Pasar al contenido principal

page search

IssuesDegradación de tierrasLandLibrary Resource
There are 2, 371 content items of different types and languages related to Degradación de tierras on the Land Portal.
Displaying 1009 - 1020 of 1117

Private-sector investor’s intention and motivation to invest in Land Degradation Neutrality

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2018
Global

In this study, the authors aimed at explaining private-sector investors’ intention to invest in Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) and analysing their motives for making investments that promote sustainable development. Regarding the actual intention to invest in LDN, the majority of investors showed rather weak intention to make investments that promote LDN in the near future.

Shaping an Enabling Environment for Land Degradation Neutrality Science-Policy Brief

Policy Papers & Briefs
Noviembre, 2019
Global

Shaping an enabling environment for Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) calls for integrated land use planning, inclusive and environmentally sound land access and governance, major reconfigurations of current institutional settings, financial backing, and ongoing dialogue between policy-makers, practitioners, and the scientific community.

ELD initiative : user guide

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2015
Global

Land degradation and desertification reduce the provision of ecosystem services by lands and soils. This constrains development, reduces water, food, and energy security, and triggers resource conflicts. Although biophysical processes and economic impacts are increasingly understood, efforts to combat degradation have been failing thus far to prevent further losses of land productivity, a cost estimated at 42 billion USD/year (Dregne & Chou, 1992; Requier-Desjardins, 2007).

Global Land Outlook: East Africa Thematic Report: Responsible Land Governance to Achieve Land Degradation Neutrality

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2019
Sudán
África oriental
Burundi
Etiopía
Kenya
Rwanda
Tanzania
Uganda

Land Degradation Neutrality is a new way of approaching land degradation that acknowledges that land and land-based ecosystems are affected by global environmental change as well as by local land use practices. Achieving the target of a land degradation neutral world encourages adaptive management during planning, implementation, and monitoring of LDN-related activities and follows the LDN response hierarchy of avoiding, reducing, and reversing land degradation.

Land Matters for Climate Reducing the Gap and Approaching the Target

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2015
Global

The land use sector represents almost 25% of total global emissions. These emissions can be reduced. There is also great potential for carbon sequestration through the scaling up, and scaling out, of proven and effective practices. Improved land use and management, such as low-emissions agriculture, agro-forestry and ecosystem conservation and restoration could, under certain circumstances, further reduce the remaining emissions gap by up to 25%. These climate-smart land management practices nearly always come with adaptation co-benefits.

Land Degradation Neutrality: Interventions to Foster Gender Equality

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2019
Global

Women constitute the bulk of people who rely on land in many of the regions most affected by desertification, land degradation and drought. One in three people on earth depend directly on agriculture, while nearly 80% of employed women in least developed countries report agriculture as their primary livelihood. Food availability fluctuations also impact women’s role in food production and intra-family food distribution, with women often reducing their nutritional intake and that of their children, with dire health consequences.

21 Issues for the 21st Century: Result of the UNEP Foresight Process on Emerging Environmental Issues

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2012
Global

The UNEP foresight report contains a description of the 21 emerging environmental issues identified through the UNEP Foresight Process. The process resulted in a list of 21 emerging environmental issues tagged 21 Issues for the 21st Century covering the major themes of the global environment including food, land, freshwater, marine, biodiversity, climate change, energy, waste, and technology, as well important cross-cutting issues ranging from the need for better environmental governance, to the need for human behavioral change towards the environment.

Global Sustainable Development Report 2019: The Future is Now – Science for Achieving Sustainable Development

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2019
Global

A call to action: 20 interventions that will matter. The report’s Call to Action identifies 20 points where interventions can create transformative and accelerated progress towards multiple goals and targets in the coming decade. These targeted actions are based on the recent scientific literature analysing the deeper systemic interconnections that identify synergies and trade-offs between individual goals and targets. Decisions based on science. Science must play a major role in advancing sustainable development.

Nature-Based Solutions for agricultural water management and food security

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2018
Egipto
Sudán
Kenya
Tanzania
África austral
Sudáfrica
Nigeria
México
Brasil
Colombia
Ecuador
Perú
Estados Unidos de América
Japón
Filipinas
Irán
Nepal

Agriculture influences and shapes the world’s ecosystems, but not always in a positive way. More than 2.5 billion people are globally involved as stewards of land and water ecosystems that constitute the natural resource base for feeding the current and future world population. Yet, conventional agronomic interventions based on ‘hard’ agricultural engineering compromise various eco-services that are required for sustainable agricultural development.

Land tenure journal.Land tenure in support of land degradation neutrality

Journal Articles & Books
Agosto, 2019
Global

Positioning land tenure within LDN: framework, implementation model and monitoring. In order to position tenure rights within the LDN approach, this article first proposes how land tenure, viewed as sets of tools, can be specifically integrated into the LDN framework (Figure 1), implementation model (Figure 2), and monitoring approach (Figure 3). These three figures build upon the schematics established by UNCCD for LDN (UNCCD, 2016a; 2014; 2013b) and used subsequently in examinations regarding how LDN intersects with the variety of topics noted above.

PowerPoint Presentation: Towards a better understanding of land and soil degradation in Europe

Multimedia
Noviembre, 2012
Global

We recognize the economic and social significance of good land management, including soil, We stress that desertification, land degradation and drought are challenges of a global dimension and continue to pose serious challenges to the sustainable development of all countries, We recognize the need for urgent action to reverse land degradation. In view of this, we will strive to achieve a land-degradation neutral world in the context of sustainable development. Measuring Land degradation is a challenge ①Declining land-productivity ≠ Land degradation e.g.

Strengthening Land Degradation Neutrality data and decision-making through free and open access platforms

Journal Articles & Books
Noviembre, 2020
Global

Land degradation – the reduction or loss of the productive potential of land – is a global challenge. Over 20% of the Earth’s vegetated surface is estimated to be degraded, affecting over 1.3 billion people, with an economic impact of up to US$10.6 trillion. Land degradation reduces agricultural productivity and increases the vulnerability of those areas already at risk of impacts from climate variability and change.