2018
DOI: 10.7896/j.1721
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Applying a social-ecological approach to enhancing provision of public goods through agriculture and forestry activities across the European Union

Abstract: Public goods provided by different land management practices in European regions have increasingly attained attention in agricultural policy debates. By focusing on the social-ecological systems (SES) framework, the systemic interrelations (e.g. drivers, resources, actors, governance regimes and policy impact) in land management across several case studies in various topographical and climatic conditions across ten European Union Member States are provided. The analysis of agricultural and forestry systems rev… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Despite its historic roots, these are not limited to "traditional" approaches, but rather seek to adapt and up-take more recent changes and technological improvements and social learning. As such, the analysis reflects on the particular scope of activities, market, and technological dynamics, and the integration into the regional socio-ecological system (see [31,32]). The specific interest is to address implications for migration and indirect effects of agritourism on regional differentiation and local attractiveness.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite its historic roots, these are not limited to "traditional" approaches, but rather seek to adapt and up-take more recent changes and technological improvements and social learning. As such, the analysis reflects on the particular scope of activities, market, and technological dynamics, and the integration into the regional socio-ecological system (see [31,32]). The specific interest is to address implications for migration and indirect effects of agritourism on regional differentiation and local attractiveness.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the same time, outdoor grazing is also beneficial for animal health and for keeping mineral resources highly balanced and diversified in the soil. In the mountain district of Murau, in Austria, the organic haymilk production is part of a private quality certification and marketing initiative called "Zurück zum Ursprung" (ZZU) [32]. Haymilk production is considered a type of farming where dried grass represents the main fodder base for dairy cows and substitutes for silage.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, the AT case shows a strong integration between different RDP instruments (AECM, organic farming, areas under natural constraints scheme, extension services support), which has been crucial to make the extensive agriculture in Austrian mountain area more economically viable. Nigman et al [32] calculated that, on average, haymilk organic mountain farms were beneficiaries both from I and II pillar. The amount received from II pillar was €15,157, of which 8835 was from AECM and 5614 from the Area of Natural Constraint scheme.…”
Section: The Analysis Of Policy Mixesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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