8 results on '"Soil ethics"'
Search Results
2. Take Care of Soils: Toward a Pluralistic Integral Soil Ethics
- Author
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Grunwald, Sabine, Patzel, Nikola, editor, Grunwald, Sabine, editor, Brevik, Eric C., editor, and Feller, Christian, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Soil is a living substance.
- Author
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Minami, Katsuyuki
- Subjects
SOILS ,SYSTEMS theory ,TOPOGRAPHY - Abstract
The time has come to promote a new paradigm for promoting the concept that soil is alive. Soil is generally defined as a natural body formed in response to factors such as climate, living things, parent material, topography, and time. However, in order to restore land, it is necessary to recognize that soil is alive like organisms. For that purpose, I will demonstrate that soil is alive based on J. G. Miller's Living Systems Theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Soil Ethics
- Author
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Kaplan, David M., editor and Thompson, Paul B., Founding Editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Changing Ground: Handling Tensions between Production Ethics and Environmental Ethics of Agricultural Soils
- Author
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van Mansvelt, Jan Diek, Struik, Paul C., Bos, Arie, Daub, Willem, Sprangers, Diederick, Van Den Berg, Mara, Vingerhoets, Marieke, Zoeteman, Kees, van Mansvelt, Jan Diek, Struik, Paul C., Bos, Arie, Daub, Willem, Sprangers, Diederick, Van Den Berg, Mara, Vingerhoets, Marieke, and Zoeteman, Kees
- Abstract
Soils are an essential element in sustainable food systems and vital for ecosystem services.Soils are degrading, because of urbanization, poor soil management, depletion and mining, over-use of inputs and impacts of climate change. Poor soil management resulted from short-term yieldmaximization caused by changes in land tenure, property rights and land use. We argue for soilprotection based on the concept of soil telos defined as the combined purposefulness in agricultural production and terrestrial ecosystem optimization. It includes the right of mankind to use soils, provided norms and values are respected based on the soil’s usefulness, its natural purposefulness and its right to be protected (including its physical, chemical and biological cycles). Finding a sustainable balance between these values and rights on the one hand and the need to use living soils for agricultural production on the other hand requires a new approach to soil management based on widely accepted norm- and value-driven decisions on unavoidable trade-offs. Reconciling man-made telos and natural telos, requires (i) empowering the soil to achieve its man-made telos (e.g., by restoring degraded soils); (ii) empowering the soil to achieve its natural telos (e.g., by restoring water courses); (iii) raising awareness about the need to reconcile these two teloi (e.g., by acknowledging rights of soils); and (iv) monitoring tools to assess successful reconciliation (e.g., by evaluating soil health).
- Published
- 2021
6. Eco-Holistic Soil Conservation to support Land Degradation Neutrality and the Sustainable Development Goals
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Commission, Albaladejo Montoro, Juan, Díaz-Pereira, Elvira, de Vente, Joris, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Commission, Albaladejo Montoro, Juan, Díaz-Pereira, Elvira, and de Vente, Joris
- Abstract
Soil degradation continues to be of the major threats for sustainable development and human well-being. Despite the advances in research, there is still a gap between research and effective conservation. To fill this gap, a change is needed in the paradigm of soil conservation research. Therefore, this paper aims to: (i) introduce the concept of Eco-Holistic- Soil Conservation (EHSC) to support the Sustainable Development Goals, (ii) present a framework for the implementation of EHSC, and (iii) show practical examples and recommendations of EHSC. The theory behind the concept of EHSC builds on a critical review of the main causes for success or failure of previous conservation projects and evaluation of latest holistic concepts and visions on conservation of soils and socio-ecosystems. The key principles underlying EHSC are: (1) perception of soils as living-systems, (2) holistic ecosystem approach, (3) central role of soil conservation for climate change mitigation and adaptation, and (4) ethical behavior in soil use. Implementation of EHSC requires a transdisciplinary approach involving a range of actions in three iterative phases: (1) diagnosis of the causes and processes of land degradation and the socio-economic context, (2) integrated assessment of the interactions and synergies between the factors and actors involved and the selection of EHSC actions, and (3) participatory evaluation and monitoring of impacts. Successful conservation requires more research on the resilience and adaptation of soils to climate change, integrated economic valuations of soil conservation, and protection of native peoples right to land in international legislation.
