The Role Played by Agriculture in Inland Areas

A special issue of Land (ISSN 2073-445X). This special issue belongs to the section "Land Socio-Economic and Political Issues".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 22 May 2024 | Viewed by 2956

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
CREA - Research Centre for Agricultural Policies and Bio-Economy, 00187 Rome, Italy
Interests: economic evaluation of agricultural policies; organic and multifunctional agriculture; farm structures; income diversification in agriculture; water footprint; profitability and costs of production of the farms; farm profitability and financial performance

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Guest Editor
Council for Agricultural Research and Economics (CREA) - Research Centre for Agricultural Policies and Bioeconomy (CREA-PB), via Barberini, 36, 00187 Rome, Italy
Interests: agricultural statistics; FADN; environmental economics; agricultural economics; food production; sustainable development; data analysis; small farms; agriculture; policy evaluation; standard output; sampling procedures
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

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Guest Editor
CREA - Research Centre for Agricultural Policies and Bio-Economy, 00187 Rome, Italy
Interests: agricultural development; rural development

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Inland areas reflect local cultures and are the product of the accumulation of social, political, and economic practices. They frequently coexist with rural territories, which frequently exhibit the characteristics of marginal areas. Inland regions have experienced depopulation and the abandonment of agricultural land throughout the years. In the context of the policies that must be adopted to ensure a cohesive and sustainable development of such territories, the theme of depopulation is becoming an increasingly significant issue to be addressed and resolved.

Depopulation has also engendered an extensive, multidisciplinary scientific discussion that considers its social, economic, and political ramifications and works to build analytical, interpretive, and practical tools that can address related issues.

Attitudes toward marginal areas, especially rural and mountainous areas, have recently changed, as these areas play an important role in sustainable economic development. Therefore, political decision-makers pay great attention to inland areas. They are characterized by conditions of hardship connected with depopulation, as well as with the abandonment of inland residential centers, mostly in those characterized by small demographics and/or mountain sizes. These territories suffer serious discomfort due to the difficulty of connecting with distant urban centers for the provision of basic services (health, education, and mobility).

Despite these issues, inland regions have a significant amount of untapped potential for eco-system services, environmental services, landscape and cultural services, tourism, etc. Such a significant potential paradoxically results from the fact that inland regions have historically been on the margin of the most extreme development, which has shielded them from anthropogenic pressures. This trajectory has caused the existence of ecosystem, environmental, landscape, and cultural services to remain relatively unchanged, with the addition of specific development potential in terms of energy, water, and tourism.

Considering the internal areas in their multidimensional aspect, and therefore as production systems where close integrations between agriculture and other economic activities can be achieved, they represent ecosystems to be protected and valued. They are places where economic and social inclusion is the result of relational networks that involve the active participation of all the inhabitants, they become places to concentrate resources and experiment with new development paradigms. In these areas, agriculture represents the only barrier against the abandonment of territories and their environmental and landscape impoverishment.

In fact, inland areas can enable the creation and preservation of environmental resources (water, air, and soil), the generation of renewable energy, etc. if they are properly valorized. This is especially true for places with low growth rates that are the poorest and whose economic and social development cannot neglect the engagement of these areas’ potentials for development. The availability of ecosystem products and services (water, air, territories, forests, biological diversity, landscape, complex ecological systems, etc.) for the agri-food chain and for the generation of renewable energy depend on these regions. Despite this, throughout the years, a sizable portion of these communities has seen a gradual process of marginalization that is defined by population loss, a drop in the availability of public services, a decline in employment, and hydrogeological instability.

In this Special Issue, we will examine the role that agriculture plays in inland regions in an effort to emphasize how it might help to reverse (or at least slow down) this process of marginalization. Additionally, we want to comprehend which agricultural policies should be implemented in order to ensure the survival of farms in these regions and enhance their productivity. In fact, agriculture offers a chance to ensure the long-term presence of people and agricultural workers in rural areas, therefore fostering the economic development of these regions and generating revenue for peasant families.

We look forward to receiving your contributions.

