Theory versus Practice in Payment for Ecosystem Services in Totonicapán, Guatemala
Date
2018-04-27
Author
Advisor
Shapiro-Garza, Elizabeth
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Abstract
Payment for Ecosystem Service (PES) initiatives are a popular and wide-spread market-based
approach to mitigating detrimental
impacts of rapid land-use change that threatens vital ecological resources such as
water, soil, and timber. The
basic premise of PES involves a set of voluntary transactions between the buyers and
sellers of a clearly defined
ecological service. In theory, sellers - often rural landholders - are incentivized
to adopt conservation-based
practices to ensure delivery of the ecosystem service that buyers pay them to provide.
Yet in
practice, PES initiatives rarely reflect the original market-based model. A debate
has surfaced as to why and
how this approach to conservation is altered and contested by local actors, however
few case studies have been
documented. To fill this gap, this study documents the history of PES in Totonicapán,
Guatemala. The study
uses a series of interviews and participant observations to explore how local political,
social, environmental and
cultural dynamics led to the contestation and subsequent reshaping of PES programs
by local actors. The
results of this study provide insight on how PES may be adapted to improve conservation
outcomes, particularly in rural
indigenous communities.
Type
Master's projectSubject
payment for ecosystem servicesconservation
incentives
non-monetary valuation
wateshed management
communal forestry
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/16599Citation
Spaulding, Leanne (2018). Theory versus Practice in Payment for Ecosystem Services in Totonicapán, Guatemala.
Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/16599.Collections
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