Communal land use and the ‘tragedy of the commons’: Some problems and development perspectives with specific reference to semi‐arid regions of southern Africa

1990 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 77-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.A. Boonzaier ◽  
M.T. Hoffman ◽  
Fiona M. Archer ◽  
A.B. Smith
SURG Journal ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 5-13
Author(s):  
Olivia Mancuso

As access to the Arctic region continues to grow, many land-use issues have become increasingly prominent. The exposure of shorter shipping routes, unresolved maritime boundaries between the bordering states, and most importantly, the plethora of renewable and non-renewable resources in the region have created a strain on international relations between the states bordering the Arctic. Rising global temperatures have created the promise and opportunity of better access to natural resources in the coming years, raising the likelihood of potentially substantial economic gains to the bordering states. However, the current property rights structure in the Arctic, as governed by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), dictates that the jurisdiction of each coastal nation state shall not exceed past 200 nautical miles beyond the coastline of each respective state. The goal of this report is to provide an assessment of the basic property rights that govern the Arctic territory in an attempt to illuminate how current and future inefficiencies in natural resource extraction and management can result from a poor property rights structure. The current property rights structure has led to a departure from an efficient allocation of rights and as a result currently operates under an anticommons scenario, while also setting the stage for a tragedy of the commons in the not so distant future. To move away from these sub-optimal outcomes and toward more efficient resource management, open communication, cooperation, and better defined property rights are important components needed to strengthen resource management among Arctic states. Keywords: Arctic land-use and property rights (assessment of); natural resource extraction and management (inefficiencies in); anticommons scenario; tragedy of the commons; Arctic Council; UNCLOS


Author(s):  
Cecilia Wawira Ireri ◽  
George Krhoda ◽  
Mukhovi Stellah

Gullies occur in semi-arid regions characterized by rainfall variability and seasonality, increased overland flow, affecting ecological fragility of an area. In most gully prone areas, extent of land affected by gullies is increasing. Thus, predicting susceptibility to gully erosion in semi-arid environment is an important step towards effectively rehabilitating and prevention against gully erosion. Proneness to gully occurrence was assessed against; Land cover/land use, slope, soil characteristics, rainfall variability and elevation, and modelled using geographical information system (GIS)-based bivariate statistical approach. Objectives of the study were; a) to assess influence of geomorphological factors on gully erosion, b) analyze and develop gully erosion susceptibility map, c) verify gully susceptibility images using error matrix of class labels in classified map against ground truth reference data. Total of 66 gullied areas (width and depth ≥ ranging 0.5), were mapped using 15m resolution Landsat images for 2018 and field surveys to estimate susceptibility to gully erosion by Global Mapper software in GIS. The images were verified using 120 pixels of known 15 gully presence or absence to produce an error matrix based on comparison of actual outcomes to predicted outcomes. Influence of conditioning factors to gully erosion showed a significant positive relationship between gully susceptibility and gully conditioning factors with consistency value; CR =0.097; value< 0.1, indicating, individual conditioning factors had an importance in influencing gully erosion. Slope (43%) and soil lithotype (25%), most influenced gully susceptibility, while land cover/land use (12%) and rainfall (12%) had least impact. Verification results showed satisfactory agreement between susceptibility map and field data on gullied areas at approximately 76.2%, an error of positive value of 4% and a negative value of 7%. Thus, production of susceptibility map by bivariate statistical method represents a useful tool for ending long and short-term gully emergencies by planning conservation of semi-arid regions.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernhard Lucke

&lt;p&gt;Assessments of land degradation in arid and semi-arid regions frequently employ models calculating annual erosion rates from the size of sediment bodies, assuming grain-by-grain transport and constant processes of deposition. It is often attempted to connect historic sediment bodies to past land use and climate by correlations with demographic estimates and reconstructions of past precipitation averages. In addition, mass transport is often equalled with soil loss and fertility degradation, based on the idea that humus-rich topsoils store the greatest part of soil nutrients. However, such concepts are based on premises transferred from temperate regions, and their suitability for arid and semi-arid regions is questionable. For example, dryland soils usually contain very small amounts of organic matter, which means that their fertility is mostly a function of texture, and a limited loss of topsoil is rather irrelevant for agricultural productivity. Part of the sediments deposited in valleys come from soft, easily erodible rocks, which means that they reflect slope denudation and not soil erosion. As well, erosion-sedimentation processes do often not take place by continuous transport of single grains. This is illustrated with a valley fill in northern Jordan: sediments were deposited discontinuously, mainly by slumping and earth flows, and the largest parts of the fill accumulated in time frames of ~100 years during the two Little Ice Ages (6&lt;sup&gt;th&lt;/sup&gt; and 14&lt;sup&gt;th&lt;/sup&gt; century AD/CE). Due to a dominance of smectites, the clay-rich Red Mediterranean Soils in the vicinity shrink and form cracks during the dry period. Because of the cracks and underlying limestone karst, they can swallow strong rains without erosion risk. However, when water-saturated, soils expand and may move in slump flows. Soil-covered geoarchaeological features like a buried ancient cemetery illustrate that such viscous flows created new land surfaces, sealing cavities but not filling them. This suggests a major role of rare but intense rainfall events in erosion-deposition processes. Analogies with modern rainfalls, including record levels of precipitation during the winter 1991/1992, indicate that levels of soil moisture triggering similar slump flows have not been reached during times of modern rainfall monitoring. That ancient land use played a minor role for erosion is supported by intense surveys of archaeological material on fields surrounding the valley, which indicate that the periods of most intensive land use coincided with very limited sediment deposition. Concepts of land degradation in semi-arid and arid regions should be reconsidered, respecting the more irregular environmental setting, the specific soil properties, and traditional land use systems which evolved in constant adaptation to this environment. Rare but extreme rainfall events as potential main drivers of land degradation should be considered more: they are difficult to control or mitigate, but may increase due to climate change.&lt;/p&gt;


2021 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. 100362
Author(s):  
Sala Alanda Lamega ◽  
Martin Komainda ◽  
Munir Paul Hoffmann ◽  
Kingsley Kwabena Ayisi ◽  
Jude Julius Owuor Odhiambo ◽  
...  

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