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  4. Global shocks, cascading disruptions, and (re-)connections: viewing the COVID-19 pandemic as concurrent natural experiments to understand land system dynamics
 

Global shocks, cascading disruptions, and (re-)connections: viewing the COVID-19 pandemic as concurrent natural experiments to understand land system dynamics

URI
https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/36324
Version
Published
Date Issued
2023
Author(s)
Piquer-Rodríguez, María
Friis, Cecilie
Andriatsitohaina, R. Ntsiva N.
Boillat, Sébastien-Pierre  
Roig-Boixeda, Paula
Cortinovis, Chiara
Geneletti, Davide
Ibarrola-Rivas, Maria-Jose
Kelley, Lisa C.
Llopis, Jorge C.
Mack, Elizabeth A.
Nanni, Ana Sofía
Zaehringer, Julie G.
Henebry, Geoffrey M.
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Context
For nearly three years, the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted human well-being and livelihoods, communities, and economies in myriad ways with consequences for social-ecological systems across the planet. The pandemic represents a global shock in multiple dimensions that has already, and is likely to continue to have, far-reaching effects on land systems and on those depending on them for their livelihoods.
Objectives
We focus on the observed effects of the pandemic on landscapes and people composing diverse land systems across the globe.
Methods
We highlight the interrelated impacts of the pandemic shock on the economic, health, and mobility dimensions of land systems using six vignettes from different land systems on four continents, analyzed through the lens of socio-ecological resilience and the telecoupling framework. We present preliminary comparative insights gathered through interviews, surveys, key informants, and authors’ observations and propose new research avenues for land system scientists.
Results
The pandemic’s effects have been unevenly distributed, context-specific, and dependent on the multiple connections that link land systems across the globe.
Conclusions
We argue that the pandemic presents concurrent “natural experiments” that can advance our understanding of the intricate ways in which global shocks produce direct, indirect, and spillover effects on local and regional landscapes and land systems. These propagating shock effects disrupt existing connections, forge new connections, and re-establish former connections between peoples, landscapes, and land systems.
Subjects
GF Human ecology. Anthropogeography
DOI
10.24451/arbor.20879
https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.20879
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s10980-023-01604-2
Journal
Landscape Ecology
ISSN
0921-2973
Publisher URL
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10980-023-01604-2
Organization
Hochschule für Agrar-, Forst- und Lebensmittelwissenschaften  
HAFL Institut Hugo P. Cecchini  
Waldpolitik und internationales Waldmanagement  
Multifunktionale Waldwirtschaft  
Sponsors
Swiss National Science Foundation
Volume
38
Issue
5
Publisher
Springer
Submitter
BoillatS
Citation apa
Piquer-Rodríguez, M., Friis, C., Andriatsitohaina, R. N. N., Boillat, S.-P., Roig-Boixeda, P., Cortinovis, C., Geneletti, D., Ibarrola-Rivas, M.-J., Kelley, L. C., Llopis, J. C., Mack, E. A., Nanni, A. S., Zaehringer, J. G., & Henebry, G. M. (2023). Global shocks, cascading disruptions, and (re-)connections: viewing the COVID-19 pandemic as concurrent natural experiments to understand land system dynamics. In Landscape Ecology (Vol. 38, Issue 5). Springer. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.20879
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