- Published
- 2021
7. Eco-Holistic Soil Conservation to support Land Degradation Neutrality and the Sustainable Development Goals
- Author
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Albaladejo Montoro, Juan, Díaz-Pereira, Elvira, de Vente, Joris, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), and European Commission
- Subjects
Soil living system ,Soil ethics ,Land stewardship ,Soil health ,Climate change adaptation ,Participatory monitoring ,Holistic approach - Abstract
Soil degradation continues to be of the major threats for sustainable development and human well-being. Despite the advances in research, there is still a gap between research and effective conservation. To fill this gap, a change is needed in the paradigm of soil conservation research. Therefore, this paper aims to: (i) introduce the concept of Eco-Holistic- Soil Conservation (EHSC) to support the Sustainable Development Goals, (ii) present a framework for the implementation of EHSC, and (iii) show practical examples and recommendations of EHSC. The theory behind the concept of EHSC builds on a critical review of the main causes for success or failure of previous conservation projects and evaluation of latest holistic concepts and visions on conservation of soils and socio-ecosystems. The key principles underlying EHSC are: (1) perception of soils as living-systems, (2) holistic ecosystem approach, (3) central role of soil conservation for climate change mitigation and adaptation, and (4) ethical behavior in soil use. Implementation of EHSC requires a transdisciplinary approach involving a range of actions in three iterative phases: (1) diagnosis of the causes and processes of land degradation and the socio-economic context, (2) integrated assessment of the interactions and synergies between the factors and actors involved and the selection of EHSC actions, and (3) participatory evaluation and monitoring of impacts. Successful conservation requires more research on the resilience and adaptation of soils to climate change, integrated economic valuations of soil conservation, and protection of native peoples right to land in international legislation. This study was supported by the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (CGL2013-48753-R co-funded by European Union FEDER funds) and Fundación Séneca (20917/PI/18)
- Published
- 2021
8. Eco-Holistic Soil Conservation to support Land Degradation Neutrality and the Sustainable Development Goals
- Author
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Elvira Díaz-Pereira, Joris de Vente, Juan Albaladejo, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), and European Commission
- Subjects
Sustainable development ,Soil ethics ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Participatory monitoring ,Climate change adaptation ,Context (language use) ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Soil living system ,Land stewardship ,Climate change mitigation ,Participatory evaluation ,Soil health ,Soil retrogression and degradation ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,Land degradation ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Business ,Soil conservation ,Environmental planning ,Holistic approach ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
Soil degradation continues to be of the major threats for sustainable development and human well-being. Despite the advances in research, there is still a gap between research and effective conservation. To fill this gap, a change is needed in the paradigm of soil conservation research. Therefore, this paper aims to: (i) introduce the concept of Eco-Holistic- Soil Conservation (EHSC) to support the Sustainable Development Goals, (ii) present a framework for the implementation of EHSC, and (iii) show practical examples and recommendations of EHSC. The theory behind the concept of EHSC builds on a critical review of the main causes for success or failure of previous conservation projects and evaluation of latest holistic concepts and visions on conservation of soils and socio-ecosystems. The key principles underlying EHSC are: (1) perception of soils as living-systems, (2) holistic ecosystem approach, (3) central role of soil conservation for climate change mitigation and adaptation, and (4) ethical behavior in soil use. Implementation of EHSC requires a transdisciplinary approach involving a range of actions in three iterative phases: (1) diagnosis of the causes and processes of land degradation and the socio-economic context, (2) integrated assessment of the interactions and synergies between the factors and actors involved and the selection of EHSC actions, and (3) participatory evaluation and monitoring of impacts. Successful conservation requires more research on the resilience and adaptation of soils to climate change, integrated economic valuations of soil conservation, and protection of native peoples right to land in international legislation., This study was supported by the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (CGL2013-48753-R co-funded by European Union FEDER funds) and Fundación Séneca (20917/PI/18)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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