New Trends and Drivers for Agricultural Land Use in Germany

Agricultural land use in Germany is faced with new drivers and conflicts. There has been a continuous downward trend in agricultural land use since reunification, and agriculture seems to be increasingly squeezed by various land use demands. Whereas land

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Thomas Weith · Tim Barkmann · Nadin Gaasch · Sebastian Rogga · Christian Strauß · Jana Zscheischler Editors

Sustainable Land Management in a European Context A Co-Design Approach

Human-Environment Interactions Volume 8

Series Editor Emilio F. Moran, Michigan State University, Bloomington, IN, USA

The Human-Environment Interactions series invites contributions addressing the role of human interactions in the earth system. It welcomes titles on sustainability, climate change and societal impacts, global environmental change, tropical deforestation, reciprocal interactions of population-environment-consumption, large-scale monitoring of changes in vegetation, reconstructions of human interactions at local and regional scales, ecosystem processes, ecosystem services, land use and land cover change, sustainability science, environmental policy, among others. The series publishes authored and edited volumes, as well as textbooks. It is intended for environmentalists, anthropologists, historical, cultural and political ecologists, political geographers, and land change scientists. Human-environment interaction provides a framework that brings together scholarship sharing both disciplinary depth and interdisciplinary scope to examine past, present, and future social and environmental change in different parts of the world. The topic is very relevant since human activities (e.g. the burn of fossil fuels, fishing, agricultural activities, among others) are so pervasive that they are capable of altering the earth system in ways that could change the viability of the very processes upon which human and non-human species depend.

More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/8599

Thomas Weith Tim Barkmann Nadin Gaasch Sebastian Rogga Christian Strauß Jana Zscheischler •









Editors

Sustainable Land Management in a European Context A Co-Design Approach

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Editors Thomas Weith Institute of Environmental Science and Geography University of Potsdam, Campus Golm Potsdam, Germany

Tim Barkmann Research Area ‘Land Use and Governance’ Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Müncheberg, Germany

Working Group “Co-Design of Change and Innovation” Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Müncheberg, Germany

Sebastian Rogga Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Müncheberg, Germany

Nadin Gaasch Science Management and Transfer Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) Potsdam, Germany

Jana Zscheischler Working Group “Co-Design of Change and Innovation” Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Müncheberg, Germany

Christian Strauß Research Area ‘Land Use and Governance’ Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF) Müncheberg, Germany

ISSN 2214-2339 ISSN 2452-1744 (electronic) Human-Environment Interactions ISBN 978-3-030-50840-1 ISBN 978-3-030-50841-8 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-50841-8 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2021. This book is an open access publication. Open A

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