Litcius/Paper detail

Understanding the Relationships between Extensive Livestock Systems, Land-Cover Changes, and CAP Support in Less-Favored Mediterranean Areas

Laurence Delattre, Marta Debolini, Jean Christophe Paoli, Claude Napoléone, Michel Mouléry, Lara Leonelli, Pierre Santucci

2020Land31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Farm abandonment and over-extensification trends in less-favored livestock breeding areas in the Mediterranean have led to socio-environmental issues that are difficult to assess and address, due to the characteristics of these areas (e.g., poor data availability and reliability). In a study case that presents many of the characteristics common to these areas, we combine qualitative and quantitative approaches to assess (i) the relationship between livestock production and land-cover change and (ii) the drivers of farmer decisions, concerning the types of livestock they breed. We show that the Common Agricultural Policy’s objective of open-landscape preservation cannot be achieved through the observed livestock management practices, with the most heavily CAP subsidy-dependent activities (e.g., suckler-cow breeding) having one of the weakest contributions to this objective. We also econometrically show that suckler-cow breeding is more likely to be adopted as a complementary or main activity in farms facing a labor scarcity and land abundance context. These results complement the literature and contribute to the discussion regarding the design of CAP support for less-favored Mediterranean areas.

Topics & Concepts

LivestockContext (archaeology)ScarcityAgricultureLand useSubsidyGeographyMediterranean climateLand coverCommon Agricultural PolicyGrazingAgroforestryEnvironmental resource managementNatural resource economicsEnvironmental planningEcologyEconomicsForestryEnvironmental scienceBiologyMicroeconomicsMarket economyArchaeologyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesAgriculture and Rural Development ResearchSustainable Agricultural Systems Analysis