PART II / CHAPTER 6 5.7 Bio-cultural Checks and Balances Against Commodification of ESS and Towards ILCs’ Rights to a Bio-cultural Way of Life BIO-CULTURAL COMMUNITY PROTOCOLS IN THE CONTEXT OF PAYMENT FOR ECOSYSTEM SERVICES the pastoralist Raika community described in previous chapters has not only become dependent on having access to the land, but has also taken on the stewardship of the ver y ecosystem upon which it relies for sur vival. A final fundamental contribution of BCPs to the PES context lies in its facilitation of ILCs’ expression of their bio-cultural values and knowledge. BCPs add an additional angle to ESS through the qualitative valuation of ecosystems’ bio-cultural During a long history of interaction, the land and the community have co-evolved a symbiotic relationship in which they mutually reinforce each other’s bio-cultural integrity. resources. In other words, BCPs describe ecosystems in terms of their bio-cultural rather than their economic value, which provides a much more holistic assessment of their true value. Even when bundled, ESS can only be measured in terms of the values they add to certain economic activities or to a certain user. Yet, ecosystems that generate economically valuable ESS do so much more than that in terms of the services they provide to the livelihoods of ILCs, which are rarely, if ever, measured economically. For example, a forest is not merely a carbon sink, but also provides ILCs with food, shelter, medicine, and spiritual guidance, all of which they have come to depend upon for their livelihoods and biocultural ways of life. It is for these reasons that ILCs such as Therefore, basing PES schemes on BCPs allows for the integration of bio-cultural values into a previously economicallyvalued system and further acknowledges the importance of bio-cultural values for the preservation of ecosystems that generate ESS in the first place. Therefore, BCPs generate a holistic approach to ESS that extends beyond an economic valuation and includes broader valuation criteria for the development of a PES scheme. PES schemes may become an additional mechanism through which ILCs can assert their rights and gain recognition for the bio-cultural principles of conservation and sustainable use entrenched in their traditional ways of life. 6. Conclusions While BCPs are not the panacea for making PES work, we PES scheme on a BCP will highlight ILCs’ bio-cultural values argue that they can be highly supportive in integrating about the ecosystem in question and allow for a more communities into PES schemes. What may otherwise seem organic community-based decision-making process than too complex for possible users of ESS may become feasible what typically occurs in a purely economic transaction. through the BCP process. Many other challenges exist, including the need that still BCPs can also serve as a capacity development mechanism exists for solid scientific and economic analyses to assign for ILCs that are confronted with the opportunity to enter value to ESS. While BCPs will only address some of the into a PES scheme. Participation, capacity development and challenges associated with this new and promising PES increased awareness of what such a scheme entails leads scheme, policymakers and entrepreneurs working in this to empowered communities that are much better prepared field should strongly consider integrating them into their to not only enter into PES negotiations, but also to commit work as they collaborate with ILCs to design and implement to the conditions of specific schemes. In addition, basing a long-term and effective PES schemes well into the future. 66

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