A multi-level stakeholder approach to sustainable land management
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
1998
Publication Type
Book Section
Division/Institute
Series
Advances in GeoEcology
Publisher
Catena
Language
English
Description
Soils provide us with over 90% of all human food, livestock feed, fibre and fuel on Earth. Soils, however, have more than just productive functions. The key challenge in coming years will be to address the diverse and potentially conflicting demands now being made by human societies and other forms of life, while ensuring that future generations have the same potential to use soils and land of comparable quality. In a multi-level stakeholder approach, down-to-earth action will have to be supplemented with measures at various levels, from households to communities, and from national policies to international conventions. Knowledge systems, both indigenous and scientific, and related research and learning processes must play a central role. Ongoing action can be enhanced through a critical assessment of the impact of past achievements, and through better cooperation between people and institutions.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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Hurni 1998 A multi-level stakeholder approach to sustainable land management.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 4.44 MB | publisher | published |