Rio De Janeiro — A new and awkward term is
doing the rounds at the UN Conference on Sustainable Development, also known as
Rio+20, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is "landscape science/ agriculture/
approach", which now embraces "eco-agriculture", "forest landscape
restoration", "territorial development", "model
forests", "foodsheds", "participatory watershed
management", "community-based natural resource management",
"biological corridors", and many other connected concepts.
This is no fringe effort - its collaborators
are the UN Environment Programme, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the
International Fund for Agricultural Development, the World Resources Institute,
and Conservation International, among others.
What is it?
As higher temperatures and erratic rainfall
affect the lives of rural dwellers, this approach helps them develop and use
their land and water resources more efficiently to earn a livelihood, produce
food, maintain livestock and take care of other needs. But they do it in a
manner that causes minimum damage to the environment while helping to restore
and maintain biodiversity, according to Sara Scherr, president and CEO of
EcoAgriculture Partners, a co-organizer of the Landscapes for People, Food and
Nature Initiative, a US-based non-profit organization.
The initiative hopes to use spatial
technology, for instance, to advise rural communities on which portion of the
land in their village should be put under agriculture, or left alone to revive,
to ensure the ecological balance is maintained.
It falls under the broader ambit of
sustainable development. The Rural Futures programme of the African Union,
launched in 2010, is based on a similar approach, better known as integrated
rural development.
How is it different?
But unlike the integrated rural development
models from the 1970s and '80s, where a lead organization devised and financed
a "top-down" plan within a defined project period, landscape
initiatives are led by local stakeholders, said Scherr.
"There are several such initiatives
where communities, pastoralists, farmers, the private sector, people from
agriculture, water and other sectors, conservationists, have come together - we
have found more than 300," she noted.
These efforts are known by different names, but
the initiative's collaborators thought it would be useful to band them under a
single umbrella, which would help not only to create awareness but also
funding, "otherwise these initiatives struggle to raise money
sectorally."
Lindiwe Sibanda, head of the Food Agriculture
and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network, a think-tank based in South
Africa, said: "It doesn't matter what it is called - we are interested in
its motives and results. Any initiative that helps reduce hunger and improve
rural lives should be welcomed."
The landscape approach is a bit more than
integrated development, said Tim Benton, the UK Champion of the Global Food
Security Programme, who teaches at the University of Leeds. The use of remote
sensing, resource monitoring, and spatial analysis are part of landscape
science and provide the tools to communities to assess the impact of their
actions on a rural landscape.
Benton said the expansion of mobile phone
technology could help make such information available to communities at their
fingertips.
[This report does not necessarily reflect the
views of the United Nations]
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