57 results on '"Peter H. May"'
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2. UN environmental policy: Non-State Actors, trends, and the regulatory role of the state
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Joseph S. Weiss, Zhu Dajian, Maria Amélia Enríquez, Peter H. May, Elimar Pinheiro do Nascimento, Walter A. Pengue, and Stanislav Shmelev
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Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Political science - Abstract
Abstract This interdisciplinary article draws from the radical ideas of global political ecology (GPE), environmental politics, ecological economics and the sociological analysis of social movements. It seeks to help bridge the research gap regarding non-state actors' (NSAs) influence on the role of the nation-state and the United Nations in global political ecology and environmental policy, including emission reductions, such as antideforestation measures, and environmental justice. We consider NSAs as consisting of two heterogeneous global coalitions: a) civil society organizations (CSOs) and environmental non-governmental organizations, and b) peak corporate organizations with green economy objectives, here denominated green business organizations, representing transnational corporations (TNCs). After a review of prior studies, we present a version of an advocacy coalition framework; identify a timeline of changes in UN architecture and simplified NSA influence categories. We only begin to test very broad hypotheses on relative agency and to compare NSA narratives with UN documents. We show that the architecture of the UN has gradually shifted from favoring civil society to corporations. There is evidence that, in the late 1990s, in comparison with CSOs, TNCs increased their access to nation-states and UN agencies. The TNC narrative changed from a) denying climate change and ignoring the UN to b) recognizing change and guiding negotiations. These shifts in UN architecture, TNC agency and narrative appears to have influenced changes in UN documents towards a corporate global environmental framework, reducing their references to the regulatory and enforcement roles of the state and global binding agreements, shifting global debate towards a voluntary corporate orientation. This may have reduced prospects for reducing emissions and increasing environmental justice. Combining market mechanisms with strong regulatory frameworks is best practice for environmental policy. When nation-states have the will and capacity to command and control, they can reduce environmental degradation. Stronger national government competence and enforcement capacity and binding UN agreements are essential for the effectiveness of market incentives, which may be enhanced by business and civil society initiatives. If CSOs can reunite and regain their strength, maybe they could negotiate with TNCs on a more equal footing. Perhaps UN members could once again become comfortable with the idea of strong states and non-hegemonic global governance. Key words: Global political ecology, Nation-state, earth system governance, UN architecture, UN agency, green economy, non-state actors, UNCED, Rio+20, Climate convention
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- 2017
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3. Designing a global mechanism for intergovernmental biodiversity financing
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Nils Droste, Joshua Farley, Irene Ring, Peter H. May, and Taylor H. Ricketts
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Aichi targets ,biodiversity financing ,Convention on Biological Diversity ,fiscal transfers ,international environmental governance ,policy proposal ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
Abstract The Convention on Biological Diversity and the Nagoya Protocol display a broad international consensus for biodiversity conservation and equitable benefit sharing. Yet, the Aichi biodiversity targets show a lack of progress and thus indicate a need for additional action such as enhanced and better targeted financial resource mobilization. To date, no global financial burden‐sharing instrument has been proposed. Developing a global‐scale financial mechanism to support biodiversity conservation through intergovernmental transfers, we simulate three allocation designs: ecocentric, socioecological, and anthropocentric. We analyze the corresponding incentives needed to reach the Aichi target of terrestrial protected area coverage by 2020. Here we show that the socioecological design would provide the strongest median incentive for states which are farthest from achieving the target. Our proposal provides a novel concept for global biodiversity financing, which can serve as a starting point for more specific policy dialogues on intergovernmental burden and benefit‐sharing mechanisms to halt biodiversity loss.
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Irrigação e/ou reforma agrária no Nordeste?
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Peter H. May
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Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
No planejamento para o assentamento de beneficiários da reforma agrária no Nordeste brasileiro, uma preocupação se faz necessário com o potencial dos recursos hídricos para proteger as culturas e animais das secas recorrentes. Este trabalho trata dos fatores institucionais que limitam a utilização efetiva dos recursos hídricos nordestinos pelo pequeno produtor rural. Em base de análise dos resultados históricos da política regional de recursos hídricos, faz um paralelo entre o Programa de Irrigação do Nordeste (PROINE), e os planos regionais de reforma agrária. Especifica possíveis fontes de conflito e problemas assemelhados na administração de ambos os programas. Buscam-se soluções as quais podem reverter os fatores que limitam o assentamento bem sucedido dos produtores rurais, envolvendo uma melhor integração do manejo dos recursos hídricos com a distribuição eqüitativa de terra. PALAVRAS-CHAVE: IRRIGAÇÃO, REFORMA AGRÁRIA, POLÍTICA AGRÍCOLA, NORDESTE. Brazil, it is essential to be concerned with the potential of water resources to protect crops and animals from recurrent drought. This study treats institutional factors that limit the effective utilization of Northeast water resources by the small fanner. On the basis of an analysis of the historical outcomes of regional water resources policies, a parallel is drawn betwenn the Northeast Irrigation Program (PROINE) and current regional agrarian reform plans. The study specifies possible sources of conflict and similar administrative problems that afflict both programs. Solutions are sought to counter the factors limiting successful settlement of small fanners, involving a better integration of water resource management with equitable land distribution. KEY WORDS: IRRIGATION, AGRARIAN REFORM, AGRICULTURAL POLICY, NORTHEAST.
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- 2011
5. A global review of ecological fiscal transfers
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Maud Borie, Rodrigo S. Cassola, Monique Akullo, Annabelle Cruz-Trinidad, Peter H. May, Lu Yu, Oyut Amarjargal, Nataliia Viktorivna Kotenko, Xiaoxi Wang, Felipe Luiz Lima de Paulo, Rui Santos, Luca Tacconi, Jonah Busch, Ulan Kasymov, Madhu Verma, Anit Mukherjee, Kecen Zhou, Joko Tri Haryanto, Ariunaa Lhkagvadorj, Gracie Verde Selva, Sonny Mumbunan, Irene Ring, and Nils Droste
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Sustainable development ,Global and Planetary Change ,Government ,Ecology ,Scope (project management) ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Urban Studies ,Ecological indicator ,Human geography ,Revenue ,Environmental impact assessment ,Business ,China ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Food Science - Abstract
Ecological fiscal transfers (EFT) transfer public revenue between governments within a country based on ecological indicators. EFT can compensate subnational governments for the costs of conserving ecosystems and in principle can incentivize greater ecological conservation. We review established EFT in Brazil, Portugal, France, China and India, and emerging or proposed EFT in ten more countries. We analyse common themes related to EFT emergence, design and effects. EFT have grown rapidly from US$0.35 billion yr−1 in 2007 to US$23 billion yr−1 in 2020. We discuss the scope of opportunity to expand EFT to other countries by ‘greening’ intergovernmental fiscal transfers. The transfer of public funds between governments within a country based on ecological indicators is an emerging tool in environmental policy. A review of extant and proposed schemes identifies challenges and opportunities to expand the use of this instrument.
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- 2021
6. Deconstructing the policyscape for reducing deforestation in the Eastern Amazon: Practical insights for a landscape approach
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Peter H. May, Erin O. Sills, Tim Forsyth, and M.F. Gebara
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Sustainable landscaping ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Policy mix ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Psychological intervention ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Focus group ,Stratified sampling ,Interdependence ,Climate change mitigation ,Deforestation ,Political science ,Environmental planning ,GE Environmental Sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common - Abstract
In international debates on climate change mitigation and forests, there is increased recognition of the importance of a landscape approach to effectively address tropical deforestation. Such an approach, although increasingly promoted, remains only loosely defined and requires further development in order to effectively integrate different interventions at landscape level. In particular, it is important to understand the possible interactions between different landscape interventions at local level—where they are intended to have effect—and the challenges associated with them. Inspired by the complexity of policy mix analysis, this article seeks to shed light on these interactions by analysing how different policies and measures for reducing deforestation and degradation have played out in a jurisdiction with wide-ranging actors and interventions aimed at shaping their behaviour. Focusing on smallholders, we examine the Sustainable Landscapes Pilot Programme in São Félix do Xingu, looking at how different policies interact—categorising interactions as “complementary,” “mutually reinforcing” (synergistic), “in conflict,” “interdependent,” and/or “redundant”—and explain how proponents of this pilot programme seek to integrate them. Most analysis is based on primary data collected through quantitative (i.e., random stratified sampling and surveys) and qualitative (i.e., observation and focus groups) methods. The São Félix do Xingu case shows that understanding effects of different policies and measures on people's behaviour requires a deeper look at local perceptions and reactions to such policies and measures, something most studies on the topic have overlooked. Ultimately, the heterogeneity and complexity of social practices that permeate landscapes must be recognised in order to integrate diverse measures to reduce deforestation.
