Geography
The parallel trajectories and increasing integration of landscape ecology and land system science
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Landscape Ecology and Land Systems Science share a common concern for the dynamics of landscapes, their environmental and human drivers and consequences, and the sustainability of land as a coupled social-ecological system. Both scientific communities employ interdisciplinary approaches to monitoring, understanding and projecting changes in landscapes, and share important epistemic, thematic and methodological interests. Nonetheless, they are also distinguished by important differences in problem framing, base constituencies, core questions, methodologies employed, and engagement with governance and policy. We review these two scientific fields, highlighting key commonalities and differences. By mapping areas of convergence and divergence in these two foremost communities studying land use and landscapes, we highlight promising research areas where the relative strengths of each can be merged to foster new advances in an integrated human-environment science of land systems. Such advances are essential for improved assessments of social-environmental systems dynamics that underpin sustainability themes.
Publication Title
Journal of Land Use Science
Publication Date
2019
Volume
14
Issue
2
First Page
135
Last Page
154
ISSN
1747-423X
DOI
10.1080/1747423X.2019.1597934
Keywords
integrated human-environment science, land change modeling, land system science, Landscape ecology, remote sensing, social-ecological system
Repository Citation
Roy Chowdhury, R. and Turner, B. L., "The parallel trajectories and increasing integration of landscape ecology and land system science" (2019). Geography. 580.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_geography/580