From Synergy to Complexity: The Trend Toward Integrated Value Chain and Landscape Governance

This Editorial introduces a special issue that illustrates a trend toward integrated landscape approaches. Whereas two papers echo older “win–win” strategies based on the trade of non-timber forest products, ten papers reflect a shift from a product to landscape perspective. However, they differ from integrated landscape approaches in that they emanate from sectorial approaches driven primarily by aims such as forest restoration, sustainable commodity sourcing, natural resource management, or carbon emission reduction. The potential of such initiatives for integrated landscape governance and achieving landscape-level outcomes has hitherto been largely unaddressed in the literature on integrated landscape approaches. This special issue addresses this gap, with a focus on actor constellations and institutional arrangements emerging in the transition from sectorial to integrated approaches. This editorial discusses the trends arising from the papers, including the need for a commonly shared concern and sense of urgency; inclusive stakeholder engagement; accommodating and coordinating polycentric governance in landscapes beset with institutional fragmentation and jurisdictional mismatches; alignment with locally embedded initiatives and governance structures; and a framework to assess and monitor the performance of integrated multi-stakeholder approaches. We conclude that, despite a growing tendency toward integrated approaches at the landscape level, inherent landscape complexity renders persistent and significant challenges such as balancing multiple objectives, equitable inclusion of all relevant stakeholders, dealing with power and gender asymmetries, adaptive management based on participatory outcome monitoring, and moving beyond existing administrative, jurisdictional, and sectorial silos. Multi-stakeholder platforms and bridging organizations and individuals are seen as key in overcoming such challenges.

[1]  M. Ros-Tonen,et al.  Governing beyond cities: the urban-rural interface , 2015 .

[2]  K. F. Wiersum,et al.  THE SCOPE FOR IMPROVING RURAL LIVELIHOODS THROUGH NON-TIMBER FOREST PRODUCTS: AN EVOLVING RESEARCH AGENDA , 2005 .

[3]  E. Arets,et al.  Governance Options to Enhance Ecosystem Services in Cocoa, Soy, Tropical Timber and Palm Oil Value Chains , 2018, Environmental Management.

[4]  E. Ostrom Beyond Markets and States: Polycentric Governance of Complex Economic Systems , 2010, American Economic Review.

[5]  M. Moeliono,et al.  From Product to Place—Spatializing governance in a commodified landscape , 2017, Environmental Management.

[6]  M. Hemmati Multi-stakeholder Processes for Governance and Sustainability: Beyond Deadlock and Conflict , 2002 .

[7]  Elinor Ostrom,et al.  Polycentric governance of multifunctional forested landscapes , 2012 .

[8]  S. Scherr,et al.  From climate-smart agriculture to climate-smart landscapes , 2012, Agriculture & Food Security.

[9]  M. Ros-Tonen,et al.  Advanced Value Chain Collaboration in Ghana’s Cocoa Sector: An Entry Point for Integrated Landscape Approaches? , 2017, Environmental Management.

[10]  C. Lindblom THE SCIENCE OF MUDDLING THROUGH , 1959 .

[11]  Nathan Clay Producing hybrid forests in the Congo Basin: A political ecology of the landscape approach to conservation , 2016 .

[12]  Jes Weigelt,et al.  Towards a governance heuristic for sustainable development , 2015 .

[13]  Luis Roman Carrasco,et al.  Biodiversity conservation in a telecoupled world , 2017 .

[14]  I. Visseren-Hamakers Integrative environmental governance: enhancing governance in the era of synergies , 2015 .

[15]  L. Hannah,et al.  Climate‐Smart Landscapes: Opportunities and Challenges for Integrating Adaptation and Mitigation in Tropical Agriculture , 2014 .

[16]  M. Ros-Tonen,et al.  From Co-Management to Landscape Governance: Whither Ghana’s Modified Taungya System? , 2014 .

[17]  B. Peters,et al.  Interactive Governance: Advancing the Paradigm , 2012 .

[18]  Aarti Gupta,et al.  An ecological landscape approach to REDD + in Madagascar: Promise and limitations? , 2017 .

[19]  T. Sunderland,et al.  Natural Resource Management Schemes as Entry Points for Integrated Landscape Approaches: Evidence from Ghana and Burkina Faso , 2017, Environmental Management.

[20]  C. V. Oosten,et al.  Governing Forest Landscape Restoration: Cases from Indonesia , 2014 .

[21]  I. Visseren-Hamakers,et al.  A reality check on the landscape approach to REDD+: Lessons from Latin America , 2017 .

[22]  Hexing Long,et al.  From State-controlled to Polycentric Governance in Forest Landscape Restoration: The Case of the Ecological Forest Purchase Program in Yong’an Municipality of China , 2018, Environmental Management.

[23]  Gabriel Medina,et al.  Landscape-scale approaches for integrated natural resource management in tropical forest landscapes , 2006 .

