Middle-Range Theories of Land System Change

Abstract

Changes in land systems generate many sustainability challenges. Identifying more sustainable land-use alternatives requires solid theoretical foundations on the causes of land-use/cover changes. Land system science is a maturing field that has produced a wealth of methodological innovations and empirical observations on landcover and land-use change, from patterns and processes to causes. This seminar takes stock of this knowledge by reviewing and synthesizing the theories that explain the causal mechanisms of land-use change, including systemic linkages between distant land-use changes, with a focus on agriculture and forestry processes. First, Dr. Patrick Meyfroidt reviews theories explaining changes in land-use extent, such as agricultural expansion, deforestation, frontier development, and land abandonment, and changes in land-use intensity, such as agricultural intensification and disintensification. He then synthesizes theories of higher-level land system change processes, focusing on: (i) land-use spillovers, including land sparing and rebound effects with intensification, leakage, indirect land-use change, and land-use displacement, and (ii) land-use transitions, defined as structural non-linear changes in land systems, including forest transitions. Theories focusing on the causes of land system changes span theoretically and epistemologically disparate knowledge domains and build from deductive, abductive, and inductive approaches. A grand, integrated theory of land system change remains elusive. Yet, middle-range theories—defined here as contextual generalizations that describe chains of causal mechanisms explaining a well-bounded range of Phenomena, as well as the conditions that trigger, enable, or prevent these causal chains—provide a path towards generalized knowledge of land systems. This knowledge can support progress towards sustainable social- ecological systems.

Presenters

Image
A headshot of Patrick Meyfroidt

Patrick Meyfroidt

Dr. Patrick Meyfroidt holds a PhD in geography (2009) and a degree in sociology from Université catholique de Louvain (UClouvain) in Belgium. His main research interests are land use and forest transitions, linkages between globalization and land use, theories of land system change, and social-ecological feedbacks. Since 2016, he is Research Associate at the F.R.S-FNRS (the Belgian Research Funds) and Professor at UCLouvain.
 

Image
A headshot of Patrick Meyfroidt

Patrick Meyfroidt

Dr. Patrick Meyfroidt holds a PhD in geography (2009) and a degree in sociology from Université catholique de Louvain (UClouvain) in Belgium. His main research interests are land use and forest transitions, linkages between globalization and land use, theories of land system change, and social-ecological feedbacks. Since 2016, he is Research Associate at the F.R.S-FNRS (the Belgian Research Funds) and Professor at UCLouvain.
 

Presenters
Patrick Meyfroidt, Catholic University of Louvain
Date
Time
11:00 a.m. ET
Location
SESYNC – 1 Park Place, Suite 300 Annapolis, MD 21401
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