Litcius/Paper detail

Combining socioeconomic and biophysical data to identify people-centric restoration opportunities

Pooja Choksi, Arun Agrawal, Ivan Bialy, Rohini Chaturvedi, Kyle Frankel Davis, Shalini Dhyani, Forrest Fleischman, Jonas Lechner, Harini Nagendra, Veena Srininvasan, Ruth DeFries

2023npj Biodiversity21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Designing restoration projects requires integrating socio-economic and cultural needs of local stakeholders for enduring and just outcomes. Using India as a case study, we demonstrate a people-centric approach to help policymakers translate global restoration prioritization studies for application to a country-specific context and to identify different socio-environmental conditions restoration programs could consider when siting projects. Focusing, in particular, on poverty quantified by living standards and land tenure, we find that of the 579 districts considered here, 116 of the poorest districts have high biophysical restoration potential (upper 50th percentile of both factors). In most districts, the predominant land tenure is private, indicating an opportunity to focus on agri-pastoral restoration over carbon and forest-based restoration projects.

Topics & Concepts

PrioritizationRestoration ecologyContext (archaeology)PovertySocioeconomic statusEnvironmental planningEnvironmental restorationEnvironmental resource managementLand tenureGeographyBusinessEconomic growthAgricultureEconomicsEcologyPopulationSociologyBiologyArchaeologyDemographyProcess managementRangeland Management and Livestock EcologyConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementLand Use and Ecosystem Services