[24]  F. DeClerck,et al.  Integrated landscape initiatives in practice: assessing experiences from 191 landscapes in Africa and Latin America , 2015 .

[25]  K. Brown Innovations for conservation and development , 2002 .

[26]  S. Namirembe,et al.  Private sector engagement in landscape- based approaches-lessons from cases in East Africa , 2014 .

[27]  J. Warner More Sustainable Participation? Multi-Stakeholder Platforms for Integrated Catchment Management , 2006 .

[28]  T. Plieninger,et al.  Integrated landscape initiatives in Europe: Multi-sector collaboration in multi-functional landscapes , 2016 .

[29]  T. Sunderland,et al.  Managing landscapes for greater food security and improved livelihoods , 2014 .

[30]  B. Campbell,et al.  17 Organizational strategies for reconciling forest conservation and livelihood goals in interventions , 2014 .

[31]  Linking conservation and poverty alleviation: discussion paper on good and best practice in the case of great ape , 2013 .

[32]  T. Breuer,et al.  Learning from Change in the Sangha Tri-National Landscape , 2016, International Forestry Review.

[33]  P. Bose,et al.  ‘Dryland Landscapes: Forest Management, Gender and Social Diversity in Asia and Africa’ , 2016 .

[34]  A. Gyau,et al.  Landscape approaches to sustainable supply chain management: the role of agribusinesses , 2014 .

[35]  Terry Sunderland,et al.  What are ‘Integrated Landscape Approaches’ and how effectively have they been implemented in the tropics: a systematic map protocol , 2015, Environmental Evidence.

[36]  T. Sunderland,et al.  Evidence-based conservation: lessons from the Lower Mekong. , 2012 .

[37]  A. Larson,et al.  Top-down, Bottom-up and Sideways: The Multilayered Complexities of Multi-level Actors Shaping Forest Governance and REDD+ Arrangements in Madre de Dios, Peru , 2018, Environmental Management.

[38]  L. Hooghe,et al.  Unraveling the Central State, but How? Types of Multi-level Governance , 2003, American Political Science Review.

[39]  Brian D. Fath,et al.  Navigating the adaptive cycle: an approach to managing the resilience of social systems , 2015 .

[40]  J. B. Jackson,et al.  The Interpretation of Ordinary Landscapes: Geographical Essays , 1979 .

[41]  K. F. Wiersum,et al.  The Governance of Indigenous Natural Products in Namibia: A Policy Network Analysis , 2018, Environmental Management.

[42]  Miguel Martínez-Ramos,et al.  Integrating Agricultural Landscapes with Biodiversity Conservation in the Mesoamerican Hotspot , 2008, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.

[43]  G. Bull,et al.  Mediating Forest Transitions: 'Grand Design' or 'Muddling Through' , 2008 .

[44]  Karin Bäckstrand,et al.  Planting Trees to Mitigate Climate Change: Contested Discourses of Ecological Modernization, Green Governmentality and Civic Environmentalism , 2006 .

[45]  Cora van Oosten Restoring Landscapes—Governing Place: A Learning Approach to Forest Landscape Restoration , 2013 .

[46]  J. Meaton,et al.  African Forest Honey: an Overlooked NTFP with Potential to Support Livelihoods and Forests , 2018, Environmental Management.

[47]  Craig Johnson,et al.  In the Eyes of the State: Negotiating a “Rights-Based Approach” to Forest Conservation in Thailand , 2002 .

[48]  C. V. Oosten Restoring Landscapes—Governing Place: A Learning Approach to Forest Landscape Restoration , 2013 .

[49]  E. Ostrom,et al.  The concept of scale and the human dimensions of global change: a survey , 2000, Ecological Economics.

[50]  Garry D. Peterson,et al.  Connecting social networks with ecosystem services for watershed governance: a social-ecological network perspective highlights the critical role of bridging organizations. , 2012 .

[51]  T. Sunderland,et al.  Rights-based approaches: Exploring issues and opportunities for conservation , 2009 .

[52]  M. McCall Beyond “Landscape” in REDD+: The Imperative for “Territory” , 2016 .

[53]  R. Pressey,et al.  Avoiding Implementation Failure in Catchment Landscapes: A Case Study in Governance of the Great Barrier Reef , 2018, Environmental Management.

[54]  J. Norberg,et al.  ADAPTIVE GOVERNANCE OF SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS , 2005 .

[55]  K. Prager Agri-environmental collaboratives as bridging organisations in landscape management. , 2015, Journal of environmental management.

[56]  C. Folke,et al.  Trust-building, Knowledge Generation and Organizational Innovations: The Role of a Bridging Organization for Adaptive Comanagement of a Wetland Landscape around Kristianstad, Sweden , 2006 .

[57]  Felix Kienast,et al.  Integrated Landscape Approach: Closing the Gap between Theory and Application , 2017 .

[58]  T. Sunderland,et al.  Landscape approaches; what are the pre-conditions for success? , 2015, Sustainability Science.

