Putting Soil Security on the Policy Agenda: Need for a Familiar Framework

Soils generate agricultural, environmental, and socio-economic benefits that are vital to human life. The enormity of threats to global soil stocks raises the imperative for securing this vital resource. To contribute to the security framing and advancement of the soil security concept and discourse...

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Main Authors: David Oscar Yawson, Michael Osei Adu, Benjamin Ason, Frederick Ato Armah, Genesis Tambang Yengoh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-09-01
Series:Challenges
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2078-1547/7/2/15
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spelling doaj-cb17b858c7ac4d6bb279578c69b976a92020-11-24T21:39:30ZengMDPI AGChallenges2078-15472016-09-01721510.3390/challe7020015challe7020015Putting Soil Security on the Policy Agenda: Need for a Familiar FrameworkDavid Oscar Yawson0Michael Osei Adu1Benjamin Ason2Frederick Ato Armah3Genesis Tambang Yengoh4Department of Soil Science, School of Agriculture, College of Agriculture and Natural Sciences, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, GhanaDepartment of Crop Science, School of Agriculture, College of Agriculture and Natural Sciences, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, GhanaSoil Research Institute, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Accra, GhanaDepartment of Environmental Science, School of Biological Science, College of Agriculture and Natural Sciences, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, GhanaLund University Centre for Sustainability Studies (LUCSUS), Lund University, Lund 22100, SwedenSoils generate agricultural, environmental, and socio-economic benefits that are vital to human life. The enormity of threats to global soil stocks raises the imperative for securing this vital resource. To contribute to the security framing and advancement of the soil security concept and discourse, this paper provides a working definition and proposes dimensions that can underpin the conceptualization of soil security. In this paper, soil security refers to safeguarding and improving the quality, quantity and functionality of soil stocks from critical and pervasive threats in order to guarantee the availability, access, and utilization of soils to sustainably generate productive goods and ecosystem services. The dimensions proposed are availability, accessibility, utilization, and stability, which are obviously similar to the dimensions of food security. Availability refers to the quality and spatial distribution of soils of a given category. Accessibility relates to the conditions or mechanisms by which actors negotiate and gain entitlements to occupy and use a given soil. Utilization deals with the use or purpose to which a given soil is put and the capacity to manage and generate optimal private and public benefits from the soil. Finally, stability refers to the governance mechanisms that safeguard and improve the first three dimensions. These dimensions, their interactions, and how they can be operationalized in a strategy to secure soils are presented and discussed.http://www.mdpi.com/2078-1547/7/2/15soil securitydimensionsavailabilityaccessibilityutilizationstabilitycritical and pervasive threatsecosystem servicespolicy agenda
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Oscar Yawson
Michael Osei Adu
Benjamin Ason
Frederick Ato Armah
Genesis Tambang Yengoh
spellingShingle David Oscar Yawson
Michael Osei Adu
Benjamin Ason
Frederick Ato Armah
Genesis Tambang Yengoh
Putting Soil Security on the Policy Agenda: Need for a Familiar Framework
Challenges
soil security
dimensions
availability
accessibility
utilization
stability
critical and pervasive threats
ecosystem services
policy agenda
author_facet David Oscar Yawson
Michael Osei Adu
Benjamin Ason
Frederick Ato Armah
Genesis Tambang Yengoh
author_sort David Oscar Yawson
title Putting Soil Security on the Policy Agenda: Need for a Familiar Framework
title_short Putting Soil Security on the Policy Agenda: Need for a Familiar Framework
title_full Putting Soil Security on the Policy Agenda: Need for a Familiar Framework
title_fullStr Putting Soil Security on the Policy Agenda: Need for a Familiar Framework
title_full_unstemmed Putting Soil Security on the Policy Agenda: Need for a Familiar Framework
title_sort putting soil security on the policy agenda: need for a familiar framework
publisher MDPI AG
series Challenges
issn 2078-1547
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Soils generate agricultural, environmental, and socio-economic benefits that are vital to human life. The enormity of threats to global soil stocks raises the imperative for securing this vital resource. To contribute to the security framing and advancement of the soil security concept and discourse, this paper provides a working definition and proposes dimensions that can underpin the conceptualization of soil security. In this paper, soil security refers to safeguarding and improving the quality, quantity and functionality of soil stocks from critical and pervasive threats in order to guarantee the availability, access, and utilization of soils to sustainably generate productive goods and ecosystem services. The dimensions proposed are availability, accessibility, utilization, and stability, which are obviously similar to the dimensions of food security. Availability refers to the quality and spatial distribution of soils of a given category. Accessibility relates to the conditions or mechanisms by which actors negotiate and gain entitlements to occupy and use a given soil. Utilization deals with the use or purpose to which a given soil is put and the capacity to manage and generate optimal private and public benefits from the soil. Finally, stability refers to the governance mechanisms that safeguard and improve the first three dimensions. These dimensions, their interactions, and how they can be operationalized in a strategy to secure soils are presented and discussed.
topic soil security
dimensions
availability
accessibility
utilization
stability
critical and pervasive threats
ecosystem services
policy agenda
url http://www.mdpi.com/2078-1547/7/2/15
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