply of public goods such as biodiversity conservation on pr...
The emergence of market mechanisms for the protection of biodiversity and ecosystem services in rece...
Many conservationists have become enamoured with mainstream economic concepts and approaches, descr...
In this paper we discuss differences in the ways transnational conservationists and Melanesian farme...
During the last decade, conservation banking mechanisms have emerged in the environmental discourse ...
During the last three decades, the arena of biodiversity conservation has largely aligned itself wit...
1. Globally, governments and regulators face an ongoing trade‐off between meeting economic developme...
Pricing and market exchange, we are now often told, are the only routes through which biological div...