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Effect of planning policies on land use dynamics and livelihood opportunities under global environmental change: evidence from the Mekong Delta

Effect of planning policies on land use dynamics and livelihood opportunities under global environmental change: evidence from the Mekong Delta
Effect of planning policies on land use dynamics and livelihood opportunities under global environmental change: evidence from the Mekong Delta
The Mekong Delta faces significant challenges in supplying Vietnam and its export market countries with agricultural commodities, while ensuring livelihoods and providing living space to its growing population in the context of climate change and the country’s agrarian transition. Anthropogenic factors, such as the construction of dykes to control river flooding, river sand mining, the further development of triple-cropping rice production, and infrastructure development, together with climate change impacts on sediment and water availability, are all combining to threaten agricultural production. One of the key challenges in sustainable development is the need to identify plausible future states of agricultural-based socio-ecological systems which draw upon differing strategies of land management, and to characterise the impacts of these systems on both the landscape and employment. It was hypothesised from the literature and rapid rural appraisals that each land system can only provide a certain number of jobs, which was further demonstrated using binomial regressions. We show that the odds of being employed are lower for intensive agricultural systems (OR=0.78 for triple rice; 0.91 for intensive aquaculture) than for diversified systems (OR=1.16 for rice-aquaculture; OR=1.63 for mixed fruit trees). Drawing from workshops with local and national stakeholders, we then used Earth observation and national census data in a spatial land use systems dynamic framework to simulate two alternative Mekong Delta futures based upon the climate pathway RCP 4.5 in combination with two existing policies (i) Resolution No. 124 (Specialisation) which promotes triple crop rice and aquaculture intensification and (ii) Resolution No. 639 (Diversification), which states that there should be a development of sustainable rice aquaculture and crop diversification. Based on the quantitative objectives of each policy, we estimated likely changes of services provided by land use systems if either policy were to dominate. The estimated impacts of each future scenario on the provision of employment ultimately indicate that policies with a diversification development paradigm will provide more employment (+0.9%) than policies with a specialisation paradigm (−46%), and that current policies have potentially conflicting consequences. Decisions driving towards intensive farming risk triggering rural unemployment and outmigration, potentially exacerbating urban poverty in major cities such as Can Tho and Ho Chi Minh City. On the other hand, decisions aiming at increasing diversified agricultural systems can help secure more job opportunities. Our results indicate that spatial planning policies should rely on a broad-based assessment of land system services that include employment and environmental impacts to ensure a just transition towards resilient and environmentally sustainable rural territories.
Environmental Change, Future scenarios, Land systems, Land-change model, Land-use planning policies, Mekong Delta, Rural employment, Rural livelihoods
0264-8377
Berchoux, Tristan
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Hutton, Craig
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Hensengerth, Oliver
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Voepel, Hal
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Tri, Van
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Vu, Pham
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Hung, Nguyen Nghia
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Parsons, D.R.
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Darby, Stephen
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Berchoux, Tristan
bf82581a-f817-4e6c-a7d2-1164db7ca4fc
Hutton, Craig
9102617b-caf7-4538-9414-c29e72f5fe2e
Hensengerth, Oliver
c398e3fc-7f0e-4617-aec0-bc2a2a0a18e0
Voepel, Hal
7330972a-c61c-4058-b52c-3669fadfcf70
Tri, Van
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Vu, Pham
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Hung, Nguyen Nghia
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Parsons, D.R.
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Darby, Stephen
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Berchoux, Tristan, Hutton, Craig, Hensengerth, Oliver, Voepel, Hal, Tri, Van, Vu, Pham, Hung, Nguyen Nghia, Parsons, D.R. and Darby, Stephen (2023) Effect of planning policies on land use dynamics and livelihood opportunities under global environmental change: evidence from the Mekong Delta. Land Use Policy, 131, [106752]. (doi:10.1016/j.landusepol.2023.106752).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The Mekong Delta faces significant challenges in supplying Vietnam and its export market countries with agricultural commodities, while ensuring livelihoods and providing living space to its growing population in the context of climate change and the country’s agrarian transition. Anthropogenic factors, such as the construction of dykes to control river flooding, river sand mining, the further development of triple-cropping rice production, and infrastructure development, together with climate change impacts on sediment and water availability, are all combining to threaten agricultural production. One of the key challenges in sustainable development is the need to identify plausible future states of agricultural-based socio-ecological systems which draw upon differing strategies of land management, and to characterise the impacts of these systems on both the landscape and employment. It was hypothesised from the literature and rapid rural appraisals that each land system can only provide a certain number of jobs, which was further demonstrated using binomial regressions. We show that the odds of being employed are lower for intensive agricultural systems (OR=0.78 for triple rice; 0.91 for intensive aquaculture) than for diversified systems (OR=1.16 for rice-aquaculture; OR=1.63 for mixed fruit trees). Drawing from workshops with local and national stakeholders, we then used Earth observation and national census data in a spatial land use systems dynamic framework to simulate two alternative Mekong Delta futures based upon the climate pathway RCP 4.5 in combination with two existing policies (i) Resolution No. 124 (Specialisation) which promotes triple crop rice and aquaculture intensification and (ii) Resolution No. 639 (Diversification), which states that there should be a development of sustainable rice aquaculture and crop diversification. Based on the quantitative objectives of each policy, we estimated likely changes of services provided by land use systems if either policy were to dominate. The estimated impacts of each future scenario on the provision of employment ultimately indicate that policies with a diversification development paradigm will provide more employment (+0.9%) than policies with a specialisation paradigm (−46%), and that current policies have potentially conflicting consequences. Decisions driving towards intensive farming risk triggering rural unemployment and outmigration, potentially exacerbating urban poverty in major cities such as Can Tho and Ho Chi Minh City. On the other hand, decisions aiming at increasing diversified agricultural systems can help secure more job opportunities. Our results indicate that spatial planning policies should rely on a broad-based assessment of land system services that include employment and environmental impacts to ensure a just transition towards resilient and environmentally sustainable rural territories.

