KolinjivadiVanHeckenAlmeidaEtAl2017
Référence
Kolinjivadi, V., Van Hecken, G., Almeida, D.V., Dupras, J., Kosoy, N. (2017) Neoliberal performatives and the ‘making’ of Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES). Progress in Human Geography. (Scopus )
Résumé
This paper argues that Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) serve as a neoliberal performative act, in which idealized conditions are re-constituted by well-resourced and networked epistemic communities with the objective of bringing a distinctly instrumental and utilitarian relationality between humans and nature into existence. We illustrate the performative agency of hegemonic epistemic communities advocating (P)ES imaginaries to differentiate between the cultural construction of an ideal reality, which can and always will fail, and an external reality of actually produced effects. In doing so, we explore human agency to disobey performative acts to craft embodied and life-affirming relationships with nature. © 2017, The Author(s) 2017.
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@ARTICLE { KolinjivadiVanHeckenAlmeidaEtAl2017,
AUTHOR = { Kolinjivadi, V. and Van Hecken, G. and Almeida, D.V. and Dupras, J. and Kosoy, N. },
TITLE = { Neoliberal performatives and the ‘making’ of Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) },
JOURNAL = { Progress in Human Geography },
YEAR = { 2017 },
NOTE = { cited By 0; Article in Press },
ABSTRACT = { This paper argues that Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) serve as a neoliberal performative act, in which idealized conditions are re-constituted by well-resourced and networked epistemic communities with the objective of bringing a distinctly instrumental and utilitarian relationality between humans and nature into existence. We illustrate the performative agency of hegemonic epistemic communities advocating (P)ES imaginaries to differentiate between the cultural construction of an ideal reality, which can and always will fail, and an external reality of actually produced effects. In doing so, we explore human agency to disobey performative acts to craft embodied and life-affirming relationships with nature. © 2017, The Author(s) 2017. },
AFFILIATION = { Université du Québec en Outaouais; University of Antwerp, Belgium; Center for Public Economics and Strategic Sectors, Institute of Higher National Studies, Ecuador; McGill University, Canada },
AUTHOR_KEYWORDS = { ecosystem services; environmental policy; neoliberalism; payments for ecosystem services; political ecology },
DOCUMENT_TYPE = { Article in Press },
DOI = { 10.1177/0309132517735707 },
SOURCE = { Scopus },
URL = { https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85041929184&doi=10.1177%2f0309132517735707&partnerID=40&md5=0a354dc1895b184de5052dbbc5e92827 },
}