A Knowledge Review on Integrated Landscape Approaches
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Objective and Methods
3. Conceptual and Theoretical Basis of Integrated Landscape Approaches
3.1. The Landscape Scale
3.2. The Science behind Integrated Landscape Approaches
3.3. Definitions of the Integrated Landscape Approach
3.4. Principles and Criteria for Integrated Landscape Approaches
4. The International ‘Momentum’ of the Integrated Landscape Approach
5. Implementation and Sustainability of ILAs
Comprehensive Landscape Planning, Monitoring, and Reporting
6. Perspectives of the Integrated Landscape Approach and Sustainability
6.1. The Integrated Landscape Approach in a Challenging and Evolving World
6.2. Integrated Landscape Approaches’ Relevance for the Forest Sector
6.3. Key Barriers to Overcome
6.3.1. Multi- and Transdisciplinary Academia Is as Relevant as a Cross-Sectoral Government
6.3.2. Exercising Long-Term Thinking for Sustainability
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Definitions | What Is It? | Common Elements | Exceptional Elements |
---|---|---|---|
‘a long-term collaborative process bringing together diverse stakeholders aiming to achieve a balance between multiple and sometimes conflicting objectives in a landscape or seascape’ [39] (p. 466). | Long-term collaborative process | Diverse stakeholders. Balance between multiple and sometimes conflicting objectives. | Landscape or seascape. |
‘Integrated landscape approaches are governance strategies that attempt to reconcile multiple and conflicting land-use claims to harmonize the needs of people and the environment and establish more sustainable and equitable multi-functional landscapes’ [35] (p. 1). | Governance strategies | Reconcile multiple and conflicting land-use claims. Equitable multi-functional landscapes. | Harmonize the needs of people and the environment. |
‘A landscape approach is broadly defined as a framework to integrate policy and practice for multiple land uses, within a given area, to ensure equitable and sustainable use of land while strengthening measures to mitigate and adapt to climate change. It also aims to balance competing demands on land through the implementation of adaptive and integrated management systems’ [28] (p. 1–2). | A framework | Multiple land-uses. Balance competing demands on land. Adaptive and integrated management systems. | Mitigate and adapt to climate change. |
‘Landscape approaches are broadly defined as a strategy to integrate research, policy and practice for multiple land uses within a given area to enhance equitability and sustainability’ [28,40] (p. 3). | A strategy | Integrate research, policy, and practice. Multiple land-uses. Enhance equitability. | n.d. |
‘A landscape approach can be defined as a framework to integrate policy and practice for multiple competing land uses through the implementation of adaptive and integrated management systems’ [1,28,36] (p. 482). | A framework | Integrate policy and practice. Multiple land-uses. Adaptive and integrated management systems. | n.d. |
‘a way of achieving a balance between competing resource uses, employing multi-stakeholder interdisciplinary working modes, to sustainably meet economic, nutritional and environmental needs as well as the aspirations of people within a landscape and of those linked to it though value chains and ecosystem services’ [11] (p. 2). | A way | Balance between competing resource uses. Multistakeholder. | Meet nutritional needs. Within a landscape and those linked to it. Value chains and ecosystem services. |
‘A conceptual framework whereby stakeholders in a landscape aim to reconcile competing social, economic, and environmental objectives. It provides tools and concepts for allocating and managing land to achieve social, economic, and environmental objectives in areas where agriculture, mining, and other productive land uses compete with environmental and biodiversity goals’ [41] (p. 3). | Conceptual framework | Stakeholders in a landscape. Reconcile competing social, economic and environmental objectives. | Tools and concepts for managing lands. Areas where mining, and other compete with biodiversity goals. |
Landscape approaches involve collaboration of stakeholders in a landscape to reconcile and optimize multiple social, economic, and environmental objectives across multiple economic sectors and land uses. Landscape approaches are implemented through processes of integrated landscape management that convene diverse stakeholders to develop and implement land-use plans, policies, projects, investments, and other interventions to advance landscape sustainability goals [42] (p. 8). | n.d. | Collaboration of stakeholders. Reconcile and optimize multiple social, economic, and environmental objectives | Implemented through integrated landscape management. Plans, policies, projects, and investments Landscape sustainability goals. |
