Your search found 3 records
1 Hope, R. A.; Garrod, G . D. 2004. Household preferences to water policy interventions in rural South Africa. Water Policy, 6(6):487-499.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H036446)
2 Hope, R. A.. 2006. Water, workfare and poverty: The impact of the working for water programme on rural poverty reduction. Environment, Development and Sustainability, 8:139-156.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 7690 Record No: H039573)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H042247)
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In response to the disappointing results of many regulatory or public investment approaches to watershed management, payments for environmental services has emerged as a new mechanism to maintain socially optimal environmental services by compensating people for the services they provide. However, without adequate understanding of stakeholders’ willingness to modify or maintain land use or water resource decisions, market-based mechanisms may prove to be unsustainable, with uncertain social and environmental outcomes. Negotiating resource use patterns is a process that requires an understanding of the type, level and duration of incentives for stakeholders to co-operate meaningfully. In this paper, we describe a negotiation support framework that has been developed from the literature and field experiences in Costa Rica and India. The framework then serves to critically examine a case study from each country to draw empirical lessons from the inherently political and contested process of watershed management.
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