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Library Land degradation assessment and prevention: selected case studies from the ESCWA region

Land degradation assessment and prevention: selected case studies from the ESCWA region

Land degradation assessment and prevention: selected case studies from the ESCWA region

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2006
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
eldis:A38045

This report looks at possible ways for policy-makers and decision-takers to combat and/or prevent land degradation in the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) region, both generally and specifically in the following countries: Egypt, Jordan, Syria and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
The report begins by reviewing the extent, causes and impact of land degradation and examines the complexity of assessing land degradation programmes. It emphasises that successful programmes should entail certain criteria that would enable their stakeholders to judge easily their usefulness and to encourage their active participation in programme activities. The major criterion is predictability, which emphasises the issues of credibility, stability and formal entitlements; promoting collective action and a participatory approach; and ensuring that the programmes should be replicable and/or transferable to new environments while still being implemented successfully.  
The following case studies are used to illustrate these points:

the Egyptian North-west Delta - traditionally a range land area but now facing coastal erosion and salinisation, mostly as a result of the increasing urbanisation process
two programmes/projects in Jordan, namely: the Al-Karak Agricultural Resource Management Project located in the south central highlands; and the Yarmouk River Basin project in an agricultural area highly affected by land degradation
the Syrian Arab Republic range land area of the Bishri Mountains, located in a semi-arid to arid Badia zone and intensely affected by land degradation due to inadequate land management practices
the Ras Al-Khaimah Emirate in the north of the United Arab Emirates, which is mostly arid and affected by salinisation, moving sand dunes and water depletion

The paper finds that there are a number of supportive elements which improve land degradation prevention. These include:

encouragement of including local knowledge in policy planning
use of strong well-planned, well-supported public institutions
coordination between different stakeholders

In conclusion, the paper notes that the ESCWA has developed a methodological framework to assess land degradation, which has so far been applied in Jordan and Lebanon. It is suggested that the framework could assist member countries in regularly identifying areas affected by land degradation, or “hot spots”, and areas responding well to measures of combating land degradation, or “bright spots”. A brief overview of the ESCWA framework is provided.

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