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- 2019
7. Rights to Land, Forests and Carbon in REDD+ : Insights from Mexico, Brazil and Costa Rica
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Peter H. May, Pablo Pacheco, Guillermo Navarro, Manuel Estrada, and Esteve Corbera
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forests ,Latin Americans ,Benefit sharing ,Natural resource economics ,business.industry ,carbon ,Environmental resource management ,Forest management ,Climate change ,Forestry ,Context (language use) ,lcsh:QK900-989 ,Forests ,Property rights ,Carbon ,Latin America ,Deforestation ,lcsh:Plant ecology ,property rights ,Business ,Land tenure ,REDD+ - Abstract
Land tenure and carbon rights constitute critical issues to take into account in achieving emission reductions, ensuring transparent benefit sharing and determining non-permanence (or non-compliance) liabilities in the context of REDD+ strategies and projects. This is so because tenure systems influence who becomes involved in efforts to avoid deforestation and improve forest management, and that land tenure, carbon rights and liabilities may be linked or divorced with implications for rural development. This paper explores these issues by looking at tenure regimes and carbon rights issues in Mexico, Brazil and Costa Rica. It is effectively shown that complex bundles of rights over forest resources have distinct implications for REDD+ design and implementation, and that REDD+ strategies in selected countries have to date failed in procedurally addressing land-use conflicts and carbon rights entitlements and liabilities.
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- 2021
8. Governança ambiental no Brasil: rumo aos objetivos do desenvolvimento sustentável (ODS)?
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Carlos Alfredo Joly, Estela Maria Souza Costa Neves, Leonardo Ribeiro Teixeira, Cristiana Simão Seixas, Peter H. May, and Deborah Santos Prado
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Water resources ,Sustainable development ,Environmental governance ,Political science ,Fishing ,Climate change ,Federal constitution ,General Medicine ,Vegetation ,Environmental planning - Abstract
A governança ambiental é peça-chave para atingir a Agenda 2030 da Organização das Nações Unidas (ONU). Este artigo explora o potencial do Brasil de aproximar-se dos Objetivos do Desenvolvimento Sustentável (ODS) da Agenda 2030. Para tanto, apresenta seus avanços e retrocessos, em particular após a Constituição Federal de 1988 enfocando: licenciamento ambiental; vegetação nativa; recursos pesqueiros; recursos hídricos; unidades de conservação; e mudanças climáticas. Concluímos o artigo apontando que os retrocessos impostos ao sistema de governança ambiental na última década, e principalmente no último ano, indicam que o país caminha em direção oposta ao futuro almejado pela Agenda 2030.
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- 2020
9. Spatially explicit valuation of the Brazilian Amazon Forest’s Ecosystem Services
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Juha Siikamäki, Michael Toman, Aline C. Oliveira, Peter H. May, Gabrielle Ferreira Pires, Britaldo Soares-Filho, Jon Strand, Ubirajara Oliveira, Marcos Heil Costa, Raoni Rajão, Sónia Maria Carvalho Ribeiro, Richard van der Hoff, and Ronaldo Seroa da Motta
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0301 basic medicine ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Biodiversity ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,Ecosystem services ,03 medical and health sciences ,food ,Forest protection ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Amazon rainforest ,Agroforestry ,Logging ,food.food ,Urban Studies ,030104 developmental biology ,Greenhouse gas ,Environmental science ,Conservation biology ,Food Science ,Brazil nut - Abstract
The Brazilian Amazon forest is tremendously important for its ecosystem services but attribution of economically measurable values remains scarce. Mapping these values is essential for designing conservation strategies that suitably combine regional forest protection with sustainable forest use. We estimate spatially explicit economic values for a range of ecosystem services provided by the Brazilian Amazon forest, including food production (Brazil nut), raw material provision (rubber and timber), greenhouse gas mitigation (CO2 emissions) and climate regulation (rent losses to soybean, beef and hydroelectricity production due to reduced rainfall). Our work also includes the mapping of biodiversity resources and of rent losses to timber production by fire-induced degradation. Highest values range from US$56.72 ± 10 ha−1 yr−1 to US$737 ± 134 ha−1 yr−1 but are restricted to only 12% of the remaining forest. Our results, presented on a web platform, identify regions where high ecosystem services values cluster together as potential information to support decision-making. This study spatially maps the economic value of some major ecosystem services provided by the Brazilian Amazon. It also estimates changes in these values under scenarios of degradation and low-impact logging.
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- 2018
10. Pandemics, conservation, and human-nature relations
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Gunars Platais, Peter H. May, and M. Fernanda Gebara
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Ecology ,Poverty ,Opposition (planets) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Social change ,Environmental ethics ,Article ,Indigenous ,Interdependence ,Animal rights ,Intervention (law) ,Anthropocentrism ,Political science ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,QH540-549.5 ,General Environmental Science ,media_common - Abstract
Highlights At this moment of profound ecological and health crises, there is an urgent call for a fundamental rethinking of hegemonic anthropocentric attitudes. Recent responses to the COVID-19 pandemic have unleashed debates in the scientific and policy arenas on conservation, human-nature relations, animal rights, and efforts to alleviate global poverty among forest-dependent peoples. In this perspective article we seek to make sense out of the ensuing debate and consider possible solutions. We couch this debate first off as a question of who is invading whom? The most serious pandemics in recorded history have their causes rooted in unsustainable anthropic intervention on land and biodiversity. With the world on lockdown, rapid social changes have increased the opportunities to re-think human-nature relations. We argue that transitioning from the current crises demand that we first renew our relationship with nature, recognizing interdependence and finding ways to cushion the overwhelming pressures of teeming humanity while we adapt to nature's response in the guise of a pandemic. We show examples of different cultures in the Amazon that could inspire a future rooted in a respectful and intuitive relationship with the natural world. We discuss the possibilities of how to get there considering the current threatening scenario to the indigenous peoples of the Amazon. We conclude by showing that in the process of transitioning from the current crises we may enable a relational cosmopolitics, where humans and other-than-humans are no longer seen as being in opposition but rather as interdependent.
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- 2021
11. Adaptive Forest Governance in Northwestern Mato Grosso, Brazil: Pilot project outcomes across agrarian reform landscapes
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Lucila Nunes de Vargas, William Costa, Peter H. May, Raoni Lucas Rajão, Amanda Ribeiro de Oliveira, Robert Brooks Davenport, Jorge L. Vivan, and Paulo César Nunes
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Sustainable development ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Land use ,Amazon rainforest ,Geography, Planning and Development ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Agrarian reform ,01 natural sciences ,food.food ,food ,Environmental governance ,Deforestation ,Environmental protection ,Human settlement ,Economics ,Environmental planning ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Brazil nut - Abstract
Recent research on deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has rarely included empirical observation of how land managers perceive and respond to forest governance rules. In this case study, we consider how two decades of pilot projects for integrated conservation and sustainable development (ICDPs) variously influenced forest governance across three agrarian reform settlements in northwestern Mato Grosso state. The analysis combines: i) remote sensing of deforestation from 1997–2015; ii) land use and economic data for individual settler farms and cooperatives; iii) settlers' perceptions regarding legitimacy and relevance of state policies, including land use regulations under the Brazilian Forest Code. Deforestation across settlements varied in association with synergies – or lack thereof – between policy instruments and socially embedded rules organizing economic alternatives to the dominant regional pattern of cattle ranching. In two of the settlements deforestation surpassed or was approaching 80% of their total area. In the third settlement deforestation stabilized at 45%, corresponding with the initiation of ICDP support for a pilot project focused on Brazil nut extractivism to consolidate community management of the settlement's collective forest reserve. The latter process involved a ‘policy mix’ or sequence of overlapping components: technical assistance, cooperative organization, environmental licensing, infrastructure, equitable contracts with surrounding indigenous communities and market development. Comparing with the two counterfactual cases, we suggest a framework for analysis of systemic socio-ecological change in settlements in the Brazilian Amazon, and reconsider the role of ICDPs in landscape approaches to environmental governance in tropical forests. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment
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- 2017
12. Municipal Responses to Ecological Fiscal Transfers in Brazil: A microeconometric panel data approach
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Guilherme Rodrigues Lima, Nils Droste, Irene Ring, and Peter H. May
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Public economics ,Ecology ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Econometric analysis ,021107 urban & regional planning ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Tax revenue ,Ecological indicator ,Incentive ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Fiscal federalism ,050207 economics ,Protected area ,Panel data - Abstract
Ecological fiscal transfers in Brazil, the so-called ICMS-Ecologico or ICMS-E, redistribute part of the state-level value-added tax revenues on the basis of ecological indicators to local governments. We analyze whether the introduction of this economic instrument in a state offers incentives to municipal responses in terms of further protected area (PA) designation. We provide a microeconomic model for the functioning of ICMS-E and test the derived hypothesis empirically. Employing an econometric analysis on panel data for two decades we estimate the correlation of the introduction of ICMS-E in Brazilian states with PA coverage. We find that the introduction of ICMS-E correlates with a higher average PA share. While the introduction of ICMS-E schemes may be a compensation for a high share of federal and state PA, we also find an incentive effect for municipalities to designate additional PA. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment
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- 2017
13. Framing REDD+ in the Brazilian national media: how discourses evolved amid global negotiation uncertainties
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Bruno Calixto, M.F. Gebara, Monica Di Gregorio, Maria Brockhaus, Rachel Carmenta, and Peter H. May
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0106 biological sciences ,Atmospheric Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Print media ,Environmental resource management ,Climate change ,Media coverage ,01 natural sciences ,010601 ecology ,Negotiation ,Politics ,Framing (social sciences) ,Political science ,Political economy ,Carbon market ,business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common ,Mass media - Abstract
Reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD+) in tropical countries is an important and contested element of the post-Kyoto climate regime. For policy options which generate controversy between diverse actor groups, such as REDD+, mass media plays an important role in defining and supporting policy possibilities. Analysis of the way in which national media frames issues of climate change and deforestation can offer insights into the nature of the contested domains of the REDD+ policy process. Here, we examine the Brazilian national media discourses surrounding REDD+ because it contributes to setting the tone of policy debates at the federal level. Specifically, we ask the following: (i) How was REDD+ portrayed in the Brazilian national print media and whose opinions and perceptions were represented? and (ii) How have media frames on REDD+ in the national print media changed over time? Our results contribute with new knowledge for understanding the observed progress of REDD+ in Brazil. We identify two main themes that dominate the focus in the national media coverage of REDD+, specifically “politics and policymaking” (representing half the coverage) and “economics and market” (with over a third). Results show that discussions around carbon markets were amongst the most contested and that optimism in relation to REDD+ effectiveness declined over time. The analysis suggests that positions adopted on the national REDD+ strategy were shaped by state and federal collision of interests. We demonstrate an evolution of national concerns from an initial focus on efficiency (e.g. finance and carbon markets) to a recentred focus on equity issues (e.g. implementation of safeguards). We conclude with some thoughts on the implications of these features for REDD+ interventions and implementation in Brazil.
