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Learning from agri-environment schemes in Australia
- First Page
- Cover
- Title page
- Copyright and imprint information
- Preface
- List of figures
- List of tables and boxes
- List of acronyms and abbreviations
- Contributors
- 1. Introduction: Framing the agri‑environment
- Part I. The agri‑environment in the real world
- 2. Working effectively with farmers on agri-environment investment
- 3. The Environmental Stewardship Program: Lessons on creating long-term agri-environment schemes
- 4. Do farmers love brolgas, seagrass and coral reefs? It depends on who’s paying, how much, and for how long!
- 5. The vital role of environmental NGOs: Trusted brokers in complex markets
- 6. Agricultural land use policy in the European Union: A brief history and lessons learnt
- 7. A brief history of agri‑environment policy in Australia: From community-based NRM to market-based instruments
- Part II. The birds and the beef
- 8. Can recognition of ecosystem services help biodiversity conservation?
- 9. A perspective on land sparing versus land sharing
- 10. Restoring ecosystem services on private farmlands: Lessons from economics
- 11. Scaling the benefits of agri‑environment schemes for biodiversity
- 12. Social dimensions of biodiversity conservation programs
- 13. Contract preferences and psychological determinants of participation in agri‑environment schemes
- 14. Accounting for private benefits in ecological restoration planning
- Part III. Planning, doing and learning
- 15. Defining and designing cost‑effective agri-environment schemes
- 16. Transaction costs in agri‑environment schemes
- 17. What a difference a metric makes: Strong (and weak) metrics for agri-environment schemes
- 18. Public benefits, private benefits, and the choice of policy tool for land-use change
- 19. Controls and counterfactual information in agro-ecological investment
- 20. Achieving greater gains in biodiversity from agri‑environment schemes
- 21. Lessons for policy from Australia’s experience with conservation tenders
- 22. Improving the performance of agri-environment programs: Reflections on best practice in design and implementation
- 23. Conclusion — Elements of good design
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