Land-Sparing and Land-Sharing in Dutch National Parks: A Historical and Transition Perspective

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

17 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Global biodiversity rates remain in decline despite the fact that worldwide 16% of the land is protected. Some argue that to stop the biodiversity decline, a shift from “land-sparing” (agricultural production and nature conservation on different plots of land) towards “land-sharing” (both activities on the same plot of land) may be needed. We use the regime dimensions of the multi-level perspective to analyze the development and implementation of land-sparing and land-sharing in Dutch national parks as they are experimenting with this. Our qualitative text-based analysis of Dutch national park policy documents from 1930 until 2022 shows that the first Dutch national parks focused on nature conservation and land-sparing. In contrast, the so-called Dutch national landscape parks were the first serious attempt to integrate nature conservation and agriculture and to implement land-sharing. However, this failed because of the misalignment between nature conservation and agriculture at that time. A new attempt is currently being made with the national parks “new style” in which more land-sharing should take place. We argue that for this, a hybrid agriculture nature-conservation regime is needed for which different dimensions of both regimes should align, which currently appears to be starting in The Netherlands.
Original languageEnglish
Article number808
Number of pages24
JournalLand
Volume14
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9-Apr-2025

Keywords

  • nature conservation
  • land use
  • extensive agriculture
  • regime change
  • multi-level perspective

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Land-Sparing and Land-Sharing in Dutch National Parks: A Historical and Transition Perspective'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this