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Species at Risk

Using Economic Incentives to Shelter Endangered Species on Private Lands
  • Edited by: Jason F. Shogren
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2005
View more publications by University of Texas Press

About this book

Protecting endangered species of animals and plants is a goal that almost everyone supports in principle—but in practice private landowners have often opposed the regulations of the Endangered Species Act, which, they argue, unfairly limits their right to profit from their property. To encourage private landowners to cooperate voluntarily in species conservation and to mitigate the economic burden of doing so, the government and nonprofit land trusts have created a number of incentive programs, including conservation easements, leases, habitat banking, habitat conservation planning, safe harbors, candidate conservation agreements, and the "no surprise" policy.

In this book, lawyers, economists, political scientists, historians, and zoologists come together to assess the challenges and opportunities for using economic incentives as compensation for protecting species at risk on private property. They examine current programs to see how well they are working and also offer ideas for how these programs could be more successful. Their ultimate goal is to better understand how economic incentive schemes can be made both more cost-effective and more socially acceptable, while respecting a wide range of views regarding opportunity costs, legal standing, biological effectiveness, moral appropriateness, and social context.

Author / Editor information

Jason F. Shogren is Stroock Distinguished Professor of Natural Resource Conservation and Management at the University of Wyoming.

Reviews

This book presents the most comprehensive discussion of the economics and practicalities of incentive instruments that could be used for endangered and threatened species conservation. I believe the book will have broad appeal to lawyers, biologists, economists, and others working in the field of endangered species, as well as to general readers with an interest in conservation.
— J. B. Ruhl

For those considering development of an incentive program, Species at Risk should be required reading. For others, it offers some clear perspective on what the next era of species-at-risk conservation in the United States could look like.
— Great Plains Research


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Mike Sullivan
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Jason F. Shogren
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1
PART I. Current and Proposed Incentive Options for Species Protection on Private Lands

Debra Donahue
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Gregory M. Parkhurst and Jason F. Shogren
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PART II. Challenges to Using Economic Incentives for Species Protection

Frieda Knobloch and R. Mcgreggor Cawley
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Debra Donahue
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Steven W. Buskirk and Samantha M. Wisely
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Thomas D. Crocker
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Jason F. Shogren, Rodney B. W. Smith and John Tschirhart
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217
PART III. Economic Incentives for ESA Reauthorization

Gregory M. Parkhurst and Jason F. Shogren
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
January 1, 2010
eBook ISBN:
9780292797161
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
283
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