Dr. Orlando Cimino
Dr. Concetta Cardillo
Dr. Giuseppe Gaudio
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • inland areas
  • agriculture in inland areas
  • vulnerability and resilience of inland areas
  • governance and policy of inland resources
  • sustainability (environmental, social, and economic)
  • ecosystem services and sustainable development of inland areas
  • management policies and strategies regarding inland areas
  • models and analytical tools for land management in inland areas
  • examples of good practices in inland areas

Published Papers (2 papers)

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Research

23 pages, 8381 KiB  
Article
Forest Tales? Unravelling Divergent Land Use and Land Cover Change (LULCC) Maps and State Narratives in Vietnam’s Northern Uplands
by Thinh An Nguyen, Hung Le, Patrick Slack, Margaret Kalacska and Sarah Turner
Land 2024, 13(1), 71; https://doi.org/10.3390/land13010071 - 07 Jan 2024
Viewed by 1479
Abstract
The Vietnamese state has advocated for the sedentarization and market integration of upland northern farmers over the past thirty years, leading to both agrarian and forest transitions. This article presents a comprehensive land use and land cover change (LULCC) analysis of two adjacent [...] Read more.
The Vietnamese state has advocated for the sedentarization and market integration of upland northern farmers over the past thirty years, leading to both agrarian and forest transitions. This article presents a comprehensive land use and land cover change (LULCC) analysis of two adjacent upland borderland districts, Phong Thổ and Bát Xát, in northern Vietnam, spanning two neighboring inland provinces, Lai Châu and Lào Cai. These districts are primarily home to ethnic minority farmers who are encouraged by Vietnamese state officials to not only protect forests but to also transition toward cash crop cultivation from less intensive semi-subsistence agriculture. Our LULCC maps, covering the period from 1990 to 2020, revealed a reduction in the speed by which closed-canopy forests were disappearing. During interviews, state officials were confident that this was due to a range of state policies and state-sponsored initiatives, including the promotion of tree crops and payments for forest environmental services. Our own fieldwork in the region suggests other factors are also supporting this decline in deforestation rates, rooted in ethnic minority farmer livelihood decision making. Some state officials were also able to point to factors hindering a more positive result regarding forest cover, including population pressure and new infrastructure. Interestingly, despite our positive findings on Land use and land cover change (LULCC) related to forest cover, one-third of state officials, upon reviewing our LULCC maps, firmly maintained that errors had occurred. Some even proposed that there was an actual rise in forest cover. Our study shows that these discrepancies raise compelling questions about officials’ political motivations and ongoing pressures to uphold the central state’s reforestation and agrarian transition discourses. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Role Played by Agriculture in Inland Areas)
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24 pages, 4336 KiB  
Article
Integrating Energy Systems Language and Emergy Approach to Simulate and Analyze the Energy Flow Process of Land Transfer
by Weiguo Fan, Wei Yao and Kehan Chen
Land 2023, 12(5), 1070; https://doi.org/10.3390/land12051070 - 15 May 2023
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Abstract
As an effective policy to revitalize rural land assets, land transfer is important to promote reforming rural land systems in poor areas. In this study, we integrated the energy systems language and emergy approach, quantified the energy flow process under the land transfer [...] Read more.
As an effective policy to revitalize rural land assets, land transfer is important to promote reforming rural land systems in poor areas. In this study, we integrated the energy systems language and emergy approach, quantified the energy flow process under the land transfer model, simulated the resource storage and energy flow state in the land transfer process, and finally compared and discussed the economic and ecological benefits of land transfer under different scenarios. The results show the following: (1) Economic benefits were significantly improved after the land transfer, and labor storage and infrastructure value were reduced. (2) Government investment enhanced the infrastructure value, and private investment led to a rapid reduction in labor storage. (3) Expanding apple orchards positively affected labor storage and infrastructure value and negatively influenced soil organic carbon storage and rural asset storage. (4) Land transfer behavior reduced the proportion of provisioning and supporting services and increased the proportion of regulating and cultural services. Overall, the research results are helpful for clarifying the complex mechanisms of the various components in the land transfer system and provide a scientific basis for the prediction and evaluation of land transfer in similar areas. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Role Played by Agriculture in Inland Areas)
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