Title: Resilience thinking and agricultural biodiversity governance
1Resilience thinking and agricultural
biodiversity governance towards a system
approach for catalyzing desired change
- Pernilla Malmer, Senior Advisor
- The Resilience and Development Programme,
- Stockholm Resilience Centre
2Stockholm Resilience Centre
- Advances transdisciplinary research for
governance of social-ecological systems - A special emphasis on resilience the ability to
deal with change and continue to develop
3Planetary boundaries
- Food for a growing world population within the
planetary boundaries will require a new
planetary food revolution
4Aichi target 7
- By 2020 areas under agriculture, aquaculture and
forestry are managed sustainably, ensuring
conservation of biodiversity.
5Resilience thinking
- Resilience the capacity
- of a system to deal with
- change and continue to
- develop
- Social ecological systems
- Adaptation
- Transformation
6Why social-ecological resilience?
- Human well-being is underpinned by ecosystems
- Human activities are strong drivers of ecosystem
change - People can and do act as stewards of their
environment
7The challenge of transformation of agricultural
systems
- Increasing yields
- needs not translate
- into bioidversity
- loss or more land
- spared for nature
8Agroecological intensification
Tscharntke, T., et al. Biological Conservation
2012
9Relations between people and nature are complex
- Cannot manage social and ecological systems in
isolation - History is important and place matters
- Ecosystems change and evolve
- We change, adapt and innovate
10Causal loop analysis
From E. Enfors. 2009
11How to maintain social-ecological resilience?
- Learn to live with change and uncertainty
- Combine different sources of knowledge
- Facilitate self-organization
- Nurture diverse sources for renewal and
reorganization
Folke et al. 2003
12What is resilience?
- Resilience is the ability of a community to
withstand negative internal and external
pressures and threats. Resilience enables
adaptation and strength, coherence and
intergenerational learning. - Communities can be resilient when they
are empowered and clear about their future and
can act together to protect their rights.
African Biodiversity Network
Quote from African Biodiversity Network
www.africanbiodiversity.org
13 Regreening of the Sahel
How do transformations take place?
- Farmers appear to have actively managed their
land in ways that contribute to re-greening, and
also enhanced productivity.
14The Tigray experience
- An approach based on sound ecological principles
can enable farmers to overcome environmental
constraints such as erosion, poor soil fertility
and build household food security on a
sustainable basis.
15Kenvo and the Kijabe landscape an
ecoagriculture approach
- The question that KENVO is grappling with now is
how best to measure the landscape in terms of
agricultural production and socioeconomic
(livelihood) welfare
16Participatory plantbreeding linking action
research to global policy
17Sustainable agricultural intensification
18What needs to be done
- Watch out for planetary boundaries
- Food is creation from cultural and biological
diversity place based, diverse - Food security policies for resilient and
productive agricultural systems and landscapes
must emphasize and build on an increase in
agroecologic capacity.
19 Thank you
Pernilla Malmer Stockholm Resilience
Centre pernilla.malmer_at_stockholmresilience.su.se
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