Land Use Planning
Land Use Planning
Land Use Planning
Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Summary
Chapter 1. Nature and scope
What is land-use planning?
When is land-use planning useful?
Making the best use of limited resources
Goals
The focus of land-use planning
Planning at different levels
Application
Foreword
Land resources are limited and finite. If human populations continue to increase at the present rate there
will be twice as many people in the world in about 60 years. There is therefore an increasingly urgent
need to match land types and land uses in the most rational way possible, so as to maximize sustainable
production and satisfy the diverse needs of society while at the same time conserving fragile ecosystems
and our genetic heritage.
Land-use planning is fundamental to this process. It is a basic component, whether we are considering
mountain ecosystems, savannahs or coastal zones, and underlies the development and conservation of
forestry, range and inland as well as coastal resources. Land-use planning is also a key element in all
types of agricultural development and conservation.
These guidelines are intended to help all those involved in planning the development, management and
conservation of rural land. This includes not only specialists in land-use planning but also ministers of
agriculture and environment, extension workers, forest officers, village leaders and many others who
contribute to or are involved in planning the use of land resources. This publication provides an overview
for people who commission and adopt land-use plans. It also provides practical advice for those who
have to prepare such plans.
Land-use planning is sometimes misunderstood as being a process where planners tell people what to do,
i.e. a typical top-down situation. In this publication, land-use planning means the systematic assessment
of physical, social and economic factors in such a way as to assist and encourage land users to select
land-use options that increase their productivity, are sustainable and meet the needs of society. Farmers
and other land users can, and should, take an active part in land-use planning, bringing to bear their
special knowledge of problems, constraints and needs for improvement.
This is not an instruction manual. It is impractical to provide instructions that are sufficiently
comprehensive to apply to the diversity of climate, land resources and economic and social conditions for
which land-use plans are needed. However, the principles and methods outlined here provide a
framework for the development of detailed procedures that will deal directly with the specific problems
and opportunities of land use in individual countries.
Land-use planning is an extremely complex subject, combining physical, social and economic aspects of
land use with an assessment of potential future needs. We would, therefore, welcome comments and
suggestions as to how these guidelines could be improved. We also invite any person or group who is
interested in carrying out case-studies on particular land-use planning programmes or projects to contact
us regarding possible collaboration.
C.H. Murray
Chairman, Inter-Departmental Working Group on Land Use Planning, FAO
Plate 1: Good land use, closely matched to the potential of the land in a long-settled area
Acknowledgements
Many people have participated in the development of these guidelines, including FAO field staff,
members of Sub-Group I of the FAO Inter-Departmental Group on Land Use Planning, under the
chairmanship of Maurice Purnell. Their contributions are gratefully acknowledged. The first draft was
prepared by Devon Nelson and the second by David Dent. Successive drafts were reviewed at two expert
consultations, held in Rome in 1986 and 1989, and comments were received from many people - of
particular value were those from the Working Group, chaired by G. Robertson at the 1989 consultation,
and those from J. Dixon and Robert Ridgway. Final editing was done by Anthony Young and FAO staff
in Rome.
Summary
Guidelines for land-use planning is primarily intended for people engaged in making land-use plans, or
those training to do so, including staff of local government, national agencies and international projects
in developing countries. The guidelines also provide an overview of land-use planning for administrators
and decision-makers.
Chapter 1 describes the nature and purpose of land-use planning: what it is, why it is needed, who
benefits from it and who carries it out. It describes the different levels or scales at which planning is
carried out and identifies the people involved: the land users, the decision-makers and the planning team.
Chapter 2 outlines the work involved in terms of ten steps, from the first meeting between planners and
potential users to the implementation of the land-use plan. These steps provide a logical sequence of
activities, each of which has a purpose.
Chapter 3 describes the same steps in more detail. Again, flexibility will be needed in adapting each step
to the specific circumstances of a particular plan. For each step, a Checklist is given.
Chapter 4 is for reference. It indicates some of the technical methods that are available for planning, with
references to sources of detailed information.
