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Abstract
Ecosystem restoration is widely recognized as a key strategy to address social-ecological challenges. National governments have pledged to restore millions of hectares of land. However, the ability to accomplish these pledges remains opaque, because restoration efforts are influenced by complex social-ecological factors. We provide a global analysis of national-level enabling and hindering conditions and their relation to restoration pledges undertaken by different nations. We developed an archetype characterization of within-country conditions using biophysical, socio-economic and governance indicators. Additionally, we investigated between-country conditions by examining flows of embodied land. Our analysis suggests that the countries with the most ambitious restoration pledges also tend to have the weakest enabling conditions (and vice versa). These results highlight the need to account for social, economic and governance factors alongside biophysical factors when considering where restoration ought to take place.
Countries with more ambitious pledges for the restoration of their ecosystems tend to exhibit socio-economic, governance and biophysical conditions that may hinder meeting such pledges, suggests a global analysis of the enabling or hindering conditions for ecosystem restoration.
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1 Leuphana University Lüneburg, Social-Ecological Systems Institute, School of Sustainability, Lüneburg, Germany (GRID:grid.10211.33) (ISNI:0000 0000 9130 6144)
2 Leuphana University Lüneburg, Social-Ecological Systems Institute, School of Sustainability, Lüneburg, Germany (GRID:grid.10211.33) (ISNI:0000 0000 9130 6144); Universidad de Almería, Carretera de Sacramento, s/n 04120 La Cañada de San Urbano, Centro Andaluz para el Cambio Global - Hermelindo Castro (ENGLOBA), Almería, Spain (GRID:grid.28020.38) (ISNI:0000 0001 0196 9356)
3 Independent researcher, Lüneburg, Germany (GRID:grid.5949.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 2172 9288)