This new book, “Making sense of research for sustainable land management”, provides evidence on how sustainable land management practices – both established and new – can be adapted to specific local and regional contexts.
Land is a limited resource, but we take it for granted and do not use it sustainably. Land is much more than a commodity: it is our natural heritage. We depend entirely on land and its soils, water, vegetation, and animal life to sustain our livelihoods. Land is multidimensional and therefore complex: it has multiple scales, functions, sectors and actors that must be taken into account. This complexity requires people from practice and research to interact as equal partners, in “implementation-oriented research”. Integrated modelling and scenario development can help test innovations and integrate research results into formats suitable for informing decision-making.
The book “Making sense of research for sustainable land management” is a book project from the project "Global Assessment of Land Use Dynamics, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Ecosystem Services (GLUES)". It provides evidence on how Sustainable Land Management practices – both established and new – can be adapted to specific local and regional contexts. It shows how research can support decision-makers and advisors from a variety of sectors – at national, regional, and local levels – in comprehending the complexity of Sustainable Land Management. It assists them in identifying and developing suitable solutions to prevent or restore land degradation, improve yields, increase resilience in production systems, and make water management more efficient. A special focus is on measures for climate change adaptation and mitigation.
The book is divided into two parts:
Part 1 consists of seven chapters, synthesizing practice-relevant results of the 12 research projects and drawing conclusions from seven years of experience.
1. Local land management – the soil, vegetation, water and climate nexus
2. Landscape management – adapting to climate change
3. Mitigating climate change
4. Protecting biodiversity and ecosystems
5. Bridging gaps between research and practice
6. The contribution of research
7. Conclusions and key messages
Part 2 comprises 30 selected case studies of Sustainable Land Management practices (technologies and approaches) documented and described in more detail by making use of the WOCAT format that ensures better clarification, easier comparison, and simpler application. The case studies can also be found in the WOCAT Global Database.
“Making sense of research for sustainable land management” contributes to the development of fresh and open-minded perspectives. It puts research on Sustainable Land Management into various different contexts for those who manage land and its soils, as well as those who want to conduct or set up research in a way that it is meaningful for land users. There is a need for integrated and integrative approaches – i.e. participatory methods that involve researchers and practitioners – as well as a corresponding self-understanding of the roles of research. And, last but not least, suitable framework conditions of funding and research management are crucial. Taking this into account, the book aims to be useful to land management practitioners who wish to incorporate research into their work of planning and budgeting the use of land, and of choosing appropriate farming technologies. It should benefit those providing consulting services, setting up research programmes, and running international dialogues on the future of agriculture. It is also aimed at scientists who want to conduct research that can successfully support Sustainable Land Management in practice.
The examples in this book confirm that preserving ecosystems and ensuring ecosystem service provision can be accomplished within production systems (land sharing), and outside of them through intensification on productive land – while leaving other land out of production (land sparing). The question is not “either/ or”. Rather, it is how to integrate both within the available space on this planet.
Some principles of Sustainable Land Management, as demonstrated by the research covered in this book, stand out in terms of practicability:
A basic strategy of research for SLM is to identify and make use of synergies while minimizing trade-offs. Unclear trade-offs; costs and benefits; and winners and losers at the local and landscape level may lead to conflicts.
Making sense of this research largely depends on integration across disciplines as well as integration of knowledge and people from science and practice. Research needs to move from producing knowledge about SLM to developing knowledge for SLM together with those who make use of it.
The book was launched after the opening of and welcome to the Landscape Day at the Rio Pavilion at CBD COP13: thirteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity Cancun, Mexico, 4–17 December 2016.
Read as E-book: https://issuu.com/wocat/docs/wocat_glues
2015 - 2016
Global Assessment of Land Use Dynamics, Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Ecosystem Services - Making sense of research for sustainable land management (GLUES): http://geoportal-glues.ufz.de/index.php
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