Payments, penalties, payouts, and environmental ethics: a system dynamics examination

A generic system dynamics model was developed as an explicit thinking tool to investigate systems of payments for environmental services (PES) and possible feedback effects regarding environmental ethics. Healthy ecosystems may justify charges for environmental services, but damaged ecosystems will...

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Main Author: Richard G. Dudley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2007-12-01
Series:Sustainability: Science, Practice, & Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejournal.nbii.org/archives/vol3iss2/0706-013.dudley.html
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author Richard G. Dudley
author_facet Richard G. Dudley
author_sort Richard G. Dudley
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description A generic system dynamics model was developed as an explicit thinking tool to investigate systems of payments for environmental services (PES) and possible feedback effects regarding environmental ethics. Healthy ecosystems may justify charges for environmental services, but damaged ecosystems will require payouts funded by other mechanisms, perhaps by penalties on ecodamage. Any payouts made may influence environmental ethics, but the direction of such influence is dependent on the level of payout, the influence that payouts have on the switchover to ecofriendly uses, and the changing attitudes of payout recipients. Payouts can cause a switchover to ecofriendly activities. If that switchover also reinforces a favorable environmental ethic it can lower the overall payout level needed to maintain ecofriendly resource-use activities.
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spelling doaj.art-aa8177c54d4f44089142d25ddf89131a2022-12-22T00:25:06ZengTaylor & Francis GroupSustainability: Science, Practice, & Policy1548-77332007-12-01322435Payments, penalties, payouts, and environmental ethics: a system dynamics examinationRichard G. DudleyA generic system dynamics model was developed as an explicit thinking tool to investigate systems of payments for environmental services (PES) and possible feedback effects regarding environmental ethics. Healthy ecosystems may justify charges for environmental services, but damaged ecosystems will require payouts funded by other mechanisms, perhaps by penalties on ecodamage. Any payouts made may influence environmental ethics, but the direction of such influence is dependent on the level of payout, the influence that payouts have on the switchover to ecofriendly uses, and the changing attitudes of payout recipients. Payouts can cause a switchover to ecofriendly activities. If that switchover also reinforces a favorable environmental ethic it can lower the overall payout level needed to maintain ecofriendly resource-use activities.http://ejournal.nbii.org/archives/vol3iss2/0706-013.dudley.htmlenvironmental ethicsmanagement toolsmodelscost-benefit analysisecosystem managementresource utilization
spellingShingle Richard G. Dudley
Payments, penalties, payouts, and environmental ethics: a system dynamics examination
Sustainability: Science, Practice, & Policy
environmental ethics
management tools
models
cost-benefit analysis
ecosystem management
resource utilization
title Payments, penalties, payouts, and environmental ethics: a system dynamics examination
title_full Payments, penalties, payouts, and environmental ethics: a system dynamics examination
title_fullStr Payments, penalties, payouts, and environmental ethics: a system dynamics examination
title_full_unstemmed Payments, penalties, payouts, and environmental ethics: a system dynamics examination
title_short Payments, penalties, payouts, and environmental ethics: a system dynamics examination
title_sort payments penalties payouts and environmental ethics a system dynamics examination
topic environmental ethics
management tools
models
cost-benefit analysis
ecosystem management
resource utilization
url http://ejournal.nbii.org/archives/vol3iss2/0706-013.dudley.html
work_keys_str_mv AT richardgdudley paymentspenaltiespayoutsandenvironmentalethicsasystemdynamicsexamination