Applying social-ecological system resilience principles to the context of woody vegetation management in smallholder farming landscapes of the Global South

被引:2
作者
Shumi, Girma
Loos, Jacqueline [1 ,2 ]
Fischer, Joern [1 ]
机构
[1] Leuphana Univ Lueneburg, Social Ecol Syst Inst, Fac Sustainabil, Luneburg, Germany
[2] Univ Vienna, Fac Life Sci, Dept Bot & Biodivers Res, Vienna, Austria
关键词
Patrick O'Farrell; Ecosystem services; Global South; local people; social-ecological systems; resilience principles; woody vegetation management; MULTILEVEL GOVERNANCE; BUILDING RESILIENCE; FOREST MANAGEMENT; LOCAL KNOWLEDGE; PROTECTED AREAS; SUSTAINABILITY; CONSERVATION; BIODIVERSITY; DIVERSITY; TRANSFORMATION;
D O I
10.1080/26395916.2024.2339222
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Woody vegetation diversity is declining due to human-induced land-use changes, mainly agricultural expansion and intensification, deforestation, forest degradation and urbanisation. This loss challenges the resilience and sustainability of smallholder farming landscapes, in which woody vegetation plays an important role for the provision of multiple material and non-material benefits to people and nature. In this review, we examine the relevance and application of established social-ecological resilience principles to woody vegetation management and explore how the resilience of smallholder farming landscapes can be enhanced in the Global South. To this end, we conducted a qualitative review and purposefully selected scientific literature relevant to each resilience principle. Exemplified by different cases from across the Global South, we collate evidence for the significance of all principles for woody vegetation management. Our review also sheds light on widespread obstacles to sustainable woody vegetation management and landscape resilience, such as the pursuit of top-down and sectoral policies for agriculture and woody vegetation management, deep-rooted power dynamics and asymmetries, and the marginalisation of local people and their traditional knowledge systems. Applying resilience principles to woody vegetation management in smallholder farming landscapes therefore requires transformative changes that enable paradigm shifts, for example, through more genuine recognition of local people and their livelihoods, knowledge and experiences. Ongoing ecosystem destruction and unsustainable development pathways are posing a challenge in smallholder farming landscapes of the Global South.More specifically, they are triggering rapid loss of ecological and social diversity.These mainly affect the diversity of woody vegetation and ecosystem services, which are essential for nature and human life.To manage such landscapes, it is therefore useful to think of them as interconnected social-ecological systems and use resilience principles.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 197 条
[51]   Classifying drivers of global forest loss [J].
Curtis, Philip G. ;
Slay, Christy M. ;
Harris, Nancy L. ;
Tyukavina, Alexandra ;
Hansen, Matthew C. .
SCIENCE, 2018, 361 (6407) :1108-1111
[52]   Monitoring matters: examining the potential of locally-based approaches [J].
Danielsen, F ;
Burgess, ND ;
Balmford, A .
BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2005, 14 (11) :2507-2542
[53]   What is the relevance of smallholders' agroforestry systems for conserving tropical tree species and genetic diversity in circa situm, in situ and ex situ settings? A review [J].
Dawson, Ian K. ;
Guariguata, Manuel R. ;
Loo, Judy ;
Weber, John C. ;
Lengkeek, Ard ;
Bush, David ;
Cornelius, Jonathan ;
Guarino, Luigi ;
Kindt, Roeland ;
Orwa, Calleb ;
Russell, Joanne ;
Jamnadass, Ramni .
BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2013, 22 (02) :301-324
[54]   Multi-level governance and power in climate change policy networks [J].
Di Gregorio, Monica ;
Fatorelli, Leandra ;
Paavola, Jouni ;
Locatelli, Bruno ;
Pramova, Emilia ;
Nurrochmat, Dodik Ridho ;
May, Peter H. ;
Brockhaus, Maria ;
Sari, Intan Maya ;
Kusumadewi, Sonya Dyah .
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2019, 54 :64-77
[55]   Pervasive human-driven decline of life on Earth points to the need for transformative change [J].
Diaz, Sandra ;
Settele, Josef ;
Brondizio, Eduardo S. ;
Ngo, Hien T. ;
Agard, John ;
Arneth, Almut ;
Balvanera, Patricia ;
Brauman, Kate A. ;
Butchart, Stuart H. M. ;
Chan, Kai M. A. ;
Garibaldi, Lucas A. ;
Ichii, Kazuhito ;
Liu, Jianguo ;
Subramanian, Suneetha M. ;
Midgley, Guy F. ;
Miloslavich, Patricia ;
Molnar, Zsolt ;
Obura, David ;
Pfaff, Alexander ;
Polasky, Stephen ;
Purvis, Andy ;
Razzaque, Jona ;
Reyers, Belinda ;
Chowdhury, Rinku Roy ;
Shin, Yunne-Jai ;
Visseren-Hamakers, Ingrid ;
Willis, Katherine J. ;
Zayas, Cynthia N. .
SCIENCE, 2019, 366 (6471) :1327-+
[56]   The struggle to govern the commons [J].
Dietz, T ;
Ostrom, E ;
Stern, PC .
SCIENCE, 2003, 302 (5652) :1907-1912
[57]   Navigating the complexity of ecological stability [J].
Donohue, Ian ;
Hillebrand, Helmut ;
Montoya, Jose M. ;
Petchey, Owen L. ;
Pimm, Stuart L. ;
Fowler, Mike S. ;
Healy, Kevin ;
Jackson, Andrew L. ;
Lurgi, Miguel ;
McClean, Deirdre ;
O'Connor, Nessa E. ;
O'Gorman, Eoin J. ;
Yang, Qiang .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2016, 19 (09) :1172-1185
[58]   Rivets and redundancy [J].
Ehrlich, P ;
Walker, B .
BIOSCIENCE, 1998, 48 (05) :387-387
[59]   Land tenure, asset heterogeneity and deforestation in Southern Burkina Faso [J].
Etongo, Daniel ;
Djenontin, Ida Nadia S. ;
Kanninen, Markku ;
Fobissie, Kalame ;
Korhonen-Kurki, Kaisa ;
Djoudi, Houria .
FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS, 2015, 61 :51-58
[60]  
FAO UNEP, 2020, The state of the world's forests 2020. Forests, DOI [10.2307/208372, DOI 10.2307/208372]