Technical terms are defined in the Glossary.
HOW TO USE THE GUIDELINES
Planning is a learning process and needs to be flexible. It can best be learned by doing. The ten steps
outlined in Chapters 2 and 3 need not be followed rigidly, but can be adapted to circumstances. However,
thought should be given to the purpose of each step and to whether it is needed in a particular plan. The
guidelines can be adapted to local conditions, either by producing national land-use planning handbooks
or simply by listing the needs, tasks and responsibilities for a particular project as well as allowing for
adjustments on the job.
Contents - Next
Contents - Previous - Next
Goals
Goals define what is meant by the "best" use of the land. They should be specified at the outset of a
particular planning project. Goals may be grouped under the three headings of efficiency, equity and
acceptability and sustainability.
Efficiency. Land use must be economically viable, so one goal of development planning is to make
efficient and productive use of the land. For any particular land use, certain areas are better suited than
others. Efficiency is achieved by matching different land uses with the areas that will yield the greatest
benefits at the least cost.
Efficiency means different things to different people, however. To the individual land user, it means the
greatest return on capital and labour invested or the greatest benefit from the area available. Government
objectives are more complex: they may include improving the foreign exchange situation by producing
for export or for import substitution.
Equity and acceptability. Land use must also be socially acceptable. Goals include food security,
employment and security of income in rural areas. Land improvements and redistribution of land may be
undertaken to reduce inequality or, alternatively, to attack absolute poverty.
Box 1
The planning process
Land-use planning can be expressed in the following questions:
• What is the present situation?
• Is change desirable? If so:
- What needs to be changed?
Land-use problems and opportunities are identified by discussions with the people
involved and by the study of their needs and the resources of the area.
- How can the changes be made?
Planners seek a range of ways to make use of the opportunities and solve the problems.
- Which is the best option?
Decision-makers choose the best option, based on forecasts of the results of implementing
each alternative.
- How far is the plan succeeding?
Once a land-use plan is put into effect, planners monitor progress made towards its goals
and change the plan if necessary.
One way of doing this is to set a threshold standard of living to which those of target groups should be
raised. Living standards may include levels of income, nutrition, food security and housing. Planning to
achieve these standards then involves the allocation of land for specific uses as well as the allocation of
financial and other resources.
Sustainability. Sustainable land use is that which meets the needs of the present while, at the same time,
conserving resources for future generations. This requires a combination of production and conservation:
the production of the goods needed by people now, combined with the conservation of the natural
resources on which that production depends so as to ensure continued production in the future.
A community that destroys its land forfeits its future. Land use has to be planned for the community as a
whole because the conservation of soil, water and other land resources is often beyond the means of
individual land users.
Box 2
Acceptability - an example
Following the drought of 1973/74 and the subsequent famine, the Government of Ethiopia became
more aware of the serious degradation of soil in the highlands.
An ambitious soil conservation programme has concentrated on protecting steep slopes by bunding and
afforestation. This has made a substantial impact on soil erosion but has not contributed much to
increased agricultural production. Large-scale afforestation is also unpopular with local people because
it reduces the area available for livestock grazing while forest protection implies denying access for
fuelwood collection. A balance between the competing requirements of conservation and production is
clearly needed if popular support for soil conservation work is to continue without inducements such as
the Food-for-Work Programme.
A land-use plan to conserve steeper slopes by restoring good vegetative cover through closure, followed
by controlled grazing, has been found to be more acceptable to the local people than large-scale
afforestation applied in isolation.
People in planning
Land-use planning involves getting many different people to work together towards common goals.
Three groups of people are directly involved (Fig. 2):
Land users. These are the people living in the planning area whose livelihood depends wholly or partly
on the land. They include not only farmers, herders, foresters and others who use the land directly but
also those who depend on these people's products, e.g. operators in crop or meat processing, sawmills
and furniture factories. The involvement of all land users in planning is essential. Ultimately, they have
to put the plan into effect and must therefore believe in its potential benefits as well as in the fairness of
the planning process.
