1. Fate can be changed! Arid rangelands in a globalizing world – A complementary co-evolutionary perspective on the current ‘desert syndrome’.
- Author
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Easdale, M.H. and Domptail, S.E.
- Subjects
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ARID regions , *RANGELANDS , *SOCIAL ecology , *LAND management , *COEVOLUTION , *GREEN Revolution , *RESOURCE management - Abstract
Abstract: Degradation in arid rangelands is an on-going concern, as they appear to be trapped in a vicious circle of desertification–marginalization–impoverishment. Recent theoretical developments in dryland research strive to provide keys to understanding linked social-ecological systems and land management. One approach, the desert-syndrome, depicts the socio-ecological evolution of drylands as being determined mainly by ecological factors. A second approach, the adaptive management paradigm, acknowledges the existence of socio-ecological systems in drylands which are considered to have adapted to a given political–economic context and a given range of economic and ecological variability. This paper proposes a conceptual framework integrating both approaches in order to point out supplementary important drivers of the socio-ecological evolution of drylands systems, especially rangelands at the global economic and political scale. The analysis is broadly conducted from a political ecology and co-evolutionary perspectives and discusses three main factors: (1) world-wide application of western-based paradigms in resource management and their effect on rangelands, (2) the fossil-fuel based Green Revolution, and (3) capitalist institutions used to regulate agricultural trade and the corresponding tools and policies. The marginalization of arid rangelands is avoidable, but requires real changes in the current general political and economic rationale under which resources are allocated. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
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