Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/17478

Title: Transitions in European land-management regimes between 1800 and 2010
Authors: Jepsen, M.R.
Kuemmerle, T.
Müller, D.
Erb, K.
Verburg, P.H.
Haberl, H.
Vesterager, J.P.
Andrič, M.
Antrop, M.
Austrheim, G.
Björn, I.
Bondeau, A.
Bürgi, M.
Bryson, J.
Caspar, G.
Cassar, L.F.
Conrad, E.
Chromý, P.
Daugirdas, V.
Eetvelde, V.V.
Elena-Rosselló, R.
Gimmi, U.
Izakovicova, Z.
Jančák, V.
Jansson, U.
Kladnik, D.
Kozak, J.
Konkoly-Gyuró, E.
Krausmann, F.
Mander, U.
McDonagh, J.
Pärn, J.
Niedertscheider, M.
Nikodemus, O.
Ostapowicz, K.
Pérez-Soba, M.
Pinto-Correia, T.
Ribokas, G.
Rounsevell, M.
Schistou, D.
Schmit, C.
Terkenli, T.S.
Tretvik, A.M.
Trzepacz, P.
Vadineanu, A.
Walz, A.
Zhllima, E.
Reenberg, A.
Keywords: Land-use change
Long-term socio-ecological research
Land-management regimes
Institutional change
Technological innovation
Policy
Path dependency
Issue Date: Dec-2015
Publisher: Land Use policy
Citation: Jepsen, M.R., et al, 2015, Transitions in European land-management regimes between 1800 and 2010. Land Use Policy Volume 49, December 2015, Pages 53–64 doi:10.1016/j.landusepol.2015.07.003
Abstract: Land use is a cornerstone of human civilization, but also intrinsically linked to many global sustainability challenges—from climate change to food security to the ongoing biodiversity crisis. Understanding the underlying technological, institutional and economic drivers of land-use change, and how they play out in different environmental, socio-economic and cultural contexts, is therefore important for identifying effective policies to successfully address these challenges. In this regard, much can be learned from studying long-term land-use change. We examined the evolution of European land management over the past 200 years with the aim of identifying (1) key episodes of changes in land management, and (2) their underlying technological, institutional and economic drivers. To do so, we generated narratives elaborating on the drivers of land use-change at the country level for 28 countries in Europe. We qualitatively grouped drivers into land-management regimes, and compared changes in management regimes across Europe. Our results allowed discerning seven land-management regimes, and highlighted marked heterogeneity regarding the types of management regimes occurring in a particular country, the timing and prevalence of regimes, and the conditions that result in observed bifurcations. However, we also found strong similarities across countries in the timing of certain land-management regime shifts, often in relation to institutional reforms (e.g., changes in EU agrarian policies or the emergence and collapse of the Soviet land management paradigm) or to technological innovations (e.g., drainage pipes, tillage and harvesting machinery, motorization, and synthetic fertilizers). Land reforms frequently triggered changes in land management, and the location and timing of reforms had substantial impacts on land-use outcomes. Finally, forest protection policies and voluntary cooperatives were important drivers of land-management changes. Overall, our results demonstrate that land-system changes should not be conceived as unidirectional developments following predefined trajectories, but rather as path-dependent processes that may be affected by various drivers, including sudden events.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/17478
Type: article
Appears in Collections:PAO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica

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