4.5 Article

Conservation policy in traditional farming landscapes

Journal

CONSERVATION LETTERS
Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages 167-175

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-263X.2012.00227.x

Keywords

CAP reform; community-based natural resource management; Common Agricultural Policy; Eastern Europe; farmland biodiversity; Romania; subsistence agriculture

Funding

  1. Sofja Kovalesvkaja Award
  2. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  3. German Ministry of Research and Education
  4. Postdoctoral programme for training scientific researchers [POSDRU/89/1.5/S/58852]
  5. European Social Fund within the Sectorial Operational Program Human Resources Development
  6. Einstein Foundation
  7. European Commission [VOLANTE-FP7-ENV-2010-265104]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Many traditional farming landscapes have high conservation value. Conservation policy in such landscapes typically follows a preservation strategy, most commonly by providing financial incentives for farmers to continue traditional practices. A preservation strategy can be successful in the short term, but it fails to acknowledge that traditional farming landscapes evolved as tightly coupled socialecological systems. Traditionally, people received direct benefits from the environment, which provided a direct incentive for sustainable land use. Globalization and rural development programs increasingly alter the social subsystem in traditional farming landscapes, whereas conservation seeks to preserve the ecological subsystem. The resulting decoupling of the socialecological system can be counteracted only in part by financial incentives, thus inherently limiting the usefulness of a preservation strategy. An alternative way to frame conservation policy in traditional farming landscapes is a transformation strategy. This strategy acknowledges that the past cannot be preserved, and assumes that direct links between people and nature are preferable to indirect links based on incentive payments. A transformation strategy seeks to support community-led efforts to create new, direct links with nature. Such a strategy could empower rural communities to embrace sustainable development, providing a vision for the future rather than attempting to preserve the past.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available