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Difference between revisions of "Energy and Landscape"

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*[[Landscapes_Policy_Framework|Landscapes Policy Framework]]<br/>
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*[[Energy_Policy_Overview_-_East_Africa|Energy Policy Overview - East Africa]]<br/>
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*[https://news.globallandscapesforum.org/10251/qa-increasing-demand-can-met-sustainable-forest-management/ Sustainable forest management]
  
Policy, if sufficently inclusive, consultative and consistent, can become the keystone of integrated and holistic landscape governance. &nbsp;Overcoming silos, even those that exist in policy circles, is an essential step in reconciling the needs, rights and aspirations of different sectors and communities. &nbsp;For government, this may involve more regulatory intervention or, in other cases, a willingness to let issues find resolution in local contexts freed of overbearing administration. &nbsp;([https://news.globallandscapesforum.org/10251/qa-increasing-demand-can-met-sustainable-forest-management/ Sustainable forest management])
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= <span class="mw-headline" id="Climate_Change_and_Landscapes">Climate Change and Landscapes</span><br/> =
 
= <span class="mw-headline" id="Climate_Change_and_Landscapes">Climate Change and Landscapes</span><br/> =

Revision as of 07:56, 27 April 2018

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Overview of Landscapes

  • What is the Global Landscape Forum?

The Global Landscapes Forum (GLF) is a movement that puts communities first in addressing landscape-level issues, rooted in the framework of the Landscape Approach. Having connected 3,000 organizations and 25,000 people through summits in Warsaw, Lima, London, Paris, Marrakech and Jakarta, along with a further 32 million online, the GLF has become the world’s largest science-led platform on sustainable land use. 

With science and traditional knowledge at the core, GLF outreach, events and projects are designed not only to spark dialogue, but also follow-through to impact in addressing some of the most complex and multi-stakeholder problems facing our earth and our communities.

Recognizing the multitude of diverse objecties found in landscapes - food, livelihoods, health, energy, biodiversity, business development, trade, climate regulation and water - and the need for holistic approaches, the GLF is founded on four principles, aiming to engage 1 billion people: connecting, sharing, learning and acting.[1]  




Energy Technologies and Landscapes




Financing and Business Models of Landscapes




Monitoring & Evaluation of Landscapes




Policy Framework




Climate Change and Landscapes

The issue of climate change sits at the heart of the concerns about sustainability and mututal benefit that govern thinking about landscapes.  It embodies the issue of making a future habitable for all, including those with the most to gain in the short term from the unsustainable exploitation of landscapes for whatever reason.  As an issue rooted in a time-consistency problem, it is for all concerned parties to exorcise short-termism under the umbrella of scientific rigor. (More than “nice to have” – the real value of tropical forests)


Further Information

  • Global Landscapes Forum[2]
  • Landscape Forum [3]


Reference