What the study found
The study found that land use change in two highland regions followed different paths between 1986 and 2023, and these differences were associated with different social conflict patterns. In the Uco Valley in Argentina, cropland increased, while in the Podhale-Magura Area in Poland, cropland shrank.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that understanding local circumstances and involving local communities in development processes may help reduce social tensions and support inclusive, sustainable development.
What the researchers tested
The researchers compared land use transformations in the Podhale-Magura Area and the Uco Valley over time. They used satellite image analysis and in-depth interviews with rural producers and administration representatives.
What worked and what didn't
The analysis showed a clear divergence in cropland trajectories: cropland increased in the Uco Valley and decreased in the Podhale-Magura Area. The Uco Valley was marked by disputes over resource use and agrarian change, while the Podhale-Magura Area was marked by tensions over land access, settlement patterns, and community–newcomer relations. The abstract also states that global market and tourism influences were important, but they operated differently in each area.
What to keep in mind
The abstract presents two case studies, so the findings are specific to these highland regions. It also says the social conflicts and community problems were location-specific and differed from one case study to another; no other limitations are described in the available summary.
Key points
- Cropland increased in the Uco Valley and decreased in the Podhale-Magura Area from 1986 to 2023.
- The two regions showed different conflict profiles tied to land use change.
- In the Uco Valley, conflicts involved resource use and agrarian change.
- In the Podhale-Magura Area, tensions involved land access, settlement patterns, and community–newcomer relations.
- The authors say local circumstances and community engagement matter for reducing social tensions.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Highland land-use change is linked to different local conflicts
- Publication date:
- 2026-03-05
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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