[59]  Jerome K. Vanclay,et al.  Social learning: a knowledge and capacity building approach for adaptive co-management of contested landscapes , 2011 .

[60]  A. Tengberg,et al.  Water, Forests, People: The Swedish Experience in Building Resilient Landscapes , 2018, Environmental Management.

[61]  Louis V. Verchot,et al.  A review of the state of research, policies and strategies in addressing leakage from reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+) , 2012, Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change.

[62]  De ning Integrated Landscape Management for Policy Makers , 2022 .

[63]  Claude A. Garcia,et al.  Ten principles for a landscape approach to reconciling agriculture, conservation, and other competing land uses , 2013, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[64]  J. Barlow,et al.  Have integrated landscape approaches reconciled societal and environmental issues in the tropics , 2017 .

[65]  Christoph Görg,et al.  Landscape governance: The “politics of scale” and the “natural” conditions of places , 2005 .

[66]  Robert J. Pabst,et al.  Spatiotemporal dynamics of simulated wildfire, forest management, and forest succession in central Oregon, USA , 2017 .

[67]  J. Barlow,et al.  Integrated landscape approaches to managing social and environmental issues in the tropics: learning from the past to guide the future , 2016, Global change biology.

[68]  T. Sunderland,et al.  Landscapes of Social Inclusion: Inclusive Value-Chain Collaboration Through the Lenses of Food Sovereignty and Landscape Governance , 2015 .

[69]  N. Mitchell,et al.  The protected landscape approach : linking nature, culture and community , 2005 .

[70]  Lalisa A. Duguma,et al.  Operationalizing the integrated landscape approach in practice , 2015 .

[71]  Fikret Berkes,et al.  Evolution of co-management: role of knowledge generation, bridging organizations and social learning. , 2009, Journal of environmental management.

[72]  M. Ros-Tonen,et al.  Forest-related partnerships in Brazilian Amazonia: There is more to sustainable forest management than reduced impact logging , 2008 .

[73]  P. Chatterton,et al.  The Little Sustainable Landscapes Book: Achieving sustainable development through integrated landscape management , 2015 .

[74]  L. Lebel,et al.  The governance of ecosystem services from tropical upland watersheds , 2009 .

[75]  J. Laborde,et al.  The Landscape Approach , 2008 .

[76]  F. DeClerck,et al.  Integrated landscape initiatives for agriculture, livelihoods and ecosystem conservation: an assessment of experiences from South and Southeast Asia. , 2017 .

[77]  Louis Lebel,et al.  Guest Editorial, part of a Special Feature on Scale and Cross-scale Dynamics Scale and Cross-Scale Dynamics: Governance and Information in a Multilevel World , 2006 .

[78]  T. Sunderland,et al.  Conservation and development in tropical forest landscapes: a time to face the trade-offs? , 2007, Environmental Conservation.

[79]  A. Agrawal,et al.  Clarifying the landscape approach: A Letter to the Editor on “Integrated landscape approaches to managing social and environmental issues in the tropics” , 2017, Global change biology.

[80]  J. Milder,et al.  Integrated Landscape Initiatives for African Agriculture, Development, and Conservation: A Region-Wide Assessment , 2014 .

[81]  J. Pfund,et al.  Landscape-scale research for conservation and development in the tropics: fighting persisting challenges , 2010 .

[82]  Thomas O. McShane,et al.  Getting biodiversity projects to work : towards more effective conservation and development , 2004 .

[83]  H. Brown An Assessment of Institutional Capacity for Integrated Landscape Management in Eastern Cameroon , 2018, Environmental Management.

[84]  A. Duncan,et al.  An analysis of power dynamics within innovation platforms for natural resource management , 2014 .

[85]  Jon Pierre,et al.  Interactive GovernanceAdvancing the Paradigm , 2012 .

[86]  B. Crona,et al.  Learning in Support of Governance: Theories, Methods, and a Framework to Assess How Bridging Organizations Contribute to Adaptive Resource Governance , 2012 .

[87]  B. Jessop Liberalism, Neoliberalism, and Urban Governance: A State‐Theoretical Perspective , 2002 .

[88]  S. Wunder Poverty Alleviation and Tropical Forests—What Scope for Synergies? , 2001 .

[89]  Andreas Scheba,et al.  Promising change, delivering continuity:REDD+ as conservation fad , 2017 .

[90]  F. DeClerck,et al.  Integrated landscape management for agriculture, rural livelihoods, and ecosystem conservation: An assessment of experience from Latin America and the Caribbean , 2014 .

[91]  Verina Ingram,et al.  Landscape Approaches : A State-of-the-Art Review , 2017 .

[92]  P. Minang,et al.  Participatory Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation of Multi-Stakeholder Platforms in Integrated Landscape Initiatives , 2017, Environmental Management.

[93]  T. Sunderland,et al.  The essential task of ‘muddling through’ to better landscape governance , 2011 .