Interview in San Paolo, Brazil July 2023 during annual meeting of the Food Systems, Land Use and Restoration (FOLUR) Impact Program funded by the Global Environment Facility (GEF).
Recording: https://youtu.be/4Ixmm0qYi4Q

Eco-Logical Blog / Katalyst.cz
Interview in San Paolo, Brazil July 2023 during annual meeting of the Food Systems, Land Use and Restoration (FOLUR) Impact Program funded by the Global Environment Facility (GEF).
Recording: https://youtu.be/4Ixmm0qYi4Q
Titled “Customised Methodology to Assess and Measure Effectiveness of Integrated Landscape Management Relevant Multi-Stakeholder Transformative Governance, Incorporating Rights-Based Planning and Tenure Aspects, Applied in Kenya, Nigeria, and Viet Nam”, the contribution was published (October 2024) in the peer-reviewed academic journal “Sustainability” together with fellow FAO colleague Louisa Jansen (lead-author).
Why is this article relevant?
1.Illustrates how food system (currently unsustainable) can be transformed towards a more sustainable pathway through the catalytic role of multi-stakeholder transformative governance within integrated landscape management;
2. The customised assessment and measurement methodology is illustrated within the Global Environment Facility (GEF) Food Systems Impact Program in Kenya, Nigeria, and Viet Nam with transferable and replicable applicability;
This article was co-written with fellow FAO colleagues Fritjof Boerstler and Marcelo Rezende and published in the Journal “Unasylva” No. 253, Vol. 73 edition titled “Forestry For a Better World” on January 2022.
Access full article here (pages 28-32)
Why is this article relevant?
1.Introduces the Dryland Sustainable Landscapes Impact Program (DSL-IP) financed by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and how, substantially and operationally, integration will materialise to reach the intended impact at scale.
2.Highlights that integration starts at the landscape level unpacking integrated landscapes management (ILM) as a means to offer “win-win” synergies to deliver sustainable production systems and livelihoods at the local level alongside global environmental benefits.
3. Introduces the “Integrated Landscape Assessment Methodology (ILAM) as an innovative and inclusive process to capture complex baseline information on land degradation, green value-chains, social, institutional and governance structures as well as land use management systems. The ultimate aim is for more evidenced-based integrated land-use planning, decision-taking and transformative governance at landscape level.
4.Illustrates on internal governance structure to operationalize (and embrace) programatic complexity
Titled “Improving Governance of Tenure in Policy and Practice: Agrarian and Environment Transition in the Mekong Region and Its Impacts on Sustainability Analyzed through the ‘tenure-scape’ Approach”, the contribution was published (January 2023) in the peer-reviewed academic journal “Sustainability” together with fellow FAO colleague Louisa Jansen (lead-author).
Why is this article relevant?
1.Analytical deep dive into the impact the Green Revolution and global commodity boom (rubber and coffee) on sustainability of the agrarian and environmental transition in the Mekong region (Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Viet Nam) with transferable lessons learned for other geographic regions;
2.Introducing the “tenure-scape” approach as a new, qualitative analysis that combines integrated landscape management, transformative governance and rights-based approaches placing legitimate tenure rights at the centre (including legal and customary rights);
3.Analytically challenges the “concession model of land-based investments” model with a suggested alternative to apply the “tenure-scape” approach to:
4.Illustrates how this approach is incorporated in large-scale development programs such as the “Dryland Sustainable Landscape Impact Program (DSL-IP) and Food Systems, Land Use and restoration (FOLUR-IP) financed by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) to accelerate action and reach impacts at scale.
Introduces the GEF-7 Dryland Sustainable Landscapes Program (DSL-IP), which takes a catalytic, country-driven approach to accelerating transformational and durable changes at scale.
This will be applied across dryland communities in 11 countries in three geographical clusters to avoid, reduce, and reverse further degradation, desertification, and deforestation of land and ecosystems in drylands.