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- 2017
14. Designing a global mechanism for intergovernmental biodiversity financing
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Joshua Farley, Nils Droste, Irene Ring, Taylor H. Ricketts, and Peter H. May
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0106 biological sciences ,Resource mobilization ,lcsh:QH1-199.5 ,biodiversity financing ,Biodiversity ,international environmental governance ,lcsh:General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Anthropocentrism ,Convention on Biological Diversity ,Nagoya Protocol ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Finance ,Ecology ,business.industry ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Incentive ,policy proposal ,Aichi targets ,fiscal transfers ,business ,Protected area ,Global biodiversity - Abstract
The Convention on Biological Diversity and the Nagoya Protocol display a broad international consensus for biodiversity conservation and equitable benefit sharing. Yet, the Aichi biodiversity targets show a lack of progress and thus indicate a need for additional action such as enhanced and better targeted financial resource mobilization. To date, no global financial burden‐sharing instrument has been proposed. Developing a global‐scale financial mechanism to support biodiversity conservation through intergovernmental transfers, we simulate three allocation designs: ecocentric, socioecological, and anthropocentric. We analyze the corresponding incentives needed to reach the Aichi target of terrestrial protected area coverage by 2020. Here we show that the socioecological design would provide the strongest median incentive for states which are farthest from achieving the target. Our proposal provides a novel concept for global biodiversity financing, which can serve as a starting point for more specific policy dialogues on intergovernmental burden and benefit‐sharing mechanisms to halt biodiversity loss.
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- 2019
15. Multi-level governance and power in climate change policy networks
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Emilia Pramova, Jouni Paavola, Peter H. May, Leandra Fatorelli, Dodik Ridho Nurrochmat, Sonya Dyah Kusumadewi, Bruno Locatelli, Maria Brockhaus, Intan Maya Sari, Monica Di Gregorio, International Forest Policy, Forest Economics, Business and Society, Department of Forest Sciences, and University of Helsinki, International Forest Policy
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Multi-level governance ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Regional science ,Climate change ,Gouvernance ,Politique de l'environnement ,CHANGE ADAPTATION ,SCALE ,Global and Planetary Change ,Utilisation des terres ,4112 Forestry ,Ecology ,Policy networks ,Corporate governance ,Communication ,Environmental governance ,Scale (social sciences) ,P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières ,Biodiversité ,INTEGRATION ,Brazil ,P40 - Météorologie et climatologie ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,CHANGE MITIGATION ,COALITIONS ,POLITICS ,1172 Environmental sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Changement climatique ,Government ,Land use ,BARRIERS ,ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE ,Climate change mitigation ,13. Climate action ,Indonesia ,LAND-USE SECTOR ,Business ,DEFORESTATION - Abstract
This article proposes an innovative theoretical framework that combines institutional and policy network approaches to study multi-level governance. The framework is used to derive a number of propositions on how cross-level power imbalances shape communication and collaboration across multiple levels of governance. The framework is then applied to examine the nature of cross-level interactions in climate change mitigation and adaptation policy processes in the land use sectors of Brazil and Indonesia. The paper identifies major barriers to cross-level communication and collaboration between national and sub-national levels. These are due to power imbalances across governance levels that reflect broader institutional differences between federal and decentralized systems of government. In addition, powerful communities operating predominantly at the national level hamper cross-level interactions. The analysis also reveals that engagement of national level actors is more extensive in the mitigation and that of local actors in the adaptation policy domain, and specialisation in one of the climate change responses at the national level hampers effective climate policy integration in the land use sector.
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- 2019
16. The future of agriculture and food: Evaluating the holistic costs and benefits
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Pushpam Kumar, Peter H. May, Harpinder Sandhu, Anil Markandya, Salman Hussain, Alexander Müller, Barbara Gemmill-Herren, Jes Weigelt, Gunars Platais, Kathleen A. Merrigan, Carl Obst, Haripriya Gundimeda, Wei Zhang, Michael W. Hamm, Kavita Sharma, Pavan Sukhdev, Abdou Tenkouano, Maria Cristina Tirado von der Pahlen, Walter Pengue, Sandhu, Harpinder, Müller, Alexander, Sukhdev, Pavan, Merrigan, Kathleen, Tenkouano, Abdou, Kumar, Pushpam, Hussain, Salman, Zhang, Wei, Pengue, Walter, Gemmill-Herren, Barbara, Hamm, Michael W, Tirado von der Pahlen, Maria Cristina, Obst, Carl, Sharma, Kavita, Gundimeda, Haripriya, Markandya, Anil, May, Peter, Platais, Gunars, and Weigelt, Jes
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Natural resource economics ,01 natural sciences ,Ecosystem services ,Sustainable agriculture ,human capital ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Global and Planetary Change ,Ecology ,Cost–benefit analysis ,natural capital ,business.industry ,externalities ,Geology ,TEEB ,010601 ecology ,Environmental studies ,sustainable agriculture ,Agriculture ,Damages ,Food systems ,Environmental science ,social capital ,Natural capital ,business - Abstract
Inadequacies of the current agriculture and food systems are recognised globally in the form of damages to environment and human health. In addition, the prevailing economic and policy systems do not reflect these damages in its accounting systems and standards. These shortcomings lead to perverse and pervasive outcomes for society at large. Our proposal is to consider all social and environmental externalities – both negative and positive, in global agriculture and food systems and reflect them in an economic system by evaluating comprehensive costs and benefits. This can be done by adopting an innovative, universal, and inclusive framework (the ‘TEEBAgriFood’ framework) in order to stimulate appropriate policy responses. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
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- 2019
17. DESAFIOS GLOBAIS E REGIONAIS, A Política Ambiental da ONU – Atores Não-Estatais, Tendências e o Papel Regulatório do Estado
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Zhu Da-jian, Walter Pengue, Peter H. May, Maria Amélia Enriquez, Joseph S. Weiss, Elimar Pinheiro do Nascimento, and Stanislav Schmelev
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- 2019
18. Promoting Sustainable Agriculture, Boosting Productivity, and Enhancing Climate Mitigation and Adaptation Through the RIO RURAL Program, Brazil
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Roland Wollenweber, Helga Hissa, J. M. G. Monteiro, Vanesa Rodríguez Osuna, Marcelo Marchesini da Costa, and Peter H. May
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0106 biological sciences ,Food security ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,Cost effectiveness ,01 natural sciences ,Climate change mitigation ,Agriculture ,Greenhouse gas ,Sustainable agriculture ,Food systems ,Business ,Rural area ,Environmental planning ,010606 plant biology & botany ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The Brazilian agricultural sector is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions, but climate-smart practices combined with degraded land restoration can result in a more resilient landscape contributing to integrated climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts. The Sustainable Rural Development Program of Rio de Janeiro (RIO RURAL) has been supporting the transition of degraded rural areas to sustainable productive systems by providing technical assistance and incentives to small-scale family farmers. RIO RURAL promotes reforestation and sustainable agriculture practices, which can boost productivity as well as carbon stocks in the agricultural landscape. Using estimates of carbon mitigation potential for such practices, we identified methodologies eligible for certification in the voluntary markets. We estimated transaction, implementation, and certification costs and calculated potential revenues associated with RIO RURAL’s activities. This did not only allow us to discuss the constraints and identify opportunities and co-benefits from RIO RURAL’s contribution to climate mitigation, adaptation, and environmental integrity but also to food security as it targets family farms. We propose a bundling approach to carbon, where multiple benefits are measured and certified including water, food systems, as well as social and cultural benefits. This would allow accessing resources from both mitigation and adaptation programs in addition to markets that value ecosystem integrity as well as water and food security.