The experience and determination of local people in dealing with their environment are often the most
neglected, as well as the most important, resource. People will grasp development opportunities that they
themselves have helped to plan more readily than any that are imposed on them. Without the support of
local leaders, a plan is not likely to succeed.
Achieving effective public participation in planning is a challenge. Planners have to invest the time and
resources needed to secure participation through local discussions, by broadcasting and newspaper
articles, through technical workshops and extension services. Imagination, a sincere interest in people
and the land as well as a willingness to experiment mark the more successful efforts.
Decision-makers. Decision-makers are those responsible for putting plans into effect. At national and
district levels, they will usually be government ministers; at the local level, they will be members of the
council or other authorities.
The planning team provides information and expert advice. The decision-makers guide the planning team
on key issues and goals while also deciding whether to implement plans and, if so, which of the options
presented should be chosen. Although the leader of the planning team is in charge of day-to-day planning
activities, the decision-maker should be involved at regular intervals.
Decision-makers also have a key role in encouraging public participation through their willingness to
expose their decisions and the way they are reached to public scrutiny.
The planning team. An essential feature of land-use planning is the treatment of land and land use as a
whole. This involves crossing boundaries between disciplines (natural resource, engineering, agricultural
and social sciences), so teamwork is essential. Ideally, a team needs a wide range of special expertise; for
example a soil surveyor, a land evaluation specialist, an agronomist, a forester, a range and livestock
specialist, an engineer, an economist and a sociologist.
Such a range may only be available at the national level. At the local level, a more typical planning team
may consist of a land-use planner and one or two assistants. Each must tackle a wide range of jobs and
will consequently need specialist advice. Government agency staff and universities may be useful
sources of assistance.
Application
These guidelines are written in general terms, applicable to any environment or region. Many problems
of land use are specific to particular areas, not only because of their differing physical environments but
also because of local social conditions such as those of land tenure.
To acquire the feel of land-use planning, it is useful to read these guidelines in conjunction with
examples of planning in practice. Thirteen such examples are assembled in the report, Land-use planning
applications. Proceedings of the FAO Expert Consultation 1990 (FAO, 1991b). Other accounts of
land-use planning, including national handbooks and sources of examples, are listed in Chapter 4.
Every land-use planning project is different. Objectives and local circumstances are extremely varied, so
each plan will require a different treatment. However, a sequence of ten steps has been found useful as a
guide. Each step represents a specific activity, or set of activities, and their outputs provide information
for subsequent steps.
Following is an outline of the steps which are described more fully in the next chapter (see also Figs 3
and 4).
Step 1. Establish goals and terms of reference. Ascertain the present situation; find out the needs of the
people and of the government; decide on the land area to be covered; agree on the broad goals and
specific objectives of the plan; settle the terms of reference for the plan.
Step 2. Organize the work. Decide what needs to be done; identify the activities needed and select the
planning team; draw up a schedule of activities and outputs; ensure that everyone who may be affected
by the plan, or will contribute to it, is consulted.
Step 3. Analyse the problems. Study the existing land-use situation, including in the field; talk to the land
users and find out their needs and views; identify the problems and analyse their causes; identify
constraints to change.
Step 4. Identify opportunities for charge. Identify and draft a design for a range of land-use types that
might achieve the goals of the plan; present these options for public discussion.
Step 5. Evaluate land suitability. For each promising land-use type, establish the land requirements and
match these with the properties of the land to establish physical land suitability.
Step 6. Appraise the alternatives: environmental, economic and social analysis. For each physically
suitable combination of land use and land, assess the environmental, economic and social impacts, for the
land users and for the community as a whole. List the consequences, favourable and unfavourable, of
alternative courses of action.
Step 7. Choose the best option. Hold public and executive discussions of the viable options and their
consequences. Based on these discussions and the above appraisal, decide which changes in land use
should be made or worked towards.
Step 8. Prepare the land-use plan. Make allocations or recommendations of the selected land uses for
the chosen areas of land; make plans for appropriate land management; plan how the selected
improvements are to be brought about and how the plan is to be put into practice; draw up policy
guidelines, prepare a budget and draft any necessary legislation; involve decision-makers, sectoral
agencies and land users.
