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Social Capital and Social-Ecological Resilience in the Asteroussia Mountains, Southern Crete, Greece

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Type: Journal Article
Author: Kizos, Thanasis; Detsis, Vassilis; Iosifides, Theodoros; Metaxakis, Minas
Journal: Ecology and Society
Volume: 19
Page(s):
Date: 2014
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/9346
Sector: Land Tenure & Use
Region: Europe
Subject(s): social-ecological systems
resilience
land degradation
desertification
Abstract: "Social-ecological resilience (SER) expresses the capacity of a social-ecological system to adapt and transform. We investigated the ways in which different types and transformations of social capital influence the SER of a region. The study area, the Asteroussia Mountains in southern Crete, Greece, is a typical semiarid hilly/mountainous area of the eastern Mediterranean in which land degradation is one of the most important issues in land management, mostly related to overgrazing because of the growing size of the flocks of sheep and goats. The approach followed was qualitative, with in-depth interviews with a small number of key stakeholders in the area. The findings indicate many important changes in the area in terms of its production, economy, and society, i.e., from a 'semiarid husbandry' period during the 1950s to the early 1980s, through a transition period lasting until the end of 1980s, to a new state, the 'subsidized husbandry' period, abruptly terminated in 2008 by the ongoing economic crisis. These changes correspond to important changes in social capital and very low levels of wider social trust among stockbreeders, while trust toward other forms of collective action at the local/regional level is also limited. Agricultural subsidies in the 1980s and onward seemed to be an important 'vehicle' for this change. Another important factor is related to external inputs and cash availability. The most serious negative impact of all these changes seems to be the abandonment of long-term care for the land. Primary producers ceased to associate their income with land quality, and this appears to be one important reason, among others, for the intensification of grazing densities and the abandonment of practices that considered vegetation and soil quality."

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