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Revising Payment for Ecosystem Services in the Light of Stewardship: The Need for a Legal Framework

Alessandra Solazzo, Aled Jones and Nigel Cooper
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Alessandra Solazzo: Global Sustainability Institute, Anglia Ruskin University, East Road, Cambridge CB1-1PN, UK
Aled Jones: Global Sustainability Institute, Anglia Ruskin University, East Road, Cambridge CB1-1PN, UK
Nigel Cooper: Global Sustainability Institute, Anglia Ruskin University, East Road, Cambridge CB1-1PN, UK

Sustainability, 2015, vol. 7, issue 11, 1-15

Abstract: Since the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA) highlighted the importance of ecosystem services for human well-being, the payments for such services have increasingly been drawing the attention of governments, the private sector and academia. Nonetheless, there is not yet a specific legal framework which is able to capture the complexity of managing natural resources and, at the same time, deal with the numerous drawbacks that have been identified by critics, who are opposed to using financialisation of the environment as a tool. This paper, after briefly summarizing some of the main features and criticisms of the Payment for Ecosystem Services (PES), will critically assess the understanding of property rights over natural resources as stewardship, rather than as entitlement, because this interpretation is more coherent with the inherent characteristics of natural resources and, consequently, of ecosystem services. The novel usage of a stewardship dimension to property rights underlines the necessity for a legal framework for PES, constituted by “property-liability rules”.

Keywords: payment for ecosystem services; voluntary mechanisms; property rights; stewardship; valuing nature; taxonomy of property law; environmental regulation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O13 Q Q0 Q2 Q3 Q5 Q56 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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