Published December 18, 2020 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Towards sustainable and just forest recovery: research gaps and potentials for knowledge integration

  • 1. Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona (ICTA-UAB), Institute of Environmental Science and Technology, Bellaterra, Spain
  • 2. Institute of Social Ecology, Department of Economics and Social Sciences (WiSo), University of Natural Resources & Life Sciences, Vienna (BOKU)

Description

Forest recovery is central for addressing major sustainability challenges such as climate change and biodiversity loss. While positive assessments prevail over the global ecological forest restoration potential, critical research highlights limited potentials and even detrimental local impacts, particularly in the Global South. Here we argue that knowledge integration across land system science (LSS) and political ecology (PE) can contribute to addressing this contradiction and advance knowledge about ecologically sustainable and socially just forest recovery. We identify five key areas where knowledge integration is promising: (1) developing multi-dimensional forest definitions, (2) linking forest land to users and interests, (3) identifying reforestation failures and successes, (4) associating drivers and impacts across places and scales, and (5) including justice dimensions in assessments of socio-ecological forest recovery potentials. For each knowledge area, we review key contributions by LSS and PE, and outline future research directions to address ecologically sustainable and socially just forest recovery.

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Funding

European Commission
HEFT - Hidden Emissions of Forest Transitions: GHG effects of socio-metabolic processes reducing pressures on forests 757995