This article explores how payment for environmental services (PES) approaches envision, design and actively constitute new hydro-social territories by reconfiguring local water control arenas. PES aims to conserve watershed ecosystems by repatterning and commoditizing the link between ‘water service providers’ upstream and ‘water consuming’ populations downstream. Two case illustrations from the Ecuadorian highlands are used to clarify how PES implementation – though presented as if it were apolitical and neutral – weakens locally crafted hydrosocial territories in favour of dominant interests. If consolidated, this depoliticized PES implementation fosters the consolidation of new (market-environmentalist) territories, subjects and interact...
In the Andes, demand for water is growing and upland land-use changes are increasing. Water quality,...
<p>In Latin America, payment for environmental services (PES) is a tool for watershed conservation t...
ABSTRACT: The threats that Andean water user collectives face are ever-growing in a globalizing soci...
This article explores how payment for environmental services (PES) approaches envision, design and a...
This article explores how payment for environmental services (PES) approaches envision, design and a...
Payment for Environmental Services (PES) is a globally expanding concept used to address environment...
Payment for Environmental Services (PES) is a globally expanding concept used to address environment...
<strong>During the last decade, the market environmentalist policy model of Payment for Environmenta...
Payments for environmental services (PES) schemes are widely promoted to secure ecosystem services t...
There is a forceful new impetus toward mega-hydraulic projects in Latin America, which are booming b...
As a form of environmental governance, Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) is imbued with ideologi...
Ecuadorian state policies and institutional reforms have territorialized water since the 1960s. Peas...
This article uses two case studies to illustrate how Andean irrigation development and management em...
Making water management more democratic through the participation of water users, while crucially in...
In Peru, payment for ecosystem services is an increasingly popular mechanism to secure the transfer ...
In the Andes, demand for water is growing and upland land-use changes are increasing. Water quality,...
<p>In Latin America, payment for environmental services (PES) is a tool for watershed conservation t...
ABSTRACT: The threats that Andean water user collectives face are ever-growing in a globalizing soci...
This article explores how payment for environmental services (PES) approaches envision, design and a...
This article explores how payment for environmental services (PES) approaches envision, design and a...
Payment for Environmental Services (PES) is a globally expanding concept used to address environment...
Payment for Environmental Services (PES) is a globally expanding concept used to address environment...
<strong>During the last decade, the market environmentalist policy model of Payment for Environmenta...
Payments for environmental services (PES) schemes are widely promoted to secure ecosystem services t...
There is a forceful new impetus toward mega-hydraulic projects in Latin America, which are booming b...
As a form of environmental governance, Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) is imbued with ideologi...
Ecuadorian state policies and institutional reforms have territorialized water since the 1960s. Peas...
This article uses two case studies to illustrate how Andean irrigation development and management em...
Making water management more democratic through the participation of water users, while crucially in...
In Peru, payment for ecosystem services is an increasingly popular mechanism to secure the transfer ...
In the Andes, demand for water is growing and upland land-use changes are increasing. Water quality,...
<p>In Latin America, payment for environmental services (PES) is a tool for watershed conservation t...
ABSTRACT: The threats that Andean water user collectives face are ever-growing in a globalizing soci...