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Featured researches published by Anette Reenberg.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

The emergence of land change science for global environmental change and sustainability

Barry Turner; Eric F. Lambin; Anette Reenberg

Land change science has emerged as a fundamental component of global environmental change and sustainability research. This interdisciplinary field seeks to understand the dynamics of land cover and land use as a coupled human–environment system to address theory, concepts, models, and applications relevant to environmental and societal problems, including the intersection of the two. The major components and advances in land change are addressed: observation and monitoring; understanding the coupled system—causes, impacts, and consequences; modeling; and synthesis issues. The six articles of the special feature are introduced and situated within these components of study.


Environmental Management | 2009

Farmers' perceptions of climate change and agricultural adaptation strategies in rural Sahel.

Ole Mertz; Cheikh Mbow; Anette Reenberg; Awa Diouf

Farmers in the Sahel have always been facing climatic variability at intra- and inter-annual and decadal time scales. While coping and adaptation strategies have traditionally included crop diversification, mobility, livelihood diversification, and migration, singling out climate as a direct driver of changes is not so simple. Using focus group interviews and a household survey, this study analyzes the perceptions of climate change and the strategies for coping and adaptation by sedentary farmers in the savanna zone of central Senegal. Households are aware of climate variability and identify wind and occasional excess rainfall as the most destructive climate factors. Households attribute poor livestock health, reduced crop yields and a range of other problems to climate factors, especially wind. However, when questions on land use and livelihood change are not asked directly in a climate context, households and groups assign economic, political, and social rather than climate factors as the main reasons for change. It is concluded that the communities studied have a high awareness of climate issues, but climatic narratives are likely to influence responses when questions mention climate. Change in land use and livelihood strategies is driven by adaptation to a range of factors of which climate appears not to be the most important. Implications for policy-making on agricultural and economic development will be to focus on providing flexible options rather than specific solutions to uncertain climate.


Ecology and Society | 2013

Framing Sustainability in a Telecoupled World

Jianguo Liu; Vanessa Hull; Mateus Batistella; Ruth S. DeFries; Thomas Dietz; Feng Fu; Thomas W. Hertel; R. Cesar Izaurralde; Eric F. Lambin; Shuxin Li; Luiz A. Martinelli; William J. McConnell; Emilio F. Moran; Rosamond L. Naylor; Zhiyun Ouyang; Karen R. Polenske; Anette Reenberg; Gilberto de Miranda Rocha; Cynthia S. Simmons; Peter H. Verburg; Peter M. Vitousek; Fusuo Zhang; Chunquan Zhu

Interactions between distant places are increasingly widespread and influential, often leading to unexpected outcomes with profound implications for sustainability. Numerous sustainability studies have been conducted within a particular place with little attention to the impacts of distant interactions on sustainability in multiple places. Although distant forces have been studied, they are usually treated as exogenous variables and feedbacks have rarely been considered. To understand and integrate various distant interactions better, we propose an integrated framework based on telecoupling, an umbrella concept that refers to socioeconomic and environmental interactions over distances. The concept of telecoupling is a logical extension of research on coupled human and natural systems, in which interactions occur within particular geographic locations. The telecoupling framework contains five major interrelated components, i.e., coupled human and natural systems, flows, agents, causes, and effects. We illustrate the framework using two examples of distant interactions associated with trade of agricultural commodities and invasive species, highlight the implications of the framework, and discuss research needs and approaches to move research on telecouplings forward. The framework can help to analyze system components and their interrelationships, identify research gaps, detect hidden costs and untapped benefits, provide a useful means to incorporate feedbacks as well as trade-offs and synergies across multiple systems (sending, receiving, and spillover systems), and improve the understanding of distant interactions and the effectiveness of policies for socioeconomic and environmental sustainability from local to global levels.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Urban land teleconnections and sustainability

Karen C. Seto; Anette Reenberg; Christopher G. Boone; Michail Fragkias; Dagmar Haase; Tobias Langanke; Peter J. Marcotullio; Darla K. Munroe; Branislav Olah; David Simon

This paper introduces urban land teleconnections as a conceptual framework that explicitly links land changes to underlying urbanization dynamics. We illustrate how three key themes that are currently addressed separately in the urban sustainability and land change literatures can lead to incorrect conclusions and misleading results when they are not examined jointly: the traditional system of land classification that is based on discrete categories and reinforces the false idea of a rural–urban dichotomy; the spatial quantification of land change that is based on place-based relationships, ignoring the connections between distant places, especially between urban functions and rural land uses; and the implicit assumptions about path dependency and sequential land changes that underlie current conceptualizations of land transitions. We then examine several environmental “grand challenges” and discuss how urban land teleconnections could help research communities frame scientific inquiries. Finally, we point to existing analytical approaches that can be used to advance development and application of the concept.


Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2003

Historical footprints in contemporary land use systems: forest cover changes in savannah woodlands in the Sudano-Sahelian zone

D. Andrew Wardell; Anette Reenberg; Christian Töttrup

Abstract The paper analyses land use trajectories in savannah woodlands in the Central-West Region, Burkina Faso and the Upper East Region in northern Ghana by use of satellite images and historical archives. Observed trends differ in terms of spatial location and correlation with population pressure from normally accepted characterizations. Colonial forestry policies are proposed as key determinants of present-day land use patterns. However, these reinforced pre-colonial land use patterns inasmuch as land gazetted as forest reserves were tracts affected by vectors of human and livestock disease. It is suggested that the transformation of wooded agricultural landscapes in the Sudano-Sahelian region is the outcome of historically and culturally embedded interactions between complex social, economic and ecological processes which operate at widely varying scales and which change over time; the implications hereof for modelling of global environmental issues is discussed.


