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Operationalizing water-energy-food nexus research for sustainable development in social-ecological systems: an interdisciplinary learning case in Central Asia

Ahmad HamidovLeibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF), Germany,Katrin DaedlowAgriculture and Food Policy Group, Humboldt-Universitt zu Berlin, Germany,Heidi WebberLeibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF), Germany,Hussam HusseinDepartment of Politics and International Relations (DPIR), University of Oxford, UK,Ilhom AbdurahmanovTashkent Institute of Irrigation and Agricultural Mechanization Engineers (TIIAME), Uzbekistan,Aleksandr DolidudkoScientific Research Institute of Irrigation and Water Problems, Uzbekistan,Ali Yawar SeeratFaculty of Agriculture, Bamyan University, Afghanistan,Umida SolievaDepartment of Environmental Sciences and Policy, Central European University, Austria,Tesfaye WoldeyohanesCenter for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)-World Agroforestry (ICRAF), Kenya,Katharina HelmingLeibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF), Germany,
Ecology and Societyjournal2022en
ABI

Аннотация

In social-ecological systems, natural resource management can be characterized by trade-offs across sectors and sustainability targets. The water-energy-food (WEF) nexus concept makes explicit various trade-offs in order to maximize synergies of interventions. However, there are few successful examples of its operationalization in research settings. Here, we explore in a learning setting if sustainability impact assessment (SIA) protocols can be a useful process to be used to adopt a systemic, interdisciplinary perspective to operationalize WEF nexus in research for sustainable development. The process and method adopted of SIA protocol, evaluated for five exemplary WEF nexus cases in Central Asia during a week-long international workshop, adequately addressed the complexity of WEF interrelationships and associated sustainability issues, and facilitated a comparative case study analysis across scales. Results within this process highlight that water governance was critical for large-scale transboundary WEF nexus management, while land and soil management were decisive for minimizing trade-offs at local levels. Issues of interdisciplinarity, complexity, uncertainty, and reflection on impacts were adequately addressed, but challenges remain in the consideration of ethics and the design of transparent, multi-actor cooperation. Most importantly, this exercise showed that employment of the process of SIA protocol supported disciplinary experts to work across disciplines and take a systemic approach for analyzing WEF nexus.

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