Environmental Services (environmental + services)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Developing sustainability balanced scorecards for environmental services: A study of three large Portuguese companies

ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT, Issue 4 2007
Idalina Dias-Sardinha
First page of article [source]


Social Capital, Networks, and Community Environments in Bangkok, Thailand

GROWTH AND CHANGE, Issue 4 2002
Amrita Daniere
This paper considers the case of Bangkok where, as in many Asian cities, the expansion of urban areas has outpaced the ability of public entities to manage and provide basic services. One potential way to improve the capacity of neighborhoods to assist in provision or improvement in environmental services is to enhance the positive contributions provided by local social networks and social capital. A conceptual framework is presented to explore the role of social networks in environmental management in polluted urban environments. This is followed by a brief description of the methodology and survey instrument used to collect information from a sample of community households in Bangkok and an analysis of the results from this survey regarding environmental practices, community action, and social networks. Some of the results suggest that increasing the number of social interactions that residents of a community experience is associated with increased community participation as, apparently, is increasing knowledge about what happens to waste or waste water after it leaves the community. Local public education efforts that focus on useful knowledge about environmental impacts may well be an effective way to encourage community participation. [source]


Turning the tide: Enabling sustainable development for Africa's mobile pastoralists

NATURAL RESOURCES FORUM, Issue 3 2008
Jonathan Davies
Abstract Sustainable development for Africa's mobile pastoralists is slowly becoming a reality. Success depends to a large extent on understanding the dynamics of drylands environments, accepting the logic of customary mobile livestock keeping, and enabling effective governance. Appropriate investment in pastoralism requires a clear understanding of the values that are attached to it and innovative approaches to marketing of the goods and services that emanate from the system. To make development truly sustainable it is imperative that the environmental services of pastoralism are recognised, rewarded and promoted. Constraints to sustainable pastoral development include low and misdirected public and private investment, weak security of resource rights, low human capital, weak pastoral voice and poor governance. Successful and sustainable development is observed in pastoral regions where customary governance has been legitimized, resource rights secured and economic development of the pastoral sector, as opposed to transformation of livestock keeping, has prevailed. This article presents state-of-the-art knowledge on sustainable pastoralism, gathered through the GEF/UNDP/IUCN World Initiative for Sustainable Pastoralism (WISP), with data and case studies taken from three recently published WISP reports: "Global Economic Review of Pastoralism", "Pastoralism as Conservation in the Horn of Africa", and "Policy Impacts on Pastoral Environments". [source]


Testing and Implementing the Use of Multiple Bidding Rounds in Conservation Auctions: A Case Study Application

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, Issue 3 2009
John Rolfe
Conservation auctions are typically framed as closed, discriminatory, single round, first-price auctions, and are based on the assumption that landholders will offer bids determined by their "independent private values." Where landholders are unfamiliar with conservation tender processes and the supply of environmental services, they may find it very difficult to construct bids in this way. Bid values may be influenced by other factors, such as concerns about "winner's curse," a desire to capture economic rent, and premiums for risk and uncertainty factors. Sealed, single round auctions may exacerbate information gaps and uncertainty factors because of the limited information flows compared to traditional market exchanges and open, ascending auctions. In this paper, the cost efficiencies of a multiple bidding round auction for landholder management actions are explored with the use of field experiments and a conservation auction. The case study application is improved grazing management in a rangeland area of Australia, where landholders are unfamiliar with supplying environmental services or conservation auctions. Results suggest that multiple round auctions may be associated with efficiency gains, particularly in initial rounds. Les enchères pour la conservation sont généralement des enchères au premier prix, à un tour, discriminatoires et par offre écrite. Elles reposent sur l'hypothèque que les offres des propriétaires fonciers refléteront leur ,valeur privée,. Lorsque les propriétaires fonciers ne sont pas familiers avec les processus d'enchères pour la conservation et la prestation de services environnementaux, ils peuvent éprouver de la difficultéà attribuer une valeur à leur offre. Cette valeur peut-être influencée par d'autres facteurs, tels que la crainte de la ,malédiction du vainqueur ,, le désir de réaliser une rente économique, les primes de risque et les facteurs d'incertitude. Les enchères scellées à un tour peuvent aggraver le manque d'information et les facteurs d'incertitude étant donné que les enchérisseurs disposent de peu d'information comparativement aux enchères ascendantes ouvertes traditionnelles. Dans le présent article, nous avons examiné, à l'aide d'expériences sur le terrain et d'enchères pour la conservation, l'efficacité-coût d'une enchère à tours multiples pour des mesures de gestion de la part de propriétaires fonciers. L'exercice visait à améliorer la gestion des pâturages d'un parcours naturel en Australie, où les propriétaires fonciers ne sont pas familiers avec la prestation de services environnementaux ni avec les enchères pour la conservation. Les résultats autorisent à penser que les enchères à tours multiples pourraient offrir des gains d'efficience, particulièrement durant les premiers tours. [source]