Rangeland Ecology & Management

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The causes of land-use and land-cover change : moving beyond the myths
Author
Lambin, Eric F
Turner, B L
Geist, Helmut J
Agbola, Samuel B
Angelsen, Arild
Bruce, John W
Coomes, Oliver T
Dirzo, Rodolfo
Fischer, Gunther
Folke, Carl
George, P S
Homewood, Katherine
Imbernon, Jacques
Leemans, Rik
Li, Xiubin
Moran, Emilio F
Mortimore, Michael
Ramakrishnan, P S
Richards, John F
Skanes, Helle
Steffen, Will
Stone, Glenn D
Svedin, Uno
Veldkamp, Tom A
Vogel, Coleen
Xu, Jianchu
Publisher
Global Environmental Change
Publication Year
2001
Body

Common understanding of the causes of land-use and land-cover change is dominated by simplifications which, in turn, underlie many environment-development policies. This article tracks some of the major myths on driving forces of land-cover change and proposes alternative pathways of change that are better supported by case study evidence. Cases reviewed support the conclusion that neither population nor poverty alone constitute the sole and major underlying causes of land-cover change worldwide. Rather, peoples' responses to economic opportunities, as mediated by institutional factors, drive land-cover changes. Opportunities and constraints for new land uses are created by local as well as national markets and policies. Global forces become the main determinants of land-use change, as they amplify or attenuate local factors.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
11
Journal Number
4
Journal Pages
261-269
Journal Name
Global Environmental Change
Keywords
land use
socio-economic aspects
Africa