Conserving and Valuing Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity: Economic, Institutional and Social Challenges

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K N Ninan
Routledge, May 4, 2012 - Business & Economics - 432 pages

This book comprehensively addresses the economic, social and institutional difficulties in conserving biodiversity and the ecosystem services that it provides. It covers a wide range of issues such as biodiversity, ecosystem services and valuation in the context of diverse ecosystems such as tropical forests, marine areas, wetlands and agricultural landscapes, non-timber forest products, incentives and institutions, payments for ecosystem services, governance, intellectual property rights and the protection of traditional knowledge, management of protected areas, and climate change and biodiversity. It also covers the application of environmental economics and institutional economics to different cases and the use of techniques such as contingent valuation method and game theory.

The book spans the globe with case studies drawn from a cross section of regions and continents including the UK, US, Europe, Australia, India, Africa and South America.

 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
PART 1 BIODIVERSITY ECOSYSTEM SERVICES AND VALUATION
23
PART 2 INCENTIVES AND INSTITUTIONS
133
PART 3 GOVERNANCE
193
PART 4 IPRS AND PROTECTION OF INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE
297
PART 5 CLIMATE CHANGE BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
343
Index
393
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About the author (2012)

K. N. Ninan is Professor of Ecological Economics at the Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, India, and Visiting Professor, Donald Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA.

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