ORCID
- Kelly, Claire: 0000-0002-3809-225X
Abstract
Land degradation is a multifaceted phenomenon. In many mountainous and hilly areas that are marginal in terms of their economic and social sustainability, degradation is closely linked to population decline through ageing and outmigration, and to the abandonment of land, leading to a loss of community resilience. These processes acting together can produce positive feedback loops, with the consequential loss of socio-economic resilience at larger spatial scales that can ultimately lead to the disintegration of entire territories. Drawing on recent advances in defining, integrating, and operationalizing the measurement of resilience, this paper took a new approach by exploring changing resilience over an extended period in a rural region of southern Italy. The paper used both quantitative and qualitative methods to test the complex and shifting relationships between multiple domains, as an expression of spatial and temporal patterns of resilience, and examined the impact of shifting resilience on continuing degradation processes. The results suggest that the capacity of socio-ecological systems to respond sustainably to land degradation over an extended period of time is highly dependent on two critical processes: the availability and mobilization of critical factors within the five key domains noted above, and the strength of the temporal and spatial cross-scale relationships between those factors.
DOI
10.3390/su11236762
Publication Date
2019-11-28
Publication Title
SUSTAINABILITY
Volume
11
Issue
23
Embargo Period
2019-12-07
Organisational Unit
School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences
First Page
6762
Last Page
6762
Recommended Citation
Salvia, R., Kelly, C., Wilson, G., & Quaranta, G. (2019) 'A Longitudinal Approach to Examining the Socio-Economic Resilience of the Alento District (Italy) to Land Degradation—1950 to Present', SUSTAINABILITY, 11(23), pp. 6762-6762. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3390/su11236762