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- 2018
19. Evolution of Public Policies and Local Innovation in Landscape Conservation in Rio de Janeiro
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Peter H. May, Leonardo S. Fernandes, and Vanesa Rodríguez Osuna
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Poverty ,Land use ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public policy ,Developing country ,Citizen journalism ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Incentive ,Environmental governance ,State (polity) ,Political science ,Environmental planning ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common - Abstract
This chapter reviews the evolution of state policies and institutions responsible for land use policy and conservation incentives to landowners in Rio de Janeiro, with emphasis on the areas involved in implementing agro-environmental programs. We refer to some of the efforts underway to create private patrimony reserves, biological corridors, and PES instruments based on water resource protection and sustainable land use practices. We discuss the impacts of those policy interventions on regional efforts to motivate landscape protection and restoration along with possible alternatives. The discussion is couched within the framework of national and global debates regarding participatory landscape management and poverty amelioration in developing countries.
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- 2018
20. A biodiversidade e a governança verde no Brasil: soluções inovadoras na gestão dos recursos para a conservação e equidade
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Peter H. May and Valéria da Vinha
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O Brasil é geralmente considerado como ator soberano essencial para envolver nos esforços de atingir os objetivos globais de conservação da biodiversidade, mesmo se for unicamente devido à proporção da biodiversidade terrestre que cabe dentro das suas fronteiras, em grande medida divido à hospedagem da área mais extensa de florestal tropical no mundo. Tal importância leva, inevitavelmente, ao surgimento de certa mitologia sobre a proteção da biodiversidade no Brasil, com respeito ao volume insuficiente dos recursos alocados e a necessidade de ações governamentais mais eficazes dedicadas a tais objetivos no país. Este trabalho busca expor alguns destes mitos e relacioná-los às falhas de políticas públicas que impedem o alcance de uma “governança verde”. Tais falhas incluem, entre exemplos discutidos, a falta de destinar receitas existentes para este propósito, assim como o desempenho fraco na utilização de incentivos pelo setor agropecuário para alavancar investimentos complementares na gestão do uso do solo por atores privados.
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- 2014
21. UN environmental policy: Non-State Actors, trends, and the regulatory role of the state
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Peter H. May, Stanislav E. Shmelev, Maria Amélia Enriquez, Walter Pengue, Elimar Pinheiro do Nascimento, Joseph S. Weiss, and Zhu Da-jian
- Subjects
Civil society ,Geography, Planning and Development ,lcsh:Political science ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,050601 international relations ,Green economy ,Sustainable business ,Environmental politics ,Economics ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Social movement ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,Environmental justice ,Ecology ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Public relations ,Political ecology ,Global governance ,0506 political science ,Political economy ,Political Science and International Relations ,business ,lcsh:J - Abstract
This interdisciplinary article draws from the radical ideas of global political ecology (GPE), environmental politics, ecological economics and the sociological analysis of social movements. It seeks to help bridge the research gap regarding non-state actors' (NSAs) influence on the role of the nation-state and the United Nations in global political ecology and environmental policy, including emission reductions, such as antideforestation measures, and environmental justice. We consider NSAs as consisting of two heterogeneous global coalitions: a) civil society organizations (CSOs) and environmental non-governmental organizations, and b) peak corporate organizations with green economy objectives, here denominated green business organizations, representing transnational corporations (TNCs). After a review of prior studies, we present a version of an advocacy coalition framework; identify a timeline of changes in UN architecture and simplified NSA influence categories. We only begin to test very broad hypotheses on relative agency and to compare NSA narratives with UN documents. We show that the architecture of the UN has gradually shifted from favoring civil society to corporations. There is evidence that, in the late 1990s, in comparison with CSOs, TNCs increased their access to nation-states and UN agencies. The TNC narrative changed from a) denying climate change and ignoring the UN to b) recognizing change and guiding negotiations. These shifts in UN architecture, TNC agency and narrative appears to have influenced changes in UN documents towards a corporate global environmental framework, reducing their references to the regulatory and enforcement roles of the state and global binding agreements, shifting global debate towards a voluntary corporate orientation. This may have reduced prospects for reducing emissions and increasing environmental justice. Combining market mechanisms with strong regulatory frameworks is best practice for environmental policy. When nation-states have the will and capacity to command and control, they can reduce environmental degradation. Stronger national government competence and enforcement capacity and binding UN agreements are essential for the effectiveness of market incentives, which may be enhanced by business and civil society initiatives. If CSOs can reunite and regain their strength, maybe they could negotiate with TNCs on a more equal footing. Perhaps UN members could once again become comfortable with the idea of strong states and non-hegemonic global governance. Key words: Global political ecology, Nation-state, earth system governance, UN architecture, UN agency, green economy, non-state actors, UNCED, Rio+20, Climate convention
- Published
- 2017
22. Valuing nature’s contributions to people: the IPBES approach
- Author
-
Aroha Te Pareake Mead, Heli Saarikoski, So Eun Ahn, Marjan van den Belt, Suneetha M. Subramanian, Pam Berry, Robert T. Watson, Marie Stenseke, Sandra Díaz, Madhu Verma, Hans Keune, Mine Islar, Patricia Balvanera, Ritesh Kumar, Heidi Wittmer, David González-Jiménez, Stanley T. Asah, Yousef S. Al-Hafedh, Virginie Maris, Fern Wickson, Adem Bilgin, Sara Jo Breslow, György Pataki, Ramón Pichis-Madruga, Keping Ma, Asia Adlan, Erik Gómez-Baggethun, Hamed Daly-Hassen, Eva Roth, Unai Pascual, Christopher D. Golden, Joël Houdet, Noboyuki Yagi, Martin F. Quaas, Eszter Kelemen, Diego Pacheco-Balanza, Craig Bullock, Peter H. May, Edward Amankwah, Ram Pandit, Florin Popa, Bernardo B. N. Strassburg, Daniel Cáceres, Susan Preston, Patrick J. O’Farrell, Esra Başak Dessane, Eugenio Figueroa, and Walter Pengue
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Economics ,Valoracion de Servicios Ecosistemicos ,Otras Ciencias Biológicas ,media_common.quotation_subject ,ta1172 ,Social Sciences(all) ,010501 environmental sciences ,outcomes ,01 natural sciences ,Ecosystem services ,Ciencias Biológicas ,power ,Environmental Science(all) ,values ,esource management ,Biology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,Valuation (finance) ,Valoracion Multicriterio ,Percepcion Multiactoral ,Management science ,Ipbes ,Stakeholder ,conservation ,General Social Sciences ,Environmental ethics ,Payment ,payments ,Chemistry ,Transformative learning ,Sustainability ,ecosystem services ,Engineering sciences. Technology ,Futures contract ,valuation ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS - Abstract
