Abstract

Assuming the importance of a “socioeconomic mosaic” influencing soil and land degradation at the landscape scale, spatial contexts should be considered in the analysis of desertification risk as a base for the design of appropriate counteracting strategies. A holistic approach grounded on a multi-scale qualitative and quantitative assessment is required to identify optimal development strategies regulating the socioeconomic dimensions of land degradation. In the last few decades, the operational thinking at the base of a comprehensive, holistic theory of land degradation evolved toward many different conceptual steps. Moving from empirical, qualitative and unstructured frameworks to a more structured, rational and articulated thinking, such theoretical approaches have been usually oriented toward complex and non-linear dynamics benefiting from progressive and refined approximations. Based on these premises, eleven disciplinary approaches were identified and commented extensively on in the present study, and were classified along a gradient of increasing complexity, from more qualitative and de-structured frameworks to more articulated, non-linear thinking aimed at interpreting the intrinsic fragmentation and heterogeneity of environmental and socioeconomic processes underlying land degradation. Identifying, reviewing and classifying such approaches demonstrated that the evolution of global thinking in land degradation was intimately non-linear, developing narrative and deductive approaches together with inferential, experimentally oriented visions. Focusing specifically on advanced economies in the world, our review contributes to systematize multiple—sometimes entropic—interpretations of desertification processes into a more organized framework, giving value to methodological interplays and specific interpretations of the latent processes underlying land degradation.

Highlights

  • Rapid and often unpredictable changes in economic structures have occurred over the past few decades, reflecting transitions in societies and local communities, and progressivelyInt

  • Many of the ecosystem services are the direct result of landscape functioning and De Groot et al [74] considered their incorporation in landscape analysis and management, with a direct application in the field of land degradation

  • Strategies aimed at containing socioeconomic imbalances seem definitely to be the most appropriate to guarantee a sustainable development fully integrated with a biophysical vision embedded in a “working with nature”

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Summary

Introduction

Rapid and often unpredictable changes in economic structures have occurred over the past few decades, reflecting (more or less rapid) transitions in societies and local communities, and progressively. Structural changes in productive activities, labor markets, housing, and the social organization of life in both advanced and developing countries have determined increasing pressures on fragile ecosystems, especially in the most sensitive and economically disadvantaged areas. Together with crop intensification, industrial livestock, overgrazing and more intense wildfires, has manipulated the typical features of rural landscapes, creating a diversified, and highly fragmented, mosaic of land uses, with coexisting urban and rural settlements [30] In both advanced and emerging economies, fragmentation of agro-ecosystems leading to land degradation was becoming the new mark of (modern) non-urban landscapes, possibly threatening ecosystem functions and services—the most promising capital endowments for future growth [31,32,33]. Drastic population disparities along urban–rural gradients; tourism development in ecologically fragile districts

The Evolution of Land Degradation Thinking
Historical Narrative
Controlling Desertification
Ecosystem Services
Sustainable Land Management
Technological Challenges
The Traditional “Demand–Supply” Economic Approach
Political Ecology
Environmental Economic Geography
Complex Adaptive System Thinking
2.10. Land Degradation Neutrality
2.11. Circular Economy
Findings
Concluding Remarks
Full Text
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