Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics?

Landscape approaches to integrated land management have recently gained considerable attention in the scientific literature and international fora. The approach is gaining increasing support at governmental and intergovernmental levels, as well as being embraced by a host of international research a...

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Main Authors: Reed, J.D., Vianen, J. van, Barlow, J., Sunderland, Terry C.H.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93925
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author Reed, J.D.
Vianen, J. van
Barlow, J.
Sunderland, Terry C.H.
author_browse Barlow, J.
Reed, J.D.
Sunderland, Terry C.H.
Vianen, J. van
author_facet Reed, J.D.
Vianen, J. van
Barlow, J.
Sunderland, Terry C.H.
author_sort Reed, J.D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Landscape approaches to integrated land management have recently gained considerable attention in the scientific literature and international fora. The approach is gaining increasing support at governmental and intergovernmental levels, as well as being embraced by a host of international research and development agencies. In an attempt to determine whether, and how, these approaches compare with previous conservation and development paradigms, we reviewed the implementation of integrated landscape approaches across the tropics. Within the scientific literature we fail to find a single applied example of the landscape approach in the tropics that adequately—that is with reliable, in depth collection and reporting of data—demonstrated the effective balancing of social and environmental trade-offs through multi-scale processes of negotiation for enhanced outcomes. However, we provide an assessment of 150 case studies from unpublished grey literature and 24 peer-reviewed studies that exhibit basic characteristics of landscape approaches. Our findings indicate that landscape approaches show potential as a framework to reconcile conservation and development and improve social capital, enhance community income and employment opportunities as well as reduce land degradation and conserve natural resources. However, comprehensive data on the social and environmental effects of these benefits remain elusive. We identify key contributing factors towards implementation, and progress, of landscape approaches and our findings suggest that multi-level, or polycentric, governance structures relate well with intervention success. We conclude that landscape approaches are a welcome departure from previous unsuccessful attempts at reconciling conservation and development in the tropics but, despite claims to the contrary, remain nascent in both their conceptualization and implementation.
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spelling CGSpace939252025-06-17T08:24:02Z Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics? Reed, J.D. Vianen, J. van Barlow, J. Sunderland, Terry C.H. landscape land management landscape conservation social impact employment opportunities resource conservation case studies land policy Landscape approaches to integrated land management have recently gained considerable attention in the scientific literature and international fora. The approach is gaining increasing support at governmental and intergovernmental levels, as well as being embraced by a host of international research and development agencies. In an attempt to determine whether, and how, these approaches compare with previous conservation and development paradigms, we reviewed the implementation of integrated landscape approaches across the tropics. Within the scientific literature we fail to find a single applied example of the landscape approach in the tropics that adequately—that is with reliable, in depth collection and reporting of data—demonstrated the effective balancing of social and environmental trade-offs through multi-scale processes of negotiation for enhanced outcomes. However, we provide an assessment of 150 case studies from unpublished grey literature and 24 peer-reviewed studies that exhibit basic characteristics of landscape approaches. Our findings indicate that landscape approaches show potential as a framework to reconcile conservation and development and improve social capital, enhance community income and employment opportunities as well as reduce land degradation and conserve natural resources. However, comprehensive data on the social and environmental effects of these benefits remain elusive. We identify key contributing factors towards implementation, and progress, of landscape approaches and our findings suggest that multi-level, or polycentric, governance structures relate well with intervention success. We conclude that landscape approaches are a welcome departure from previous unsuccessful attempts at reconciling conservation and development in the tropics but, despite claims to the contrary, remain nascent in both their conceptualization and implementation. 2017-04 2018-07-03T10:56:38Z 2018-07-03T10:56:38Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93925 en Open Access Elsevier Reed, J., Van Vianen, J., Barlow, J., Sunderland, T.C.H.. 2017. Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics? Land Use Policy, 63 : 481-492. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.02.021
spellingShingle landscape
land management
landscape conservation
social impact
employment opportunities
resource conservation
case studies
land policy
Reed, J.D.
Vianen, J. van
Barlow, J.
Sunderland, Terry C.H.
Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics?
title Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics?
title_full Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics?
title_fullStr Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics?
title_full_unstemmed Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics?
title_short Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics?
title_sort have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics
topic landscape
land management
landscape conservation
social impact
employment opportunities
resource conservation
case studies
land policy
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/93925
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