Authors
Richard Thomas, Mark Reed, Kathyrn Clifton, Nathan Appadurai, Anthony Mills, Claudio Zucca, Elie Kodsi, Jason Sircely, Fida Haddad, Christopher Hagen, Everisto Mapedza, Kifle Woldearegay, Kumar Shalander, Mauricio Bellon, Quang Le, Samuel Mabikke, Sasha Alexander, Stefan Leu, Stefan Schlingloff, Tana Lala‐Pritchard, Victor Mares, Roberto Quiroz
Publication date
2018/10
Journal
Land Degradation & Development
Volume
29
Issue
10
Pages
3272-3284
Description
Improvements in land use and management are needed at a global scale to tackle interconnected global challenges of population growth, poverty, migration, climate change, biodiversity loss, and degrading land and water resources. There are hundreds of technical options for improving the sustainability of land management and preventing or reversing degradation, but there are many sociocultural, institutional, economic, and policy barriers hindering their adoption at large scale. To tackle this challenge, the Dryland Systems Program of the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research and the UN Convention to Combat Desertification convened an expert group to consider barriers and incentives to scaling technologies, processes, policies, or institutional arrangements. The group reviewed existing frameworks for scaling sustainable land management (SLM) interventions across a range of contexts …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Thomas, M Reed, K Clifton, N Appadurai, A Mills… - Land Degradation & Development, 2018