Expert Group Meets at UNU-INWEH to Develop a Global Report
on Desertification

Team Members
The UNU-INWEH hosted experts from 11 countries, who gathered
in Hamilton (11-13 August 2004) to discuss policies and
management approaches to combat desertification. This
dialogue was based on the information gathered within the
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) process and will
lead to formulation of a synthesis report. The MA is a global
assessment that focuses on consequences of ecosystem change
for human well-being and options for responding to those
changes.
Over two billion people live in drylands, which occupy more
than 40% of the global land area. These drylands are under
increasing threat of desertification – a process of
persistent decrease in ecosystem benefits to the human
society. A vast majority of people living in drylands suffer
from poverty and poor access to health and social services.
It is thought that these conditions lead to human suffering,
and often, displacement of people.
Many factors contribute to the plight of people and
ecosystems in drylands, including population growth, local
and global economic stresses, and use of inappropriate
technologies and management approaches. Appropriate and
locally-sensitive policies and interventions, supported by
relevant capacity building, can be implemented to ameliorate
the situation.
By exploring response options, the MA
desertification synthesis report addresses the concerns and
needs of the parties to the UN Convention to Combat
Desertification. It particularly highlights the respective
roles of the developed and developing countries. During the
two-day meeting at the UNU-INWEH, the MA expert team
developed a first draft of the report, which will undergo an
open review process by other experts and governments. It is
anticipated that the final report will be available by the
summer of 2005.
The synthesis report also benefits from UNU-INWEH’s
ongoing research and capacity-building projects in drylands.
These include a four-year community-based research project
on sustainable management of marginal drylands (SUMAMAD),
which is being implemented in cooperation with UNESCO and
ICARDA. It evaluates eight study sites in North Africa and
Asia. The UNU has also recently launched a cooperative
Master’s Degree Program for dryland managers, with courses
offered in Tunisia and China. A number of researchers have
also been funded by UNU to investigate the effectiveness of
traditional water management
practices in drylands.