Nature is perceived and valued in starkly different and oftenconflicting ways. This paper presents the rationale for theinclusive valuation of nature's contributions to people (NCP) indecision making, as well as broad methodological steps fordoing so. While developed within the context of theIntergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), this approach is more widely applicable toinitiatives at the knowledge?policy interface, which require apluralistic approach to recognizing the diversity of values. Weargue that transformative practices aiming at sustainablefutures would benefit from embracing such diversity, which require recognizing and addressing power relationships across stake holder groups that hold different values on human nature relations and NCP Fil: Pascual, Unai. University Of Cambridge; Reino Unido Fil: Balvanera, Patricia. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México; México Fil: Díaz, Sandra Myrna. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba. Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas Físicas y Naturales. Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal; Argentina Fil: Pataki, György. Corvinus University of Budapest; Hungría Fil: Roth, Eva. University of Southern Denmark; Dinamarca Fil: Stenseke, Marie. University Goteborg; Suecia Fil: Watson, Robert T.. University of East Anglia; Reino Unido Fil: Basak Dessane, Esra. Project House; Turquía Fil: Islar, Mine. Lund University; Suecia Fil: Kelemen, Eszter. Environmental Social Science Research Group; Hungría Fil: Maris, Virginie. Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive; Francia Fil: Quaas, Martin. Kiel University; Alemania Fil: Subramanian, Suneetha M. United Nations University; Japón Fil: Wittmer, Heidi. Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research; Alemania Fil: Adlan, Asia. University of Khartoum; Sudán Fil: Ahn, SoEun. Korea Environment Institute; Corea del Sur Fil: Al-Hafedh, Yousef S. King Abdulaziz City for Science & Technology; Arabia Saudita Fil: Amankwah, Edward. Center for Environmental Governance; Ghana Fil: Berry, Pam. University of Washington; Estados Unidos Fil: Bilgin, Adem. University of Oxford; Reino Unido Fil: Breslow, Sara J. Ministry of Forestry and Water Affairs of Turkey; Turquía Fil: Bullock, Craig. University College Dublin; Reino Unido Fil: Caceres, Daniel Mario. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Ciencias Agropecuarias. Departamento de Desarrollo Rural; Argentina Fil: Daly-Hassen, Hamed. University of Carthage; Túnez Fil: Figueroa, Eugenio. Universidad de Chile; Chile Fil: van den Belt, Marjan. Victoria University of Wellington; Nueva Zelanda Fil: Verma, Madhu. Indian Institute of Forest Management; India Fil: Wickson, Fern. GenØk Centre for Biosafety, Siva innovasjonssenter; Noruega Fil: Yagi, Noboyuki. The University of Tokyo; Japón
- Published
- 2017
23. Linking Forest Tenure Reform, Environmental Compliance, and Incentives: Lessons from REDD+ Initiatives in the Brazilian Amazon
- Author
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Peter H. May, Marina Cromberg, Sven Wunder, Tadeu Melo, Galia Selaya, William D. Sunderlin, Jan Börner, Simone Bauch, Anne M. Larson, Erin O. Sills, M.F. Gebara, P. Cronkleton, Amy E. Duchelle, and Raissa Guerra
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Government ,Economic growth ,Sociology and Political Science ,Environmental compliance ,Natural resource economics ,Corporate governance ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Development ,Livelihood ,Incentive ,Property rights ,Deforestation ,Business ,Land tenure - Abstract
Pervasive tenure insecurity in developing countries is a key challenge for REDD+. Brazil, a leader in REDD+, has advanced efforts to link forest tenure reform and environmental compliance. We describe how these policies have shaped sub-national interventions with detailed data on land tenure and livelihoods in four REDD+ pilot sites in the Brazilian Amazon. Despite different local contexts, REDD+ proponents have converged on a similar strategy of collaborating with government agencies to clarify tenure and pave the way for a mix of regulatory enforcement and incentive-based REDD+ mechanisms. This polycentric governance model holds promise for effective and equitable REDD+ implementation.
- Published
- 2014
24. Payments for ecosystem services and the fatal attraction of win-win solutions
- Author
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Lorenzo Pellegrini, Peter H. May, Laura Rival, Nicolas Kosoy, Murat Arsel, Begüm Özkaynak, Philippe Méral, Bhaskar Vira, Romain Pirard, Fikret Adaman, P. Mibielli, F. Saenz, K. Urama, D. Ezzine de Blas, Joshua Farley, Denis Pesche, G. Van Hecken, Esteve Corbera, Jesus Ramos-Martin, J. F. le Coq, M. Perez, Erik Gómez-Baggethun, Pieter Leroy, B. Aguilar, Unai Pascual, Walter Pengue, Bina Agarwal, John M. Gowdy, Arild Vatn, Richard B. Norgaard, Géraldine Froger, Roldan Muradian, and Eduardo García-Frapolli
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ecology ,Public economics ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Environmental resource management ,Face (sociological concept) ,010501 environmental sciences ,15. Life on land ,Payment ,01 natural sciences ,Ecosystem services ,Win-win game ,Environmental governance ,Business ,Fatal attraction ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,media_common - Abstract
In this commentary we critically discuss the suitability of payments for ecosystem services and the most important challenges they face. While such instruments can play a role in improving environmental governance, we argue that over-reliance on payments as win-win solutions might lead to ineffective outcomes, similar to earlier experience with integrated conservation and development projects. Our objective is to raise awareness, particularly among policy makers and practitioners, about the limitations of such instruments and to encourage a dialogue about the policy contexts in which they might be appropriate.
- Published
- 2013
25. The context of REDD+ in Brazil: drivers, agents, and institutions - 3rd edition
- Author
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Maytê Benicio Rizek, B. Millikan, L.M. de Barcellos, Peter H. May, and M.F. Gebara
- Subjects
Project implementation ,Deforestation ,Greenhouse gas ,Environmental science ,Climate change ,Context (language use) ,Environmental degradation ,Environmental planning - Published
- 2016
26. O contexto de REDD+ no Brasil: Determinantes, atores e instituições - 3ª Edição Atualizada
- Author
-
Peter H. May, M.F. Gebara, Maytê Benicio Rizek, B. Millikan, and L.M. de Barcellos
- Subjects
Political science ,Humanities - Abstract
Este trabalho representa uma atualizacao do perfil do Brasil no contexto global e nacional, relativo a elaboracao e implementacao da estrategia nacional de Reducao de Emissoes de Gases de Efeito Estufa oriundos do Desmatamento e Degradacao Florestal (REDD+), como parte do Estudo Global Comparado REDD+ do CIFOR. Desde de 2007, o Brasil vem desenvolvendo propostas para valorizar as florestas em pe no âmbito da Convencao do Clima. Nesse periodo, os governos federal e estaduais vem adotando politicas publicas direcionadas a reducao do desmatamento, preconizados atraves de diferentes medidas e sucessivas revisoes do Plano de Prevencao do Desmatamento da Amazonia Legal (PPCDAm) desde 2004, resultando num declinio significativo das taxas do desmatamento em 79% entre 2005-2013. Mas o desmatamento ainda representa mais de 5 mil km2 de florestas tropicais por ano. A presente arena politica nacional promove atividades que geram desmatamento, incentivadas em parte pelas alteracoes promovidas no Codigo Florestal em 2012. O estudo descreve os atores, instituicoes e estrategias adotadas ao longo deste periodo, avaliando o contexto da implantacao de REDD+ no pais. Em conclusao, o estudo indica o potencial para atingir uma reducao continua no desmatamento de uma maneira eficiente, eficaz e equitativa, visando atingir a meta de desmatamento ilegal zero assumida pelo pais nos Acordos de Paris em 2015.
- Published
- 2016
27. Estimating greenhouse gas emissions from cattle raising in Brazil
- Author
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Roberto Smeraldi, Jean Pierre Henry Balbaud Ometto, Mercedes M. C. Bustamante, Carlos A. Nobre, Karla Longo, Laerte Guimarães Ferreira, Luis Gustavo Barioni, Ana Paula Dutra Aguiar, Peter H. May, and Alexandre de Siqueira Pinto
- Subjects
2. Zero hunger ,Atmospheric Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Amazon rainforest ,Agroforestry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Vegetation ,15. Life on land ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,Pasture ,Greenhouse gas reduction ,Enteric fermentation ,13. Climate action ,Deforestation ,Greenhouse gas ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental science ,Cattle ranching ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The study estimated, for the first time, the greenhouse gas emissions associated with cattle raising in Brazil, focusing on the period from 2003 to 2008 and the three principal sources: 1) portion of deforestation resulting in pasture establishment and subsequent burning of felled vegetation; 2) pasture burning; and 3) bovine enteric fermentation. Deforestation for pasture establishment was only considered for the Amazon and Cerrado. Emissions from pasture burning and enteric fermentation were accounted for the entire country. The consolidated emissions estimate lies between approximately 813 Mt CO2eq in 2008 (smallest value) and approximately 1,090 Mt CO2eq in 2003 (greatest value). The total emissions associated with Amazon cattle ranching ranged from 499 to 775 Mt CO2eq, that of the Cerrado from 229 to 231 Mt CO2eq, and that of the rest of the country between 84 and 87 Mt CO2eq. The full set of emissions originating from cattle raising is responsible for approximately half of all Brazilian emissions (estimated to be approximately 1,055 Mt CO2eq in 2005), even without considering cattle related sources not explicitly estimated in this study, such as energy use for transport and refrigeration along the beef and derivatives supply chain. The potential for reduction of greenhouse gas emissions offered by the Brazilian cattle industry is very high and might constitute Brazil’s most important opportunity for emissions mitigation. The study offers a series of policy recommendations for mitigation that can be implemented by public and private administrators at a low cost relative to other greenhouse gas reduction options.