The programmatic approach of the DSL IP will take account of the similar and transboundary nature of many of the challenges facing drylands.
The program aims to reach close to 1 million direct beneficiaries and bring 12 million hectares of drylands under sustainable land management, including 1.1 million hectares primarily benefitting biodiversity and preventing deforestation of 10,000 hectares of high conservation value forests. In addition, the program will improve the management effectiveness in 1.6 million hectares of protected areas and restore 0.9 million hectares of degraded land in the drylands. All these activities will result in total greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions of 34.6 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalent (tCO2e).
The interview with FAO-ADG Rene Castro Salazar supported by Patrick P. Kalaš illustrates the pressing need to transform currently unsustainable food and agriculture systems nationally, regionally and globally to address the nexus between environmental challenges (i.e. climate change, biodiversity loss, land degradation) as well as food and nutrition insecurity (including hunger and obesity) with relevance for the developed and developing world.
Issues highlighted: Agro-ecological, “biodiversity-and-climate change -friendly” approaches; conducive agricultural policies, incentives such as investments and subsidies; food loss and waste during production and consumption; potential for “green and healthy” procurement of school feeding programs to incentivise local, small-scale producers and more.
Titled “Improving the Governance of Tenure in Policy and Practice: A Conceptual Basis to Analyse Multi-Stakeholder Partnerships for Multi-Stakeholder Transformative Governance Illustrated with an Example from South Africa”, the contribution was recently published in the peer-reviewed academic journal “Sustainability” together with fellow FAO Louisa Jansen (lead-author).
Why is this article relevant?
2. The article adopts a “business-as-unusual” approach to MSPs through:
3. The article is based on qualitative research and data collected from events across Africa and Asia to implement the ‘Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security’ (VGGT) and applied to the ongoing South African National Multi-Stakeholder Platform process.
Published in the academic Land Use Policy Journal together with fellow FAO colleagues Louisa Jansen (Lead-Author) and Marianna Bicchieri, the article captures how a systemic, bottom-up and country-driven capacity enhancement process tangibly contributed to improve the responsible governance of tenure in Myanmar. Substantial and methodological lessons learned are directly applicable to work across climate change, biodiversity and environment to help achieve the sustainable development goals (SDGs).
The briefing note highlights the need to apply a country-driven institutional capacity development approach for the formulation, implementation and monitoring of National Adaptation Plans (NAPs) for more impactful and sustainable climate adaptation action.
More specifically, this brief provides guidance on how to identify country strengths and needs for NAP through a participatory institutional capacity needs assessment process to improve cross-sectoral collaboration and coordination mechanisms between ministries and relevant stakeholders. Illustrated with case examples and practical tools that focus on the agriculture sectors, the brief introduces an institutional capacity assessment approach outlined according to key capacities for initiating and operationalizing NAP, in particular to address agricultural sector challenges. The rapid institutional capacity assessment approach is in line with and complements the “Addressing Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry in National Adaptation Plans-Supplementary Guidelines”aiming to inform, enable and inspire country stakeholders to apply a more effective capacity development approach for integrating the agriculture sectors in NAPs. Institutional capacity assessment approach for national adaptation planning in the agriculture sectors.
Download the publication on https://www.fao.org/3/I8900EN/i8900en.pdf
What are the capacities of people, organisations and institutions needed to achieve lasting progress for more responsible governance of tenure of land, fisheries and forest in the context of national food security? What role can multi-stakeholder processes, platforms and partnerships play?
This contribution consist of a text box example with transferable lessons learned on multi-stakeholder processes and platforms to implement the the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the context of National Food Security (VGGT) in South Africa. Co-authored with Dr. Louisa J. M. Jansen, the text was published in the Committee on World Food Security report of the High-Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition on “Multi-stakeholder partnerships to finance and improve food security and nutrition in the framework of the 2030 Agenda”.
See page 91 in http://www.fao.org/3/CA0156EN/CA0156en.pdf.