Ecology and Society | 2010

Complex Land Systems: the Need for Long Time Perspectives to Assess their Future

John A. Dearing; Ademola K. Braimoh; Anette Reenberg; Barry Turner; Sander van der Leeuw

The growing awareness about the need to anticipate the future of land systems focuses on how well we understand the interactions between society and environmental processes within a complexity framework. A major barrier to understanding is insufficient attention given to long (multidecadal) temporal perspectives on complex system behavior that can provide insights through both analog and evolutionary approaches. Analogs are useful in generating typologies of generic system behavior, whereas evolutionary assessments provide insight into site-specific system properties. Four dimensions of these properties: (1) trends and trajectories, (2) frequencies, thresholds and alternate steady states, (3) slow and fast processes, and (4) legacies and contingencies, are discussed. Compilations and analyses of past information and data from instruments and observations, palaeoenvironmental archives, and human and environmental history are now the subject of major international effort. The embedding of empirical information over multidecadal timescales in attempts to define and model sustainable and adaptive management of land systems is now not only possible, but also necessary.


Geografisk Tidsskrift-danish Journal of Geography | 2006

Land system changes in the context of urbanisation: Examples from the peri-urban area of Greater Copenhagen

Anne Gravsholt Busck; Søren Pilgaard Kristensen; Søren Præstholm; Anette Reenberg; Jørgen Primdahl

Abstract Peri-urban areas are characterised by great heterogeneity and rapid changes of land use. Furthermore, population composition changes as peri-urban areas offer attractive residential alternatives to city centres or more remote locations. The dynamic processes leave peri-urban areas in an in-between situation, neither city nor countryside and home to a range of functions, spanning from agricultural production to residential and recreational areas. The paper investigates the urbanisation of agricultural areas in the Greater Copenhagen region based on quantitative data collected on agricultural properties in nine study areas between 1984 and 2004. The overall conclusion is that agricultural land use has continued largely unaffected by the processes of urbanisation. However, most of the production is concentrated on a few very large full-time farms. In addition, the economic activities have been greatly diversified over the last three decades. The structural components of the areas (land use and landscape elements) thus appear more resilient than the socio-economic system (declining number of full-time farmers and increasing number of owners engaged in other gainful activities). However, at some point this discrepancy will disappear and rapid land use changes may be expected.


Economic Botany | 2001

Importance and seasonality of vegetable consumption and marketing in Burkina Faso

Ole Mertz; Anne Mette Lykke; Anette Reenberg

The use of vegetables in two rural communities in Burkina Faso is quantified through the use of food diaries kept by 13 households during one year. Interviews on preferences, field registration, and a market survey supplement the diaries. The use of wild species is concentrated onParkia biglobosa, Corchorus spp.,Adansonia digitata, andBombax costatum. At least five other wild species are mentioned as important but very rarely occur in the diet, indicating the usefulness of diaries compared to interviews.Capsicum frutescens, Abelmoschus esculentus, Allium cepa, andSolanum lycopersicon are the most commonly used cultivated species. Wild vegetables constitute 35% and 59% of the total vegetable consumption in the two communities. Most products are highly seasonal in supply and prices vary accordingly. Households compensate for the seasonality by drying products, but stocks are often insufficient and vegetable purchases needed. Many of the vegetable species studied should be integrated in agricultural research and extension programs.


Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 1998

Field expansion and reallocation in the Sahel – land use pattern dynamics in a fluctuating biophysical and socio-economic environment

Anette Reenberg; Trine Louring Nielsen; Kjeld Rasmussen

Abstract The paper addresses the dynamic relationship between the human use of land and alterations in the biophysical environment, demographic pressure or socio-economic conditions. An empirical study from the Sahelian zone in northern Burkina Faso illustrates the dynamics of cultivation pattern at the village level and the changing priorities given to different landscape units over time. Field measurements, aerial photos and satellite images from seven successive years provide information on land use pattern changes from 1945 to 1995. A household survey illustrates how socio-economic and cultural parameters enable and constrain land use strategies at the farm level.


Agricultural Systems | 1997

Determinants for land use strategies in a Sahelian agro-ecosystem—Anthropological and ecological geographical aspects of natural resource management

Anette Reenberg; Bjarke Paarup-Laursen

The paper presents traditional concerns of anthropological and ecological geographical approaches to the analysis of agricultural systems, with a view to contributing to a multidisciplinary and holistic framework. Following a short introduction to how each discipline is able to contribute an insight into the complex processes determining natural resource management strategies, a case study from northern Burkina Faso is presented. A few aspects concerning the land use and agricultural strategies have been selected in order to illustrate how the two approaches can fruitfully supplement each other and lead to a more profound understanding of forces driving management strategies in the agricultural system. The priorities given to different soil types, determinants for field sizes and the division of inputs between various agricultural activities are analysed in the examples. The findings underline the fact that within-household variations in resource management strategies can only be fully understood if the analysis is based on broad insight into different objectives and rationalities for land use decisions.

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Ole Mertz

University of Copenhagen

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Tobias Kuemmerle

Humboldt University of Berlin

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