23 research outputs found
Volterra
Voce Volterra con fonti letterarie, storia degli studi e degli scavi, bibliografia di riferiment
Developmental Policies, Long-Term Land-Use Changes and the Way Towards Soil Degradation: Evidence from Southern Italy
This paper discusses the relationship between state-driven developmental policies,
considered as potential drivers of land degradation, and post-war territorial transformations in
southern Italy, a disadvantaged Mediterranean region. Since the early 1950s, state-driven
development policies aimed at balancing the socio-economic disparities between coastal and
inland areas in southern Italy have sometimes impacted negatively on the quality of land. Three
national and one European Union post-war policies have been considered in this study: (i) the
Agrarian Reform promoting the realignment of land ownership and a new agricultural
organization, (ii) the Cassa per il Mezzogiorno intervention stimulating economic development and
reducing territorial unbalances, (iii) the measures for industrial recovery and settlement
reconstruction after the 1980 earthquake in Campania and Basilicata regions and (iv) the
European Common Agricultural Policy. The impact of these policies on soil resource depletion
and land degradation in ecologically fragile, arid areas has been discussed using three case
studies: Basilicata region, Sele river plain and Fortore river valley (both located in Campania
region). The paper illustrates the multiple links between post-war economic policy and the
downward environmental spiral observed in southern Italy as a contribution to the Mediterranean
strategy for combating soil degradation, drought and desertification. It raises valid concerns
about the negative implications of national and international political policies for land
degradation in Italy which share resonance with similar developments in other countries