Title of article :
Land use and sustainability indicators. An introduction
Author/Authors :
Helmut Haberl، نويسنده , , Mathis Wackernagel، نويسنده , , Thomas Wrbka، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Bioproductive land is one of the most significant natural resources. People use the land for receiving ecological services. This leads to humans using and favouring certain species, while competing with all other species. Land use can create diverse cultural landscapes of outstanding aesthetic, economic and ecological value, but it may equally result in land degradation, soil loss and impoverished ecosystems. Hence land use is shaped by processes of society–nature interaction. These processes can detract from sustainability—in other words, society–nature interaction may deplete the natural capital upon which the provision of ecosystem services for humans depends. Sustainability indicators aim at monitoring key aspects of society–nature interaction in order to generate information needed to document the current state and the history leading up to it. Moreover, they are useful to communicate complex sustainability problems within the scientific community, to policy-makers and the broad public. This paper introduces a special issue that seeks to contribute to the development of sustainability indicators that track society–nature interaction. We focus on a variety of concepts that measure socio-economic metabolism. All the discussed approaches relate socio-economic energy and material flows to the bioproductive area needed to support them, above all, the ecological footprint and the human appropriation of net primary production. In addition, this special issue also analyses the consequences of land use intensity on the diversity, naturalness and patterns of landscapes.
Keywords :
Sustainability indicators , land use , Ecological footprint , Sustainability , Socio-economic metabolism , Landscape ecology
Journal title :
Land Use Policy
Journal title :
Land Use Policy