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Landscapes—a lens for assessing sustainability.

CSS Publication Number
CSS25-24
Full Publication Date
January 22, 2025
Abstract

Context

There are urgent calls to transition society to more sustainable trajectories, at scales ranging from local to global. Landscape sustainability (LS), or the capacity for landscapes to provide equitable access to ecosystem services essential for human wellbeing for both current and future generations, provides an operational approach to monitor these transitions. However, the complexity of landscapes complicates how and what to consider when assessing LS.

Objectives

To identify important features of landscapes that remain challenging to consider in LS assessments and provide guidance to strengthen future assessments.

Methods

We conducted two workshops to identify the complex features of landscapes that remain under-considered in LS assessments, and developed guidelines on how to better incorporate these features.

Results

We identify open and connected boundaries and diversity of values as landscape features that must be better considered in LS assessments or risk exacerbating offstage sustainability burdens and power inequalities. We provide guidelines to avoid these pitfalls which emphasize assessing ecosystem service interactions across interconnected landscapes and incorporating local actors’ diverse values.

Conclusions

Our guidelines provide a stepping stone for researchers and practitioners to better incorporate landscape complexities into LS assessments to inform landscape-level decisions and actions.

Co-Author(s)
Marie C. Dade
Aletta Bonn
Felix Eigenbrod
María R. Felipe-Lucia
Brendan Fisher
Robert A. Holland
Kelly A. Hopping
Sandra Lavorel
Yann le Polain de Waroux
Graham K. MacDonald
Lisa Mandle
Jean Paul Metzger
Unai Pascual
Jesse T. Rieb
Améline Vallet
Geoff J. Wells
Carly D. Ziter
Elena M. Bennett
Brian E. Robinson
Research Areas
Urban Systems and Built Environment
Framework, Methods & Tools
Impacts & Burdens
Keywords

Nature's contributions to people, Landscape management, Social-ecological systems, Sustainability, Telecoupling, Values about nature

 

Publication Type
Journal Article
Digital Object Identifier
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10980-024-02007-7
Full Citation

Dade, M.C., Bonn, A., Eigenbrod, F. et al. (2025) "Landscapes—a lens for assessing sustainability." Landscape Ecology 40(28). CSS25-24