4.7 Review

Sustainability challenges for the social-environmental systems across the Asian Drylands Belt

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac472f

Keywords

social-environmental system; Asian drylands; land use; geopolitical events; global change; institution; sustainability

Funding

  1. LCLUC program of NASA [80NSSC20K0410, NNH18ZDA001N, 80NSSC20K0411, NNX15AD51G, NNX15AP81G]
  2. NSF through The George Washington University, USA [1558389, 1717770, 2019691]
  3. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFC0507801, 2019YFC0507805]
  4. Basic Frontier Science Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [ZDBS-LY-DQC023]
  5. NASA [808621, NNX15AD51G, NNX15AP81G, 802863] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  6. Directorate For Geosciences
  7. ICER [1558389, 1717770] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  8. Div of Res, Innovation, Synergies, & Edu
  9. Directorate For Geosciences [2019691] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This paper synthesizes the contemporary challenges for the sustainability of the Asian Drylands Belt (ADB) social-environmental system (SES), which covers a diverse region geographically, environmentally, and geopolitically. The paper discusses the pressing challenges for the SES, including reduced water quantity and quality, geopolitical conflicts, volatile socioeconomic structures, globalization and cross-country influences, and changes in land use and land cover. The paper highlights the importance of place-based, context-dependent transdisciplinary approaches and the assessment of regulating mechanisms in moderating SES dynamics in the region.
This paper synthesizes the contemporary challenges for the sustainability of the social-environmental system (SES) across a geographically, environmentally, and geopolitically diverse region-the Asian Drylands Belt (ADB). This region includes 18 political entities, covering 10.3% of global land area and 30% of total global drylands. At the present time, the ADB is confronted with a unique set of environmental and socioeconomic changes including water shortage-related environmental challenges and dramatic institutional changes since the collapse of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. The SES of the ADB is assessed using a conceptual framework rooted in the three pillars of sustainability science: social, economic, and ecological systems. The complex dynamics are explored with biophysical, socioeconomic, institutional, and local context-dependent mechanisms with a focus on institutions and land use and land cover change (LULCC) as important drivers of SES dynamics. This paper also discusses the following five pressing, practical challenges for the sustainability of the ADB SES: (a) reduced water quantity and quality under warming, drying, and escalating extreme events, (b) continued, if not intensifying, geopolitical conflicts, (c) volatile, uncertain, and shifting socioeconomic structures, (d) globalization and cross-country influences, and (e) intensification and shifts in LULCC. To meet the varied challenges across the region, place-based, context-dependent transdisciplinary approaches are needed to focus on the human-environment interactions within and between regional landscapes with explicit consideration of specific forcings and regulatory mechanisms. Future work focused on this region should also assess the role of the following mechanisms that may moderate SES dynamics: socioeconomic regulating mechanisms, biophysical regulating mechanisms, regional and national institutional regulating mechanisms, and localized institutional regulating mechanisms.

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