McGahey, D., Davies, J., Hagelberg, N., and Ouedraogo, R., 2014. Nairobi: IUCN and UNEP. 72 pages.
- the contribution of pastoralism to the maintenance of natural capital;
- pastoralism’s resource efficiency and sustainable production in highly variable dryland environments; and
- the conditions that enable pastoralism to deliver on its green economy potential.
It synthesises existing evidence and uses practical examples from mobile pastoralism in Europe, Latin America, North America, Central, Western and Southern Asia, Australia and throughout Africa to both demonstrate the system’s inherent characteristics for adaptive sustainability and some of the key opportunities and challenges for promoting development in rangelands. Finally, the study identifies the key enabling conditions required for pastoralism to deliver on its potential role in a Green Economy.
The “Green Economy” is a vision of the future wherein material wealth is not generated at the cost of increasing environmental risk, ecological scarcity or social disparity. Considerations over “green” development for the global livestock sector are at an all-time high and whilst countries grapple with what this entails, many of them possess large areas of rangelands that are managed through pastoralism and which already make a major contribution to environmental sustainability and the economy.
This report is financed by UNEP and is part of the efforts of UNEP, IUCN and the World Initiative for Sustainable Pastoralism (WISP), to provide the social, economic and environmental arguments for increased recognition of sustainable pastoralism as a viable land management option for the world’s rangelands.
Related:
9-12 March 2015. Cancun Mexico. The global Drylands Initiative in Collaboration with UNEP will be launching a publication they produced together at the 3rd UNCCD scientific conference in Mexico.
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