Model-Based Synthesis of Locally Contingent Responses to Global Market Signals
Authored by Nicolas R Magliocca
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.3390/land4030807
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
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Abstract
Rural livelihoods and the land systems on which they depend are
increasingly influenced by distant markets through economic
globalization. Place-based analyses of land and livelihood system
sustainability must then consider both proximate and distant influences
on local decision-making. Thus, advancing land change theory in the
context of economic globalization calls for a systematic understanding
of the general processes as well as local contingencies shaping local
responses to global signals. Synthesis of insights from place-based case
studies is a path forward for developing such systematic knowledge. This
paper introduces a generalized agent-based modeling framework for
model-based synthesis to investigate the relative importance of
structural versus agent-level factors in driving land-use and livelihood
responses to changing global market signals. Six case-study sites that
differed in environmental conditions, market access and influence, and
livelihood settings were analyzed. Stronger market signals generally led
to intensification and/or expansion of agriculture or increased non-farm
labor, while changes in agents' risk attitudes prompted heterogeneous
local responses to global market signals. These results demonstrate
model-based synthesis as a promising approach to overcome many of the
challenges of current synthesis methods in land change science and
identify generalized as well as locally contingent responses to global
market signals.
Tags
Agriculture
Agent-based models
land-change science
Livelihoods
Deforestation
globalization
Climate-change
Environmental-change
Metaanalysis
Rural poverty