Building Natural Assets: New Strategies for Poverty Reduction and Environmental Protection

You are here

Organization: 
Political Economy Research Institute
Author: 
James K. Boyce and Manuel Pastor

This report is an outcome of the Natural Assets Project, a collaborative initiative of the Political Economy Research Institute supported by the Ford Foundation. The report draws on papers prepared for the Conference on Natural Assets: Democratizing Environmental Ownership held in Santa Fe, New Mexico, in January 2000. We are grateful to the conference participants for insights, support, and inspiration. The focus of this report, like that of the conference, is on strategies for building natural assets in the United States. We hope that further research and discussion will explore the relevance of these concepts to environmental issues and institutional settings in other countries.

Contents

INTRODUCTION

WHAT ARE NATURAL ASSETS?
Sidebar: Investing in Natural Capital: The Acequia Ecosystems of the Upper Rio Grande
Sidebar: Natural Capital, Social Capital, and Environmental Justice

CAN BUILDING NATURAL ASSETS REDUCE POVERTY?
Sidebar: Is Inequality Bad for the Environment?

MAKING A DIFFERENCE: FOUR ROUTES TO NATURAL ASSET BUILDING
Sidebar: “Take a Stand, Own the Land”: Boston's Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative
Sidebar: The Forest Stewardship Council: Certifying Responsible Forest Management
Sidebar: The Sky Trust
Sidebar: The Right to a Clean and Safe Environment

THE ROAD AHEAD

RESOURCES

[ download full report ]

Year: 
2001
Format: 
Document
Guidebook
Research report
Case study
Categories: 
Community Capacity Building
Environment
Policy Development & Advocacy
Sector-Based Strategies
Sustainable Development
Source: 
Weblink

If a link on this page is broken, please notify us at engagement at ccednet-rcdec.ca