All Stories

  1. Transforming tropical peatland governance to manage climate risks using the Three Horizons method
  2. A New Dryland Development Paradigm Grounded in Empirical Analysis of Dryland Systems Science
  3. A place-based approach to payments for ecosystem services
  4. How does the context and design of participatory decision making processes affect their outcomes? Evidence from sustainable land management in global drylands
  5. Five principles for the practice of knowledge exchange in environmental management
  6. Improving the link between payments and the provision of ecosystem services in agri-environment schemes
  7. Assessing and valuing peatland ecosystem services for sustainable management
  8. Investing in nature: Developing ecosystem service markets for peatland restoration
  9. Relationships between anthropogenic pressures and ecosystem functions in UK blanket bogs: Linking process understanding to ecosystem service valuation
  10. From Framework to Action: The DESIRE Approach to Combat Desertification
  11. Evaluating knowledge exchange in interdisciplinary and multi-stakeholder research
  12. FORMAL INSTITUTIONS AND THEIR ROLE IN PROMOTING SUSTAINABLE LAND MANAGEMENT IN BOTETI, BOTSWANA
  13. Participatory scenario development for environmental management: A methodological framework illustrated with experience from the UK uplands
  14. Combining analytical frameworks to assess livelihood vulnerability to climate change and analyse adaptation options
  15. Habitat monitoring in the wider countryside: A case study on the pursuit of innovation in red deer management
  16. Participatory Evaluation of Monitoring and Modeling of Sustainable Land Management Technologies in Areas Prone to Land Degradation
  17. Disintegrated development at the rural–urban fringe: Re-connecting spatial planning theory and practice
  18. Anticipating and Managing Future Trade-offs and Complementarities between Ecosystem Services
  19. What does the future hold for semi-arid Mediterranean agro-ecosystems? – Exploring cellular automata and agent-based trajectories of future land-use change
  20. Knowledge exchange: a review and research agenda for environmental management
  21. Afforestation, agricultural abandonment and intensification: Competing trajectories in semi-arid Mediterranean agro-ecosystems
  22. A structured multi-stakeholder learning process for Sustainable Land Management
  23. Regional consequences of the way land users respond to future water availability in Murcia, Spain
  24. Participatory environmental assessment in drylands: Introducing a new approach
  25. Encouraging collaboration for the provision of ecosystem services at a landscape scale—Rethinking agri-environmental payments
  26. Farmer typology, future scenarios and the implications for ecosystem service provision: a case study from south-eastern Spain
  27. Managing Peatland Ecosystem Services: Current UK Policy and Future Challenges in a Changing World
  28. Learning from Experiences in Adaptive Action Research: a Critical Comparison of two Case Studies Applying Participatory Scenario Development and Modelling Approaches
  29. MAKING LAND MANAGEMENT MORE SUSTAINABLE: EXPERIENCE IMPLEMENTING A NEW METHODOLOGICAL FRAMEWORK IN BOTSWANA
  30. KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT FOR LAND DEGRADATION MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT: AN ANALYSIS OF CONTEMPORARY THINKING
  31. Cross-scale monitoring and assessment of land degradation and sustainable land management: A methodological framework for knowledge management
  32. Integrative geospatial approaches for the comprehensive monitoring and assessment of land management sustainability: Rationale, Potentials, and Characteristics
  33. High levels of participation in conservation projects enhance learning
  34. Monitoring and assessing the influence of social, economic and policy factors on sustainable land management in drylands
  35. A three-tiered approach to participatory vulnerability assessment in the Solomon Islands
  36. Adaptation strategies for reducing vulnerability to future environmental change
  37. Integrating local and scientific knowledge for environmental management
  38. Property rights in UK uplands and the implications for policy and management
  39. Linking degradation assessment to sustainable land management: A decision support system for Kalahari pastoralists
  40. Can carbon offsetting pay for upland ecological restoration?
  41. The future of the uplands
  42. Using scenarios to explore UK upland futures
  43. Adaptations to climate change, drought and desertification: local insights to enhance policy in southern Africa
  44. What is Land For?
  45. Stakeholder Analysis and Social Network Analysis in Natural Resource Management
  46. Who's in and why? A typology of stakeholder analysis methods for natural resource management
  47. Modelling the coupled dynamics of moorland management and upland vegetation
  48. Lessons Learned from a Computer-Assisted Participatory Planning and Management Process in the Peak District National Park, England
  49. Biodiversity, land degradation, and climate change: Participatory planning in Romania
  50. Governing long-term social-ecological change: what can the adaptive management and transition management approaches learn from each other?
  51. Drivers of Environmental Change in Uplands
  52. ‘Who’s in the Network?’ When Stakeholders Influence Data Analysis
  53. Stakeholder participation for environmental management: A literature review
  54. PARTICIPATORY INDICATOR DEVELOPMENT: WHAT CAN ECOLOGISTS AND LOCAL COMMUNITIES LEARN FROM EACH OTHER
  55. Allelopathic potential of five agroforestry trees, Botswana
  56. If you have a hammer everything looks like a nail: traditional versus participatory model building
  57. Implementing the UNCCD: Participatory challenges
  58. Predicting the future carbon budget of an upland peat catchment
  59. Environmental change in moorland landscapes
  60. Integrating local and scientific knowledge for adaptation to land degradation: Kalahari rangeland management options
  61. Land degradation assessment in Southern Africa: integrating local and scientific knowledge bases
  62. An adaptive learning process for developing and applying sustainability indicators with local communities
  63. Learning from Doing Participatory Rural Research: Lessons from the Peak District National Park
  64. Bottom up and top down: Analysis of participatory processes for sustainability indicator identification as a pathway to community empowerment and sustainable environmental management
  65. Seed weight patterns of Acacia tortilis from seven seed provenances across Botswana
  66. Carbon budget for a British upland peat catchment
  67. Effects of grazing and cultivation on forest plant communities in Mount Elgon National Park, Uganda