Litcius/Paper detail

Saving the ground beneath our feet: Establishing priorities and criteria for governing soil use and protection

Lewis Peake, Cairo A. R. Robb

2021Royal Society Open Science14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The continual loss and impairment of soil ecosystem services (SES) across the globe calls for a fundamental reconsideration of soil governance mechanisms. This critical synthesis charts the history and evolution of national and international soil law and seeks to unravel certain challenges that have contributed to this failure in governance. It describes and categorizes law and policy responses to different soil threats, and identifies a worrying widespread absence of legislation for oversight and protection of agricultural soils from urbanization, as well as a lack of clear legal mechanisms to determine national priorities for soil protection. A reduction in the world's prime farmland threatens SES, including food security, carbon storage and biodiversity. Falling between the stalls of agricultural and environmental law, the fate of farmland is often left to planners who do not see themselves as responsible for soils. Consequently, legal instruments with the greatest power to affect soil, sometimes irreversibly, are often framed and worded with little or no reference to the soil. Nevertheless, emerging conceptual frameworks might offer positive outcomes. The authors advocate robust holistic policies of soil governance and land use planning that place SES and natural capital at the heart of decision making.

Topics & Concepts

Corporate governanceEcosystem servicesEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental planningSoil governanceUrbanizationBusinessNatural resource economicsGeographyEconomicsEcosystemEnvironmental scienceSoil waterEcologyEconomic growthSoil healthBiologySoil organic matterSoil scienceFinanceEnvironmental Conservation and ManagementAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentEnvironmental law and policy