- Published
- 2012
28. Tree Vitality Assessment in Urban Landscapes
- Author
-
Peter H. May, David Callow, and Denise Johnstone
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,drought stress ,fungi ,Shade tree ,Forestry ,lcsh:QK900-989 ,Biology ,Carbon sequestration ,Vitality ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Ecosystem services ,climate change ,urban tree growth ,Urban forest ,Ulmus procera ,Bark (sound) ,lcsh:Plant ecology ,Chlorophyll fluorescence ,010606 plant biology & botany ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The recent prolonged drought in Melbourne, Australia has had a deleterious effect on the urban forest, resulting in the premature decline of many mature trees and a consequent decline in the environmental services that trees are able to provide to urban residents. Measuring the severity of tree stress and defoliation due to various climatic factors is essential to the ongoing delivery of environmental services such as shade and carbon sequestration. This study evaluates two methods to assess the vitality of drought stressed Elm trees within an inner-city environment—bark chlorophyll fluorescence measured on large branches and an urban visual vitality index. Study species were Ulmus procera Salisb. (English Elm) and Ulmus × hollandica (Dutch Elm), which are important character and shade tree species for Melbourne. Relationships were identified between leaf water potential and the urban visual vitality index and between leaf water potential and bark chlorophyll fluorescence measured on large branches, indicating that these methods could be used to assess the effect of long-term drought and other stressors on urban trees.
- Published
- 2018
29. Analysis of information used in the management of plant genetic resources: a case study from northwestern Mato Grosso, Brazil
- Author
-
Luís H. H. da Cunha, Walter Simon de Boef, Charles R. Clement, Jorge L. Vivan, and Peter H. May
- Subjects
Genetic diversity ,biology ,business.industry ,Amazon rainforest ,Environmental resource management ,Biodiversity ,Information quality ,Forestry ,biology.organism_classification ,Adaptive management ,Geography ,Environmental protection ,Agriculture ,Bactris gasipaes ,Project management ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Evaluation and monitoring are critical to agroforestry (AFS) project management, especially if they aim to contribute to use and conservation of biodiversity and plant genetic resources. A methodology to analyze information used in decision-making processes was developed and applied in a biodiversity conservation project in the Brazilian Amazon. Quality of information gathered at landscape, AFS, species (Bactris gasipaes Kunth, both wild and cultivated varieties) and genetic diversity levels in three dimensions was analyzed. The information at the landscape level was good, while that in the organizational-institutional and socio-economic dimensions was acceptable; information gaps were serious in the genetic-ecological dimension. Ecological and economic functionality assessment based on indicators built upon reported administrative actions suggests that information related to conservation played a greater role in decision-making and management than information associated with use and development. The application of the methodology proved instrumental for enhancing efficacy of decision-making within an adaptive management approach to plant genetic resources use and conservation.
- Published
- 2009
30. Overcoming Contradictions Between Growth and Sustainability: Institutional Innovation in the BRICS
- Author
-
Peter H. May
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,Poverty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Developing country ,Environmental Science (miscellaneous) ,Toxicology ,Scarcity ,Kuznets curve ,Development economics ,Sustainability ,Economics ,Economic system ,China ,Demography ,media_common ,Pace - Abstract
The recent accelerated growth rates or efforts to emulate countries that have achieved a rapid pace of economic growth are widely acclaimed as means to uplift millions from poverty. In so doing, however, this rapid economic growth is most likely to coincide with unsustainable levels of consumption, place excessive pressure on life support systems and terrestrial sinks and foreshorten options for the future. Rather than pursuing the “Environmental Kuznets Curve” (EKC) hypothesis that higher income will bring with it the means to reduce the impacts of greater consumption, ecological economists assert that buying our way out of future scarcity with fast growth is indeed contradictory with sustainability. To better understand these contradictions and explore potential institutional innovations that may enable developing nations to better confront them (in effect, “tunneling under” the EKC), this article refers to recent experience in the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa)...
- Published
- 2008
31. Exploring socioeconomic impacts of forest based mitigation projects: Lessons from Brazil and Bolivia
- Author
-
Peter H. May, Manyu Chang, Fernando C. Veiga, and Emily Boyd
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,Land use ,United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change ,Carbon finance ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Social change ,Global warming ,Environmental resource management ,Stakeholder ,Business ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law - Abstract
This paper aims to contribute new insights globally and regionally on how carbon forest mitigation contributes to sustainable development in South America. Carbon finance has emerged as a potential policy option to tackling global climate change, degradation of forests, and social development in poor countries. This paper focuses on evaluating the socioeconomic impacts of a set of forest based mitigation pilot projects that emerged under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. The paper reviews research conducted in 2001–2002, drawing from empirical data from four pilot projects, derived from qualitative stakeholder interviews, and complemented by policy documents and literature. Of the four projects studied three are located in frontier areas, where there are considerable pressures for conversion of standing forest to agriculture. In this sense, forest mitigation projects have a substantial role to play in the region. Findings suggest however, that all four projects have experienced cumbersome implementation processes specifically, due to weak social objectives, poor communication, as well as time constraints. In three out of four cases, stakeholders highlighted limited local acceptance at the implementation stages. In the light of these findings, we discuss opportunities for implementation of future forest based mitigation projects in the land use sector.
- Published
- 2007
32. Biodiversity and green governance in Brazil
- Author
-
Peter H. May and Valéria da Vinha
- Subjects
Natural resource economics ,Corporate governance ,Equity (finance) ,Biodiversity ,Business - Published
- 2015
33. The REDD+ Governance Landscape and the Challenge of Coordination in Brazil
- Author
-
Leandra Fatorelli, M.F. Gebara, Shaozeng Zhang, M. Di Gregorio, and Peter H. May
- Subjects
Civil society ,Government ,State (polity) ,Deforestation ,Economic policy ,Agroforestry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Corporate governance ,Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation ,Mandate ,Environmental science ,Productivity ,media_common - Abstract
Key pointsDespite significant efforts towards the coordination of governance related to REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation), it remains a major challenge in Brazil. This challenge is pervasive whether between government levels (as evidenced in the differences in REDD+ perspectives and interests between federal and state governments), civil society or between government and the private sector.Despite their clear mandate to do so, state actors exchange only limited information on REDD+ policy with non-state actors.Domestic NGOs play an important mediating role in the limited REDD+ coordination that does take place.Private-sector actors, one of the main forces driving deforestation and forest degradation, are largely absent from the REDD+ policy domain, and the few who do participate are relatively isolated from other REDD+ policy actors.
- Published
- 2015
34. Fix food metrics
- Author
-
Pavan Sukhdev, Alexander Müller, and Peter H. May
- Subjects
Conservation of Natural Resources ,Rainforest ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Nutritional Status ,Palm Oil ,010501 environmental sciences ,Zea mays ,01 natural sciences ,Agricultural economics ,Food Supply ,Nutrition Policy ,Palm oil ,Animals ,Humans ,Plant Oils ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Government ,Multidisciplinary ,Cost–benefit analysis ,Public economics ,business.industry ,Agriculture ,Nutritional status ,Diet ,Workforce ,Food processing ,Food systems ,Soybeans ,business - Abstract
For sustainable, equitable nutrition we must count the true global costs and benefits of food production, urge Pavan Sukhdev, Peter May and Alexander Muller.
- Published
- 2016
35. [Untitled]
- Author
-
Peter H. May, Alan W. Dabbs, Valéria da Vinha, Patricia Fernández-Dávila, and Nathan Zaidenweber
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Social Welfare ,General Medicine ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Environmental economics ,Pollution ,Corporation ,Competitive advantage ,Natural resource ,Production (economics) ,Resource management ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Social capital - Abstract
The prevailing corporate trend regarding development of energy resources in the tropics emphasizes financial gain over long-term societal benefits. Some corporations are beginning to find a competitive advantage linked to proactive relations with host communities and adequate protection of fragile ecosystems. Herein, we describe a case study where an international energy production company worked with stakeholders to achieve social capital and sustainable development. The strategies aimed to strengthen local capacity to improve social welfare and to ensure conservation and wise use of biodiversity. We provide examples, discuss lessons learned and make recommendations for future development projects.
