Commoditizing water territories: the clash between Andean water rights cultures and payment for environmental services policies

Boelens, Rutgerd / Jaime Dinge Hoogesteger-van-Dijk / Jean Carlo Rodríguez de Francisco
External Publications (2014)

in: Capitalism Nature Socialism 25 (3), 84-102

Information

Payment for Environmental Services (PES) schemes receive much policy attention as a new approach to protect ecosystems and foster livelihood development. In the Andean region, policy makers and development institutes have embraced this approach of applying market mechanisms to regulate water allocation and territorial conservation. By critically analyzing PES, this paper argues that such schemes threaten to break down local water control through undermining community institutions and collective action. The introduction of ‘market rationality’ produces replacement of context- and history-rooted ‘water territories’ by commoditizing and individualizing the complex array of mutual dependence relations and Andean water management arrangements. Policy makers and development institutes, rather than relying on expert-knowledge, objectified values and blueprint approaches, need to profoundly consider place-based history and diversity, and local-global power relations.



About the author

Rodríguez de Francisco

Further experts

Dombrowsky, Ines

Economist 

Hornidge, Anna-Katharina

Development and Knowledge Sociology 

Schoderer, Mirja

Environmental Research 

Schüpf, Dennis

Economics