The interactive role of human and environmental dimensions in the desertification debate
We summarize a new synthetic framework for understanding and responding to desertification that emerged from the 88th Dahlem workshop on "An Integrated Assessment of the Ecological, Meteorological and Human Dimensions of Global Desertification". We refer to this framework as the Dahlem Desertification Paradigm. This paper then examines one thread through this framework - the chain of logic that runs from the assertion that simultaneous consideration of both the human and environmental aspects of desertification if critical for any advances on dealing with desertification and degradation at all scales; that the coupled human and environmental parts of the system change over time, in ways that may be more or less dysfunctional; to emphasize the critical importance of assisting the rate of development of appropriate local environmental knowledge (LEK) in minimizing dysfunction. Given the increasing rates of change being imposed on our worlds, and the particular difficulties in developing experiential knowledge quickly in variable arid environments, we conclude that support for better integration of LEK with the scientific method is one critical pillar in creating a learning society in drylands.
Duke Scholars
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- Agronomy & Agriculture
- 3002 Agriculture, land and farm management
- 0701 Agriculture, Land and Farm Management
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Published In
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Agronomy & Agriculture
- 3002 Agriculture, land and farm management
- 0701 Agriculture, Land and Farm Management