Opting for the middle ground: blended sustainability as the way forward
Mockshell, JonathanExterne Publikationen (2018)
in: Rural 21 52 (2), 29-30
In both developed and developing countries, policy stakeholders are tussling with the question of whether to promote agroecological intensification or sustainable agricultural intensification to deal with the multiple burden of a growing population, a changing climate, environmental degradation, and a precarious food and nutrition security situation. This has nurtured intense debates and created an impasse among policy actors. Blended sustainability could be a way out.
Further IDOS experts
-
Aleksandrova, Mariya
Climate risk governance
-
Banerjee, Aparajita
Environmental and Resource Sociology, Public Policy
-
Brüntrup, Michael
Agricultural Economy
-
Dombrowsky, Ines
Economist
-
Donnelly, Aiveen
Politcal Science
-
Gubbini, Emily
Social Science
-
Hagenström, Paul
International Relations
-
Hein, Jonas
Geography
-
Hernandez, Ariel
Economy
-
Houdret, Annabelle
Political Scientist
-
Kativu, Saymore Ngonidzashe
Geography
-
Kornher, Lukas
Economics
-
Lehmann, Ina
Political Science
-
Mudimu, George Tonderai
Agricultural policy economics
-
Möschl, Tim
Governance
-
Putz, Lena-Marie
Peace and Conflict Research
-
Reich, Charlotte
Economics
-
Rodríguez de Francisco, Jean Carlo
Ecological economics
-
Rukundo, Emmanuel Nshakira
Development Economics
-
Sakketa, Tekalign Gutu
Agricultural / Development Economics
-
Siriwardane-de Zoysa, Rapti
Sociology