Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12872/298
Título : The different dimensions of livelihood impacts of Payments for Environmental Services (PES) Schemes: A systematic review
Autor : Blundo Canto, Genowefa Maria
Bax, Vincent
Quintero, Marcela
Cruz García, Gisella Susana
Groeneveld, Rolf Adriaan
Pérez Marulanda, Lisset
Palabras clave : Capacity building
Comparative study
Conservation management
Deforestation
Ecological economics
Ecosystem service
Incentive
Income
Livelihood
Research program
Fecha de publicación : jul-2018
Editorial : Elsevier B.V.
Citación : Blundo Canto, G., Bax, V., Quintero, M., Cruz Garcia, G. S., Groeneveld, R. A., & Perez Marulanda, L. (2018). The different dimensions of livelihood impacts of Payments for Environmental Services (PES) schemes: A systematic review. Ecological Economics, 149, 160-183.
Resumen : Through a systematic review of peer-reviewed and grey literature, this paper analyzes evidence of the livelihood impacts of Payments for Environmental Services (PES). Forty-six studies assessed PES livelihood impacts. The assessments presented more positive livelihood impacts than negative ones, focusing on financial benefits. Non-monetary and non-material impacts of PES were largely understudied. Most reviews focused on ES providers, hindering the understanding of broader societal impacts. The review yielded examples where participants lost from their participation or where improvements in one livelihood dimension paralleled deterioration in another. Consequently, we identified key research gaps in: i) understanding the social and cultural impacts of PES, ii) evaluating environmental and economic additionality from improving other ES at the expense of cultural ones, iii) and assessing PES impacts in terms of trade-offs between multiple livelihood dimensions. Moreover, increased knowledge is needed on the impact of PES on changes in household expenditure and choice, and on trade-offs between household income and inequality in ES provider communities. Finally, if PES schemes are implemented to sustainably improve livelihoods, targeting disaggregated populations, understanding equity and social power relations within and between ES providers and users, and better monitoring and evaluation systems that consider locally relevant livelihood dimensions are needed.
URI : http://repositorio.uch.edu.pe/handle/uch/298
http://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2018.03.011
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800917306006
ISSN : 0921-8009
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