- Published
- 2002
36. REDD+ policy networks in Brazil: constraints and opportunities for successful policy making
- Author
-
Leandra Fatorelli, Shaozeng Zhang, Peter H. May, and M.F. Gebara
- Subjects
policy analysis ,QH301-705.5 ,REDD ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation ,policy making ,Biology (General) ,Information exchange ,QH540-549.5 ,media_common ,Government ,actors ,Public economics ,Social network ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,Polarization (politics) ,Environmental resource management ,Forestry ,Private sector ,JA Political science (General) ,Negotiation ,networks ,business ,REDD+ ,Brazil ,GE Environmental Sciences - Abstract
The prospective introduction of REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation and enhancement of carbon stocks) in Brazil has generated many questions about its form of implementation and likely environmental effectiveness. These issues must be addressed to reduce the risks associated with REDD+, such as conflicts over land and forest resources, and increase the likelihood of successful outcomes, as equitable benefits sharing. In this study, we examine how policy actors such as NGOs, government, and the private sector influence the REDD+ policy process in Brazil. We analyze actors' positions on key issues in REDD+ (conflicts; benefits sharing; free, prior, and informed consent; tenure; and coordination) to identify associated constraints and opportunities for REDD+ policy making with a focus on the national strategy. We examine the structure of three policy networks in this policy arena (prestige, information exchange, and collaboration) with the aim of explaining these constraints and opportunities, so that policy can be positively modified or adapted ahead of its implementation. We note that the presence of polarization on the issues analyzed implies the need for better negotiation among actors if REDD+ is to move forward effectively. Furthermore, the absence of coordination between types of actors (private sector, government, and NGOs) suggests that achieving optimal REDD+ governance in Brazil will be difficult. Finally, we propose some directions for REDD+ policy making in Brazil that could help policy managers and stakeholders improve the design and implementation of the national strategy. In this study, we examine how policy actors such as NGOs, government, and the private sector influence REDD+ policy making in Brazil. We emphasize a combination of network analysis and actors' discourse to investigate how actors bring their influence to design the Brazilian national REDD+ strategy, still in formulation. We analyze actors' "stances," that is, their positions on statements, on key REDD+ issues to identify the associated constraints and opportunities for REDD+ policy making. We examine multiple social network measures of policy actors' influence to assess which actors are prominent in influencing REDD+ policy design. We assume that a successful outcome will be more likely if constraints that could arise during policy implementation are considered at the policy design stage. In this paper, the policy design stage corresponds to the construction of the Brazilian national strategy on REDD+. We measure if it is likely to be a successful outcome by exploring how different actors may have influenced this process and how the strategy considers the constraints pointed out by actors.
- Published
- 2014
37. Lessons from local environmental funds for REDD+ benefit sharing with indigenous people in Brazil
- Author
-
Luiza Muccillo, M.F. Gebara, Lasse Loft, Angelo Santos, Claudia Vitel, and Peter H. May
- Subjects
Public economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Vulnerability ,ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,Decentralization ,Indigenous ,Informed consent ,Property rights ,Business ,Environmental degradation ,Environmental planning ,Legitimacy ,Autonomy ,media_common - Abstract
Key lessonsWhile the constitutional rights (e.g. property rights) of indigenous peoples (IP) are strong in Brazil and may help to overcome their vulnerability, they are rarely enforceable and do not offer sufficient safeguards.Informed consultation and a structured free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) process that considers cultural issues are fundamental to ensuring acceptance and consent by IP.Local environmental funds can be a tool for increasing autonomy and decentralization while sharing benefits with IP and financing long-term and specific demands that can change over time.Safeguard strategies implemented by the Amazon Fund to avoid conflicts of interest may result in restrictions on the participation of IP, having implications related to the legitimacy of decision-making in the distribution of benefits.The absence of timely financial flows to meet IP needs may be a considerable risk since it can encourage environmentally damaging activities.Relying on the voluntary market may be risky for IP initiatives because of market instability and possible lack of funding.
- Published
- 2014
38. How Much is the Amazon Worth? The State of Knowledge concerning the Value of Preserving Amazon Rainforests
- Author
-
Jon Strand, Peter H. May, and Soares-Filho Silveira Soares-Filho
- Subjects
Forest inventory ,Amazon rainforest ,Agroforestry ,Forest ecology ,Forest management ,Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation ,Environmental science ,Rainforest ,Forest protection ,Forest restoration - Abstract
This paper surveys the current state of knowledge concerning the value of the Amazon rainforest, including a survey of work to date to quantify changes in economic values when the rainforest cover changes. The focus is on local and regional impacts of forest loss or protection, including both gross values of forest protection and opportunity costs of converting the forest to other uses including agriculture. Important gross value items surveyed are timber and non-timber product extraction from a sustainably maintained rainforest; local values of eco-tourism; biological resources including bio-prospecting; a range of hydrological impacts including watershed protection, hydropower production, and changes in rainfall patterns; and impacts of forest fires and their control. Mapping such values in geographical space is of high value for implementing efficient and effective (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation ) programs for protecting the remaining forest. The current data basis for such mapping is found to be quite weak and in need of improvement for all value elements.
- Published
- 2013
39. Investing in Sustainable Use of Biodiversity for Social Benefit in Brazil
- Author
-
Peter H. May and Valéria da Vinha
- Subjects
business.industry ,Biodiversity ,Capacity building ,Distribution (economics) ,food.food ,Product (business) ,Technical support ,food ,New product development ,Sustainability ,Economics ,business ,Environmental planning ,Brazil nut - Abstract
Brazil is a megadiverse country of continental dimension, with a wide range of distinct biomes and aquatic zones and cultural patterns associated with the use (and misuse) of nature. It is simultaneously the world’s largest producer and consumer of tropical timber, for example, and its beef cattle enterprises occupy over 70 % of all land cleared for production, which accounts for half of all tropical deforestation. With rapid loss of remaining biodiversity, conservation must rely increasingly on strategies to integrate biodiversity use and protection into the rural production landscape. The authors here appraise investment opportunities associated with sustainable use of components of biodiversity. Official data on existing uses of non-timber forest product raw materials are valued by the market at less than $500 million/year though they involve several million forest-dwelling people. Only one cosmetics corporation, Natura, has over $2 billion in annual revenues with growing sales based on a biodiversity-friendly image including community investment and equitable distribution of benefits to recognize traditional knowledge. Such business strategies create value but as yet little of these benefits trickle down. The use of native oilseeds and essences in natural cosmetics, for example, has foundered by over-concentration by producers in one or two oilseeds or essences (e.g. Brazil nut oil, rosewood essential oil) that may also result in species extinctions due to overharvest. Strategies proposed for greater integration of biodiversity within regional development processes include the adoption of a territorial perspective in which clusters of interlinked enterprises can achieve more positive feedback on local employment and income distribution by finding uses for a range of biodiversity components rather than specializing in a narrow band of species, technologies, product or service types. Small-scale natural product enterprises are most viable when upward linked with partners at a larger scale and/or have the potential to innovate in diversified product development. Research and development should stimulate entrepreneurial innovation along with basic enterprise capacity building, legal and technical support and certification of sustainable origin.
- Published
- 2012
40. A Policy Mix to Finance Protected Areas in Mato Grosso, Brazil
- Author
-
Peter H. May, João Andrade, and Paula Bernasconi
- Subjects
Clean Development Mechanism ,Ecological economics ,Land use ,Environmental protection ,Natural resource economics ,Deforestation ,Policy mix ,Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation ,Business ,Protected area ,Ecosystem services - Abstract
Under REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation) and related initiatives for avoided deforestation, a system of payments may act as an incentive to landowners to retire land that would otherwise be deforested. This study describes how potential socio-environmental benefits of forest conservation in the humid Amazon tropics might be captured from a combination of policy instruments under development aimed at compensating for the conservation of remaining forests through payments for environmental services (PES). Specifically, payments for REDD would be channelled towards the expansion and structuring of a state system of protected areas in Mato Grosso, Brazil. This area of Brazil is responsible for half of all deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon and is thus the largest contributor to global deforestation and CO2 emissions from tropical forest clearing and burning, chiefly due to agricultural and livestock expansion. The study evaluates the potential that reduced deforestation and compensation for legal reserves in new protected areas could be achieved within the context of a proposed state ecological-economic zoning plan. As a case study in the development and appraisal of potential benefits from this combination of policy instruments, the study highlights the political and economic forces that mediate policy effectiveness in this complex arena. It also shows how ecological economics can contribute to the integration of biophysical and socio-economic information and the identification of priority areas for investment. The idea of PES has captured the attention of many actors seeking so-called “win-win” strategies for resource conservation, in which the costs of land retirement or preservation are borne by downstream beneficiaries, who directly or indirectly compensate those who have adopted more appropriate land use practices. Such strategies are not without problems, but as economic instruments, they may be more cost-effective when combined with more generalized command and control measures.
