Abstract

This commentary debates on the role of multiple socioeconomic drivers of fringe land degradation (including, but not limited to, population and social dynamics, economic polarization, and developmental policies), as a novel contribution to the desertification assessment in Southern European metropolitan regions, a recognized hotspot of desertification at the global scale. Expanding rapidly all over the world, metropolitan regions are a geographical space where land degradation drivers and processes assume typical relationships that require further research supporting dedicated policy strategies. To assure a better comprehension of the environmental-economic nexus at the base of land degradation in peri-urban areas, we provided a classification of relevant socioeconomic and territorial dimensions in both macro-scale and micro-scale degradation processes. We also identified the related (contextual) factors that determine an increased risk of desertification in metropolitan regions. Micro-scale factors, such as agricultural prices and off-farm employment, reflect some potential causes of fringe land degradation, with a mostly local and on-site role. Technological change, agricultural prices, and household income influence land vulnerability, but their impact on fringe land degradation was less investigated and supposed to be quite moderate in most cases. Macro-scale factors such as population density, rural poverty, and environmental policies—being extensively studied on a qualitative base—were taken as important drivers of fringe land degradation, although their impact still remains undefined. Regional disparities in land resource distribution, rural poverty, and unsustainable management of environmental resources like soil and water were indirect consequences of land degradation in peri-urban districts. Based on a comparative review of theoretical and empirical findings, strategies mitigating degradation of fringe land and reducing desertification risk in potentially affected metropolitan regions were finally discussed for the Northern Mediterranean basin and generalized to other socioeconomic contexts.

Highlights

  • Economic re-organization of regions and countries implies changes in land resource availability, sometimes altering ecosystem quality and biodiversity [1,2,3]

  • Land prices in fringe districts may not reflect the agricultural potential but rather speculation that purchasers will profit from selling the land at a given date in the future [68]. Such dynamics were occasionally documented in fringe areas surrounding large Mediterranean cities—whose territory is structurally sensitive to land degradation due to climate aridity, poor soils, and vegetation cover [39]

  • Reconnecting socioeconomicimpacts impacts a regional scalethe with the ecologicaldynamicsdynamics on a local scale certainly to an enriched knowledge local commuterritorial on a local scalecontributes certainly contributes to an enrichedofknowledge of nities, outlining how a study of differences based on assumptions of non-linearity and local communities, outlining how a study of differences based on assumptions of noncomplexand thinking is a thinking key to understanding socio-environmental trends in Southern linearity complex is a key to understanding socio-environmental trends Euin rope

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Summary

Introduction

Economic re-organization of regions and countries implies changes in land resource availability, sometimes altering ecosystem quality and biodiversity [1,2,3]. In this a com-a hotspots in inperi-urban peri-urbanregions regionsasas effective policy targets In perspective, this perspective, mentary illustrating a brief review of recent literature and reorienting the debate on the commentary illustrating a brief review of recent literature and reorienting the debate on socio-environmental role of land degradation in peri-urban fringes is appropriate in both the socio-environmental role of land degradation in peri-urban fringes is appropriate in environmental studies and regional planning.

Peri-Urbanization
An Empirical Approach Identifying Drivers of Fringe Land Degradation
AAflow-chart flow-chart depicting examples of socioeconomic processes leading
Macro-Scale Factors
Population Growth
Human Pressure on Land
Agriculture
Socioeconomic Development
Micro-Scale Factors
Agricultural Prices
Land Prices and Property Regimes
The Impact of Technological Change
A Summary Perspective
Discussion
Coping with Degradation of Fringe Land: A Geo-Economic Perspective
Territorial Disparities and Land Degradation
Concluding Remarks
Full Text
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