Land Degradation & Development

LAND DEGRAD DEV

3.6 (2023)
1085-3278
No
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Quarterly
$4980 USD/£3300 GBP/€4170 EUR
422
8.3%
Major category Minor category TOP journal Review journal
Q1

AGRICULTURAL AND FORESTRY SCIENCES

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Yes No

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

CiteScore SJR SNIP CiteScore ranking
7.7 1.159 1.162
Subject Area Rank Percentile
Social SciencesDevelopment 30 / 306 90%
68
Science Citation Index Expanded
Submission to first decision: 27 days Submission to acceptance: 192 days
Land Degradation & Development is an international journal which seeks to promote rational study of the recognition, monitoring, control and rehabilitation of degradation in terrestrial environments. The journal focuses on:

what land degradation is;
what causes land degradation;
the impacts of land degradation
the scale of land degradation;
the history, current status or future trends of land degradation;
avoidance, mitigation and control of land degradation;
remedial actions to rehabilitate or restore degraded land;
sustainable land management.
Land degradation may be defined as the loss of utility or potential utility through the reduction of or damage to physical, social, cultural or economic features, and/or reduction of ecosystem diversity. There may be a single cause or a complex mix of causes, some may be biogeophysical ('natural'), some socioeconomic ('human') and it is quite possible that cause(s) will be indirect, perhaps cumulative and difficult to identify. A major challenge is to learn how interactions between development and environment can be better managed to increase prospects for ecologically and socially sustainable improvements to human well-being. Development means attempts to improve human well-being or environmental quality in rich and poor nations on a sustained basis (sustainable development). Climate change affects all processes that contribute to land degradation and development, both directly and indirectly. Off-site impacts are also strongly influenced by climate.
Papers are invited on scientific, social, economic, political and historical aspects of terrestrial environmental degradation. Also welcome are analyses presenting forecasts of trends, case studies and discussion on management, planning and policy-making relating to the promotion of ecological sustainability and the counteraction of land degradation.
In addition to original research papers, regional and thematic reviews, both invited and submitted, will be included, as will short communications, book reviews and applications of remote sensing and computer techniques. The members of the Editorial Board are drawn from a comprehensive range of disciplines and nationalities. Together with a strict refereeing procedure this will ensure Land Degradation & Development maintains a high standard and presents material from a wide range of disciplines, from interdisciplinary study and with an international coverage. Land Degradation & Development practices a non- politics/gender/religion/race policy as a science journal. Figures should not contain material such as disputed territory, and text should not contain discriminatory or derogatory material.
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