TY - JOUR
T1 - Achieving sustainability by introducing alternative livelihoods
AU - Adeel, Zafar
AU - Safriel, Uriel
PY - 2008/4
Y1 - 2008/4
N2 - The millennium ecosystem assessment report on global assessment of desertification has highlighted its worldwide impacts on the environment - increasing dust storms, floods and global warming - as well as on societies and economies. It links sustainable management of resources, and inter alia well-being of dryland populations, to reducing societal pressures on dryland ecosystems through adoption of alternative livelihoods. This paper, in combination with a companion paper by Safriel and Adeel, presents the conceptual underpinnings of this approach as well as examples of how innovative approaches for creating livelihoods can help reduce the pressure on marginal drylands. Three case studies presented are based on activities undertaken within a joint international project called sustainable management of marginal drylands. First, introduction of chicken farming to farmers in Hunshundake Sandland in northern China has reduced the pressure on grasslands and led to a major recovery of these ecosystems. Second, development of desert-based aquaculture, with accompanied longer-term storage of water, on the margins of the Cholistan desert in Pakistan has provided a new source of income for the villagers. Third, development of a new income-generating activity based on soap production from olive oil in Dana Biosphere Reserve in Jordan has demonstrated that traditional olive farming can be linked to community-based innovation to create a new, high-demand market for goods. Working with communities to develop new, sustainable livelihoods that reduce pressure on marginal drylands can thus be used as powerful tool for overcoming and reversing desertification.
AB - The millennium ecosystem assessment report on global assessment of desertification has highlighted its worldwide impacts on the environment - increasing dust storms, floods and global warming - as well as on societies and economies. It links sustainable management of resources, and inter alia well-being of dryland populations, to reducing societal pressures on dryland ecosystems through adoption of alternative livelihoods. This paper, in combination with a companion paper by Safriel and Adeel, presents the conceptual underpinnings of this approach as well as examples of how innovative approaches for creating livelihoods can help reduce the pressure on marginal drylands. Three case studies presented are based on activities undertaken within a joint international project called sustainable management of marginal drylands. First, introduction of chicken farming to farmers in Hunshundake Sandland in northern China has reduced the pressure on grasslands and led to a major recovery of these ecosystems. Second, development of desert-based aquaculture, with accompanied longer-term storage of water, on the margins of the Cholistan desert in Pakistan has provided a new source of income for the villagers. Third, development of a new income-generating activity based on soap production from olive oil in Dana Biosphere Reserve in Jordan has demonstrated that traditional olive farming can be linked to community-based innovation to create a new, high-demand market for goods. Working with communities to develop new, sustainable livelihoods that reduce pressure on marginal drylands can thus be used as powerful tool for overcoming and reversing desertification.
KW - Alternative livelihoods
KW - Desertification
KW - Developing countries
KW - Sustainability
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=42049093615&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11625-007-0039-4
DO - 10.1007/s11625-007-0039-4
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AN - SCOPUS:42049093615
SN - 1862-4065
VL - 3
SP - 125
EP - 133
JO - Sustainability Science
JF - Sustainability Science
IS - 1
ER -