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dc.contributor.authorIslam, Monirul-
dc.contributor.authorMohammed, Essam Y-
dc.coverage.spatialSouth Asia; Bangladeshen
dc.date.accessioned2019-03-30T14:44:13Z-
dc.date.available2019-03-30T14:44:13Z-
dc.date.issued2017-
dc.identifier.citationhttp://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/G04268.pdfen
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2451/44200-
dc.description"Evidence from the international research community shows that careful management of nature results in benefits to people’s wellbeing. Poor people especially depend more heavily on the quality of the ecosystems and have less access to substitutes when they are degraded. Making meaningful impacts in the way ecosystems are managed requires governments to step in and scale up, but the evidence also shows that empowered communities can make strong calls to enact and implement change at the local level. Positive incentives like payments for ecosystem services (PES) and other forms of conditional transfers can provide important signals to enact this behavioural change into positive actions. Carefully designed, these incentives can also contribute to the wellbeing of people, especially poor and vulnerable groups. New tools emerge that can help with scaling up and dealing with inevitable trade-offs, but more efforts are needed to bring this information closer to those making decisions. This case study accompanies a Guidance for Practitioners that helps to bridge this space by: 1) making evidence accessible, bringing the latest evidence from research on PES in theory and practice with documented case studies written for practitioners; and 2) supporting capacity building to ‘train the trainers’, through teaching modules which can be used to promote capacity building of practitioners."en
dc.publisherInternational Institute for Environment and Developmenten
dc.rightsNYU Libraries is providing access to these materials as a service to our scholarly community. We do not claim the copyright in these materials, nor can we give permission for their re-use. If you would like to request that we take down any of this material, please write to archive.help@nyu.edu with the following information: Provide the URL of the material that is the basis of your inquiry; Identify the material you have rights to; Provide your contact information, including name, address, telephone number, and e-mail address; Provide a statement of your good-faith belief that the material you identified is infringing of the material you have rights to.en
dc.subjectBangladesh -- climate change; Bangladesh -- adaptations ; Bangladesh -- ecosystems; Bangladesh -- fisheries -- Hilsa; Environmental Studiesen
dc.titleBangladesh Jatka Marine conservation programme: case study Module 2en
dc.publisher.placeLondon, UKen
Appears in Collections:South Asian Born-Digital NGO Reports Collection Project

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