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IssuesOrdenación territorialLandLibrary Resource
There are 6, 666 content items of different types and languages related to Ordenación territorial on the Land Portal.
Displaying 3469 - 3480 of 5056

Managing urban growth in a transforming China: Evidence from Beijing

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2011
China

Managing urban growth in the current rapid urbanization process has become a key issue for land use policy in transformation China. This paper maps and assesses the performance of urban containment strategies in China, looking at the case of Beijing over a 19-year period (1990–2009). The analysis shows that to a large extent containment strategies perform well in terms of concentrating urban growth in planned suburban areas and promoting compact development.

Land restitution and communal property associations: The Elandskloof case

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2011
Sudáfrica
África austral

Elandskloof was the first land restitution case in post-apartheid South Africa in which the government returned land to a community. The communal property association became dysfunctional, and the courts placed it under government administration. In its haste to return land to the community in the aftermath of the apartheid system the state did not set up comprehensive planning and consultative processes within government institutions, the beneficiary community and NGOs before returning the land.

Coherence and inconsistency of European instruments for integrated river basin management

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2013
Europa

Large rivers are particularly under pressure due to multiple uses which often have severe impacts on ecosystems, or water quality and flow. Conflicting aims and a lack of integration and cooperation in planning and management are not beneficial to sustainable management. Important elements of integrated river basin management (IRBM) include both water quality aspects and floodplain and flood risk management. On the other hand, land use and land use planning are also both of great importance for sustainable river management.

APPLICATION ON GIS FOR LAND USE PLANNING IN CENTRAL PART OF ALBANIA, MAMINAS COMMUNE

Journal Articles & Books
Marzo, 2011

New developments in geographic information science and technology are changing the way we apply GIS to developing-world agriculture, creating new opportunities to utilize the technology to address problems of disaster management, climate change, land use change, land degradation, crop analysis and impact assessment.GIS allows data and demographic information to be presented graphically, primarily in maps, but also in business tools such as charts, graphs and other reports.

Soil microbial diversity and C turnover modified by tillage and cropping in Laos tropical grassland

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2013
Laos

Agricultural practices should modify the diversity of soil microbes. However, the precise relationships between soil properties and microbial diversity are poorly known. Here, we study the effect of agricultural management on soil microbial diversity and C turnover in tropical grassland of north-eastern Laos. Three years after native grassland conversion into agricultural land, we compared soils from five land use management systems: one till versus two no-till rotational cropping systems, one no-till improved pasture and the natural grassland.

Making use of the ecosystem services concept in regional planning—trade-offs from reducing water erosion

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2014
Alemania

In this article we demonstrate how to integrate the ecosystem services concept into regional planning using the example of a case study in Saxony, Germany. We analysed how the reduction of water erosion as a regulating service impacts six other ecosystem services. Ecological integrity, provisioning services (provision of food and fibre, provision of biomass), regulating services (soil erosion protection, drought-risk regulation, flood regulation), and the cultural service landscape aesthetics are taken into account.

Can renewable energy technologies improve the management of stressed water resources threatened by climate change? Argentine drylands case study

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2013
Argentina
América central
América del Sur

This work addresses increasing concerns about water management for rural productive activities in the vast dry regions of Latin America by assessing renewable energy technologies (RETs) that could be suitable for localized needs. Forecasted trends in climate change and variability make this analysis very relevant, in an area where very little published work exists. While Argentina is widely known for its fertile pampas, around 75 % of the country consists of dry lands. In addition, erosion is increasing by up to 650,000 hectares each year.

Spatio-temporal patterns of precipitation in Serbia

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2014
Serbia

The monthly precipitation data from 29 synoptic stations for the period 1946–2012 were analyzed using a number of different multivariate statistical analysis methods to investigate the spatial variability and temporal patterns of precipitation across Serbia. R-mode principal component analysis was used to study the spatial variability of the precipitation.

Эколого-экономические аспекты эксплуатационно-воспроизводственных процессов в сфере сельскохозяйственного землепользования Ставропольского края

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2013

The article examines the use of the fertile layer of soil and its reproduction, shows the qualitative
composition of lands of Stavropol Territory. Some basics mechanism of reproduction of agricultural land are presented. The main methods of reproduction of fertility of the soil – agrotechnical actions (use of rational system of agriculture – optimum crop rotations, chemicalixation, melioration) are proved.

Persistent Acacia savannas replace Mediterranean sclerophyllous forests in South America

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2011
Chile
América del Sur

Mediterranean ecosystems are global hotspots of biodiversity threaten by human disturbances. Growing evidence indicates that regeneration of Mediterranean forests can be halted under certain circumstances and that successional stages can become notoriously persistent. The Mediterranean sclerophyllous forest in central Chile is been largely transformed into savannas dominated by the invasive legume tree Acacia caven as result of interacting management and ecological factors.