10 Principles of the Landscape Approach |
---|
1. Continual learning and adaptive management |
2. Common concern entry point |
3. Multiple scales |
4. Multifunctionality |
5. Multiple stakeholders |
6. Negotiated and transparent change logic |
7. Clarification of rights and responsibilities |
8. Participatory and user-friendly monitoring |
9. Resilience |
10. Strengthened stakeholder capacity |
International Framework | Specifications | Type |
---|---|---|
UN Convention of Biological Diversity (CBD) and Aichi targets [1,35,39,47] | The conservation of biodiversity and ecosystems is a primary goal of ILAs. | International Agreement |
UN Framework of Climate Change (UNFCCC) and Green Climate Fund (GCF) [12,35,50,58,59] | ILAs are acknowledged as a strategy for implementing mitigation and adaptation measures particularly, but not restricted, for the LULUCF sector. Additionally, some ILA elements are included in the contribution of integrated land use plannning and integrated landscape management to implementing land degradation neutrality. | International Agreement |
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SGDs) [1,11,15,28,35] | Overlapping intentions of ILAs with the SDGs, therefore ILAs provide a framework to achieve many SDGs (11–15 SDGs with potential direct and indirect linkages). | International Agreement |
Agenda 21 [60] | Section II, Chapter 10 of the integrated approach to the planning and management of land resources relates to ILA principles. | Global partnership |
The New York Declaration on Forests (NYDF) [35,61] | Pledges by governments and multinational companies to manage natural resources more holistically. | International Agreement |
The Bonn Challenge [35,54,59,61] | Pledges by countries, companies, and institutions to restore millions of hectares of degraded lands using a multifunctional landscape approach. | International initiative |
World Bank—[21,61] Global Environmental Facility [62] Forest Carbon Partnership Facility [63] BioCarbon Fund—Initiative for Sustainable Forest Landscapes [64] | Promoting ILA mostly on forest and land use sectors within specific programs towards sustainable landscapes and jurisdictional REDD+. | International financial institutions |
Food and Agriculture Organization of United Nations [65] UN-REDD Programme [66] | Developing programs and platforms that promote a landscape approach and jurisdictional REDD+. | UN specialized agencies |
Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) [47]. Program for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) [67]. | Including the landscape concept on their principles and exploring ILA into certification schemes. | Forest certification schemes |
Forest Positive Coalition [68] GCF-Task Force [69] | Companies and sub-national governments groups with common objectives in the transition to holistic and sustainable landscapes/jurisdictions. | Groups and coalitions |
Global Landscapes Forum [70] Jurisdictional Action Network—JA Resource Hub [71] | International platform to share knowledge and incentivize networks on sustainable landscapes. | Network platform |
Center for International Forestry Research/World Agroforestry (CIFOR) [72] | Launching and supporting specific ILA research and implementation projects. | Research |
LandScale [73] CDP [74] IDH Source up [75] | Developing standards and frameworks to measure and report on landscape approaches. | Measuring and reporting frameworks |
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Pedroza-Arceo, N.M.; Weber, N.; Ortega-Argueta, A. A Knowledge Review on Integrated Landscape Approaches. Forests 2022, 13, 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13020312
Pedroza-Arceo NM, Weber N, Ortega-Argueta A. A Knowledge Review on Integrated Landscape Approaches. Forests. 2022; 13(2):312. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13020312
Chicago/Turabian StylePedroza-Arceo, Norma M., Norbert Weber, and Alejandro Ortega-Argueta. 2022. "A Knowledge Review on Integrated Landscape Approaches" Forests 13, no. 2: 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13020312
APA StylePedroza-Arceo, N. M., Weber, N., & Ortega-Argueta, A. (2022). A Knowledge Review on Integrated Landscape Approaches. Forests, 13(2), 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13020312