Reconnecting People with Nature through Agriculture
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783036538556
- 9783036538563
- books978-3-0365-3856-3
- Research & information: general
- adoptions
- agricultural diversification
- agricultural innovations
- agricultural knowledge and innovation systems (AKIS)
- agricultural landscapes
- agriculture
- agroecology
- alternative agri-food networks (AAFNs)
- alternative food networks
- biodiversity
- biological control
- city-region
- climate change
- collective action
- community supported agriculture
- community-supported agriculture (CSA)
- conservation
- conservative agriculture practices
- consumers/citizens
- cooperatives
- cross-national case study
- cultural landscapes
- demand
- depopulation
- double-hurdle model
- drivers of change
- ecological agriculture
- ecosystem services
- food planning
- food policy
- food self-sufficiency
- food systems governance
- foodshed archipelago
- greenhouses
- human nature connectedness
- human-nature connectedness
- human-nature connectedness (HNC)
- human-nature reconnection
- inclusive multilateralism
- innovative business models
- integrated pest management
- interpretative structural modeling
- knowledge co-production
- land use
- landscape planning
- landscape stewardship
- local identity
- mediterranean horticulture
- mixed methods
- multi-level perspective
- multi-level perspective (MLP)
- n/a
- nature
- participatory governance
- participatory mapping
- PGIS
- pond naturalisation
- proximity food supply chains
- public policy
- regional food security
- regional food system
- relational proximity
- rights-based approach
- rural abandonment
- rural-urban interaction
- socio-ecological systems
- socioecological systems
- soil health
- Spain
- spatial proximity
- spatial signature
- stakeholder inclusion
- sustainability transitions
- sustainable agricultural transition
- sustainable agriculture
- sustainable consumption
- threatened plant
- urban growth
- water conservation
- world heritage site
- youth
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
An increasing number of people live in cities. In recent decades, this, combined with rural abandonment and landscape polarisation, has resulted in high land ownership concentrations and agricultural intensification. This, in turn, has resulted in a significant decrease in the resilience of agriculture and overall food systems and threatens the maintenance of traditional indigenous and peasant farming. Therefore, there is an urgent need to reconnect society with the sustainable use of agroecosystems by fostering resilient social-ecological systems, emphasising the links between the functioning of natural systems and human well-being, and stressing the benefits that people derive from them. This Special Issue aims to highlight impactful research and commentaries that focus on attempts to connect people with nature for the promotion of sustainable agricultural transitions. This Issue embraces inter- and trans-disciplinary studies from multiple disciplines (e.g., agricultural sciences, environmental sciences, geography, economy, and sociology), as well as those incorporating other knowledge systems (e.g., local and indigenous) in the co-construction of knowledge for sustainable agriculture, including studies in rural areas (e.g., GIAHS or HNV farmland) and initiatives that address urban-rural relationships or those developed within metropolitan areas (e.g., community-supported agriculture, food hubs, domestic gardens, multifunctional agriculture, and farmers´ or consumers´ cooperatives) and studies assessing the societal and ecological impacts of those initiatives.
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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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