- Published
- 2012
41. Adaptation to climate change in Brazil: the role of private investment
- Author
-
Valéria da Vinha and Peter H. May
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Water resources ,River basins ,Sociology and Political Science ,Bacias hidrográficas ,Brasil ,Investimento privado ,Recursos hídricos ,Private investiment ,Mudanças climáticas ,Climate change ,lcsh:H1-99 ,lcsh:Social sciences (General) ,Adaptation ,Adaptação ,Brazil - Abstract
Em face da intensificação dos efeitos das mudanças climáticas, e das limitações das estratégias de mitigação em enfrentá-los, a temática da adaptação vem ganhando crescente importância. Este artigo apresenta parte dos resultados de uma ampla pesquisa que mapeou as iniciativas e os projetos em adaptação implementados pelo setor público, por organizações não governamentais e pelo setor privado, em todos os segmentos da atividade econômica e em todas as regiões do país, analisando em particular o destino dos investimentos do sistema financeiro privado. Aponta os principais vetores dos projetos de adaptação, concluindo que o binômio água-clima concentra a maior parte dos financiamentos desse segmento, e que os desafios colocados requerem uma coordenação articulada entre financiamento, governo e comunidade acadêmica.Given the intensifying effects of climate change, and limitations of mitigation strategies to address them, the issue of adaptation has become increasingly important. This article presents some results of an extensive research that mapped the initiatives and projects implemented by the public sector, by nongovernmental organizations and the private sector in all sectors of economic activity in all regions of the country, analyzing in particular the fate of the investments of private financial system. It sets out the main vectors of adaptation projects, concluding that the binomial water-climate concentrates most of the financing of this sector, and that the challenges require coordination between finance, government and academia.
- Published
- 2012
42. Nature Conservation – a new dimension in Open Access publishing bridging science and application
- Author
-
Pavel Stoev, Irene Ring, Dirk S. Schmeller, Jean Clobert, William E. Kunin, Yrjö Haila, Michael J. Samways, Szabolcs Lengyel, Lyubomir Penev, Chris Margules, Hugh P. Possingham, Simone Sommer, Michael Kleyer, Simon G. Potts, Andreas Huth, Adeline Loyau, Małgorzata Grodzińska-Jurczak, Klaus Henle, Jukka Similä, Sandra Bell, Christoph Görg, Isabel Sousa-Pinto, Béla Tóthmérész, Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter, Joseph Tzanopoulos, Romain Julliard, Martin T. Sykes, Douglas Evans, Bernd Gruber, Yiannis G. Matsinos, Denis A. Saunders, James S. Pryke, Lluís Brotons, Yu-Pin Lin, Gary W. Luck, Rita Yam, D. Johan Kotze, Pierre-Yves Henry, Petr Keil, William E. Magnusson, Peter H. May, Conservation des espèces, Restauration et Suivi des Populations (CERSP), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN)-Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6 (UPMC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Mécanismes adaptatifs : des organismes aux communautés, and Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Semantic HTML ,Conservation management ,lcsh:QH1-199.5 ,computer.internet_protocol ,Information Dissemination ,Nature Conservation ,Data publishing ,Semantic markup ,lcsh:General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Bridging (programming) ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,conservation policy ,conservation science ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,biodiversity ,data publishing ,Scope (project management) ,business.industry ,Conservation policy ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Biodiversity ,semantic enhancements ,[SDE.ES]Environmental Sciences/Environmental and Society ,Data science ,Semantic enhancements ,conservation management ,Workflow ,13. Climate action ,Publishing ,Conservation science ,semantic markup ,lcsh:Ecology ,[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology ,business ,computer ,XML - Abstract
This Editorial presents the focus, scope and policies of the inaugural issue of Nature Conservation, a new open access, peer-reviewed journal bridging natural sciences, social sciences and hands-on applications in conservation management. The journal covers all aspects of nature conservation and aims particularly at facilitating better interaction between scientists and practitioners. The journal will impose no restrictions on manuscript size or the use of colour. We will use an XML-based editorial workflow and several cutting-edge innovations in publishing and information dissemination. These include semantic mark-up of, and enhancements to published text, data, and extensive cross-linking within the journal and to external sources. We believe the journal will make an important contribution to better linking science and practice, offers rapid, peer-reviewed and flexible publication for authors and unrestricted access to content. The journal Nature Conservation was established within the framework of the European Union's Framework Program 7 large-integrated project SCALES: Securing the Conservation of biodiversity across Administrative Levels and spatial, temporal, and Ecological Scales, www.scales-project.net (grant 226852; Henle et al. 2010).
- Published
- 2012
43. The context of REDD+ in Brazil: Drivers, agents, and institutions
- Author
-
Peter H. May, B. Millikan, and M.F. Gebara
- Subjects
Land use ,Agroforestry ,Deforestation ,Corporate governance ,Legal opinion ,Equity (finance) ,Environmental science ,Context (language use) ,Environmental planning ,Environmental degradation ,Decentralization - Abstract
This report provides an overview of the contextual conditions that affect the REDD+ policy environment in the Brazilian Amazon. Based on reviews of existing literature, national and international data, legal opinions and selected expert interviews, it provides the background and the preliminary analysis of the context in which national REDD+ strategies are being developed. This document is organized into 5 main sections. First, it reviews the main forest and land use trends, investigating the main country-specific drivers of deforestation and degradation. The second section reviews major institutional factors linked to governance and rights, with particular emphasis on access rights to forestland and forest resources, as well as on decentralization of governance, which has a crucial role in Brazil's REDD+ strategy. The third section encompasses political-economic factors, depicting the broader context in which drivers of deforestation and degradation operate. The fourth section moves more specifically to the development of national REDD+ policy strategies. The final section then draws on the implications of the preceding sections for prospective REDD+ outcomes by conducting an assessment of the efficiency, efficacy and equity (3Es) of execution of REDD+ strategies
- Published
- 2011
44. O contexto de REDD+ no Brasil: Determinantes, atores e instituições
- Author
-
Peter H. May, M.F. Gebara, and B. Millikan
- Subjects
Geography ,Welfare economics - Published
- 2011
45. The causes of tropical deforestation; the economic and statistical analysis of factors giving rise to the loss of the tropical forests
- Author
-
Peter H. May
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Geography ,Regional science ,Statistical analysis ,Forestry ,General Environmental Science ,Tropical deforestation - Published
- 1996
46. A corporate approach to social monitoring and assessment for development in a fragile environment
- Author
-
Peter H, May, Alan W, Dabbs, Patricia, Fernández-Dávila, Valéria, Da Vinha, and Nathan, Zaidenweber
- Subjects
Fossil Fuels ,Tropical Climate ,Local Government ,International Cooperation ,Peru ,Conservation of Energy Resources ,Humans ,Environment ,Social Change ,Community-Institutional Relations ,Ecosystem ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The prevailing corporate trend regarding development of energy resources in the tropics emphasizes financial gain over long-term societal benefits. Some corporations are beginning to find a competitive advantage linked to proactive relations with host communities and adequate protection of fragile ecosystems. Herein, we describe a case study where an international energy production company worked with stakeholders to achieve social capital and sustainable development. The strategies aimed to strengthen local capacity to improve social welfare and to ensure conservation and wise use of biodiversity. We provide examples, discuss lessons learned and make recommendations for future development projects.
- Published
- 2002
47. Book Review
- Author
-
Peter H. May
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Planet ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Economics ,Economic history ,Prosperity ,General Environmental Science ,media_common - Published
- 2010
48. International Private Finance and Sustainable Development: Policy Instruments for Brazil
- Author
-
Peter H. May
- Published
- 2000
49. Value or Incentive? Getting Society to Pay for Conservation
- Author
-
Peter H. May
- Subjects
Microeconomics ,Incentive ,business.industry ,Ecology ,Value (economics) ,Environmental resource management ,Incentive program ,business ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2001
50. Subsistence benefits from the babassu palm (Orbignya martiana)
- Author
-
Peter H. May, Michael J. Balick, J. M. F. Frazao, and Anthony B. Anderson
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,2. Zero hunger ,biology ,Tropical agriculture ,Agroforestry ,business.industry ,Subsistence agriculture ,Martiana ,Plant Science ,15. Life on land ,Horticulture ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Economic botany ,Shifting cultivation ,Geography ,Agronomy ,Agriculture ,Deforestation ,business ,Palm ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Stands of babassu palms (Orbignya martiana) occupy an area of Brazil estimated at nearly 200,000 km2, concentrated in the states of Maranhao, Piaui and Goias. Babassu’s cryptogeal germination, establishing the apical meristem of the plant below ground for its early growth and development, enables it to survive human disturbance, making the palm an integral part of shifting cultivation and pastoral farming systems. People obtain a multitude of products from babassu throughout the palm’s life cycle: leaves are used widely for thatch, basketry, and construction; trunks for palmito and bridges; the fruit for feed, oil and, charcoal. As many as 450,000 subsistence-level households rely on the sale of babassu kernels, used in a regional vegetable oil industry, for an important share of their cash incomes. Deforestation pressures and technological innovation toward an industry based on mechanical processing of whole babassu fruit threaten to reduce benefits the palm provides to the region’s rural poor. Understanding how babassu is used by rural families who depend upon it will help to make current efforts at “domesticating” the palm and whole-fruit processing more responsive to human needs.
- Published
- 1985
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