TY - JOUR
T1 - The social context of carbon sequestration
T2 - Considerations from a multi-scale environmental history of the Old Peanut Basin of Senegal
AU - Tschakert, P.
AU - Tappan, G.
PY - 2004/11/1
Y1 - 2004/11/1
N2 - This paper presents the results of a multi-scale investigation of environmental change in the Old Peanut Basin of Senegal throughout the 20th century. Based on historical accounts, ethnographies, aerial photos, satellite images, field and household surveys as well as various participatory research activities with farmers in selected villages, the study attempts to make explicit layered scales of analysis, both temporally and spatially. It shows that, despite some general trends of resource degradation in the Old Peanut Basin, local farming systems have embarked on different pathways of change to adapt to their evolving environment. It also illustrates that high diversity with respect to soil fertility management exists at the farm and household level. Finally, the paper proposes a farmer-oriented approach to carbon sequestration in order to integrate recommended technical options more efficiently into the complex and dynamic livelihoods of smallholders in dryland environments. This approach includes pathway-specific land use and management options at the level of farming systems and, at the level of individual households, a basket of possible practices from which farmers can choose depending on their multiple needs, capacities, and adaptive strategies to cope with risk and uncertainty.
AB - This paper presents the results of a multi-scale investigation of environmental change in the Old Peanut Basin of Senegal throughout the 20th century. Based on historical accounts, ethnographies, aerial photos, satellite images, field and household surveys as well as various participatory research activities with farmers in selected villages, the study attempts to make explicit layered scales of analysis, both temporally and spatially. It shows that, despite some general trends of resource degradation in the Old Peanut Basin, local farming systems have embarked on different pathways of change to adapt to their evolving environment. It also illustrates that high diversity with respect to soil fertility management exists at the farm and household level. Finally, the paper proposes a farmer-oriented approach to carbon sequestration in order to integrate recommended technical options more efficiently into the complex and dynamic livelihoods of smallholders in dryland environments. This approach includes pathway-specific land use and management options at the level of farming systems and, at the level of individual households, a basket of possible practices from which farmers can choose depending on their multiple needs, capacities, and adaptive strategies to cope with risk and uncertainty.
KW - Carbon sequestration
KW - Environmental change
KW - Remote sensing
KW - Rural livelihoods
KW - Senegal
KW - Soil fertility management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=4344689074&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2004.03.021
DO - 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2004.03.021
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:4344689074
SN - 0140-1963
VL - 59
SP - 535
EP - 564
JO - Journal of Arid Environments
JF - Journal of Arid Environments
IS - 3
ER -