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Desertification (UNCCD)

Overcoming one of the greatest environmental challenges of our times: re-thinking policies to cope with desertification

Dealing with desertification, finding the right policies

Authors: Zafar Adeel; Janos Bogardi; Christoper Braeuel
Publisher: United Nations University International Network on Water, Environment and Health, 2007

What are the policy challenges posed by desertification? This paper highlights a range of new and innovative options available to policymakers to achieve sustainable land management, combat desertification and reduce poverty. It finds that many new approaches have been identified by communities, researchers and decision-makers at various levels, and incorporated into current strategies, to varying degrees. The authors point out that viewing accumulated experience, exploring transferable lessons and debating new options are activities that could be more frequently incorporated into policy processes at all levels under the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD).

The authors find that many challenges remain for the effective mainstreaming of desertification policies within the context of larger social and economic development policies. These include:

  • societal solutions, including economic incentives, to combat desertification are not always considered
  • scientists do not play a strong enough role in defining public policies
  • existing policies on land tenure interact poorly with economic development policies, which are further exacerbated by adverse subsidies and inappropriate incentives
  • international influences on national “mainstreaming”, particularly in the form of development aid, are typically not appropriate to the needs of the dryland peoples

Factors highlighted in the paper include:

  • governments can harness investments in sustainable land management through the reorientation of existing institutions
  • improving the awareness of national factors impinging at the local scale can be important for populations at the community level
  • coordination at the regional level makes sense because problems and solutions are often similar or shared
  • in Latin America, policies to combat desertification have been deployed at the national level, limiting any substantial benefits to be gained from regional synchronisation
  • in West Asia, a relatively strong organisational arrangement is in place to address desertification as an economic and social issue across the West Asian region
  • in Africa, continent-wide strategies give significant recognition to desertification as a key factor affecting African development.