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Accepted/In Press date: 17 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 May 2023
Published date: August 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: This research was co-funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council under a Global Challenges Research Foundation Award for Global Agriculture and Food Systems Research (BB/P022693/1), and by the UK National Environmental Research Council (NERC) and the Viet Nam National Foundation for Science and Technology Development (NAFOSTED) under the project ‘The resilience and sustainability of the Mekong delta to changes in water and sediment fluxes (RAMESES)’ (grant agreement NE/P014704/1). Prior to commencing the study, ethical clearance was obtained from the University of Southampton [ERGO number 27665]. Data used in this research come from the Population and Housing Census of Vietnam provided by the General Statistics Office of Vietnam. The authors wish to thank all participants for providing their time and knowledge. Additional gratitude goes to Nguyễn Ngọc Diệp who helped in the organisation, planning and interpretation of the Rapid Rural Appraisal. Funding Information: This research was co-funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council under a Global Challenges Research Foundation Award for Global Agriculture and Food Systems Research ( BB/P022693/1 ), and by the UK National Environmental Research Council (NERC) and the Viet Nam National Foundation for Science and Technology Development ( NAFOSTED ) under the project ‘The resilience and sustainability of the Mekong delta to changes in water and sediment fluxes (RAMESES)’ (grant agreement NE/P014704/1 ). Prior to commencing the study, ethical clearance was obtained from the University of Southampton [ERGO number 27665 ]. Data used in this research come from the Population and Housing Census of Vietnam provided by the General Statistics Office of Vietnam. The authors wish to thank all participants for providing their time and knowledge. Additional gratitude goes to Nguyễn Ngọc Diệp who helped in the organisation, planning and interpretation of the Rapid Rural Appraisal. Publisher Copyright: © 2023
Keywords: Environmental Change, Future scenarios, Land systems, Land-change model, Land-use planning policies, Mekong Delta, Rural employment, Rural livelihoods

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477686
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477686
ISSN: 0264-8377
PURE UUID: b323dd6e-9814-4f8b-92f4-a0a15db88792
ORCID for Craig Hutton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5896-756X
ORCID for Hal Voepel: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7375-1460
ORCID for Stephen Darby: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8778-4394

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Date deposited: 13 Jun 2023 16:51
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:36

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Contributors

Author: Tristan Berchoux
Author: Craig Hutton ORCID iD
Author: Oliver Hensengerth
Author: Hal Voepel ORCID iD
Author: Van Tri
Author: Pham Vu
Author: Nguyen Nghia Hung
Author: D.R. Parsons
Author: Stephen Darby ORCID iD

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