Authors
Stephanie Mansourian, John Parrotta, Poorna Balaji, Imogen Bellwood‐Howard, Suhas Bhasme, R Patrick Bixler, Agni Klintuni Boedhihartono, Rachel Carmenta, Theresa Jedd, Wil de Jong, Frank K Lake, Agnieszka Latawiec, Melvin Lippe, Nitin D Rai, Jeffrey Sayer, Kristina Van Dexter, Bhaskar Vira, Ingrid Visseren‐Hamakers, Carina Wyborn, Anastasia Yang
Publication date
2020/2/28
Source
Land Degradation & Development
Volume
31
Issue
4
Pages
419-429
Description
The concept of forest landscape restoration (FLR) is being widely adopted around the globe by governmental, non‐governmental agencies, and the private sector, all of whom see FLR as an approach that contributes to multiple global sustainability goals. Originally, FLR was designed with a clearly integrative dimension across sectors, stakeholders, space and time, and in particular across the natural and social sciences. Yet, in practice, this integration remains a challenge in many FLR efforts. Reflecting this lack of integration are the continued narrow sectoral and disciplinary approaches taken by forest restoration projects, often leading to marginalisation of the most vulnerable populations, including through land dispossessions. This article aims to assess what lessons can be learned from other associated fields of practice for FLR implementation. To do this, 35 scientists came together to review the key literature …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Mansourian, J Parrotta, P Balaji, I Bellwood‐Howard… - Land Degradation & Development, 2020