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Showing items 1 through 9 of 18.Despite the local and global importance of forests, deforestation driven by various socio-economic and biophysical factors continues in many countries.
The size of the protected area is recognized as one of the key attributes for assessing the effectiveness of investing in protected areas.
Globally, privately protected areas (PPAs) are an increasingly popular approach to long-term protection of biodiversity on privately owned lands. PPAs provide multiple ecological, social and economic benefits to diverse range of stakeholders in across a range of contexts.
"Green Bonds" emerged as a new form of environmental financing in 2007.
This paper is about the research methods, stages, challenges and results of the LASCAUX programme, a European research programme that took place over five years, between February 2009 and January 2014.
Declines in global biodiversity due to land conversion and habitat loss are driving a "Sixth Mass Extinction" and many countries currently fall short of meeting even nominal land protection targets to mitigate this crisis.
Temporal spillovers occur when a conservation program changes what happens to land outside the temporal window of the conservation contract.
Until recently public efforts to encourage conservation on private land in many countries has primarily been through uniform payment policies.
The paper looks at the development of conservation policy since the mid-20th Century. It reviews how land conservation policy developed in the UK, and the ethical and policy design issues which emerged as the focus of conservation expanded.
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