Step 9. Implement the plan. Either directly within the planning process or, more likely, as a separate
development project, put the plan into action; the planning team should work in conjunction with the
implementing agencies.
Step 10. Monitor and revise the plan. Monitor the progress of the plan towards its goals; modify or
revise the plan in the light of experience.
In a still broader view, the steps can be grouped into the following logical sequence:
• Identify the problems. Steps 1-3.
• Determine what alternative solutions exist. Steps 4-6.
• Decide which is the best alternative and prepare the plan. Steps 7-8.
• Put the plan into action, see how it works and learn from this experience. Steps 9-10.
Figure 3: Steps in land-use planning
Incremental planning
Planning does not necessarily have to proceed by means of specific, time-bound plans. It can proceed
incrementally, by making small local changes. An advantage is that mistakes, for example a crop variety
that is attacked by a pest, can be identified early on before losses have become serious. This is how
individual land users operate, but planners can also contribute. They can assist change by offering their
own skills, for example technical knowledge of small-scale irrigation methods, and by being agents in
bringing in outside resources.
The initiative for incremental planning is likely to come from the land users (bottom-up planning). It
requires that the planning agency should be on the spot and continuously in touch with the land users,
and it is therefore more likely to be conducted by a national land-use planning agency or its district
branches than by a specially convened external team. In formal terms this approach again commences
with a perceived problem, Step 3, followed by a compressed version of Steps 4 to 10 in which one or
more solutions to the problem are identified, their consequences considered and action taken.
This section sets out the tasks involved in making a land-use plan following the ten steps outlined in the
previous chapter. For each step it gives:
• the objectives, i.e. why the step is needed;
• the main activities included;
• the information to be collected and its sources;
• the people involved and their responsibilities.
Each step is summarized by means of a Checklist.
Further details of methods available, with sources which can be consulted for details, are given in
Chapter 4. An aspect common to all of the steps is that of "information management" (see Chapter 4, p.
75, and Glossary).
As already emphasized, these steps should be treated as guidelines to be adapted to the circumstances of
specific plans.
How is it done?
First, list the major planning tasks and activities. For each task, outline what needs to be done as well as
the skilled personnel and other resources required.
Identify the people and organizations who will be responsible for each task and others who will
contribute. A checklist of jobs and responsibilities is a priority. Everyone needs to know what is expected
of them and to whom they are responsible.
Specify the time needed to complete each task, which tasks need to be completed before others can be
started and the deadlines. Allocate money and equipment. Draw up budgets for each activity and list the
resources (e.g. transport, equipment) that will be needed.
Figure 6: Example of a critical path chart
The simplest format for the work plan is a table, as shown in Table 1. This can be expanded to include
locations of activities, materials required, times taken, budget figures and details of output such as reports
and maps.
A bar chart is a clear way of displaying the work plan (Fig. 5). Colouring in the bars as each stage is
completed highlights whether the work is keeping to schedule. If the project is large and complex, a
critical path chart can be drawn up (Fig. 6). This is based on the concept of a preceding activity, a task
which has to be completed before another can be started. Such a chart draws attention to what the key
activities are, where delays will slow down the project as a whole.
However, land-use planning projects must be allowed to evolve. Not all activities can be foreseen and
timed in advance, especially in situations involving several independent organizations with different
workloads. A critical path analysis is not appropriate for an evolving planning project with a time frame
extending over several years, but the discipline of producing a work plan of this kind for each individual
step of the process can be valuable.
CHECKLIST
Step 2
ORGANIZATION OF THE WORK
Responsibility: planning team leader and administrator
• List the planning tasks and activities. For each task:
- identify the people and organizations responsible for or contributing to it;
- set out the resources needed;
-estimate the time needed.
• Decide which tasks need to be completed before others can be commenced.
• Draw up a work plan for the project as a whole (table, bar chart or critical path analysis).
• Draw up individual, personal work plans.
• Allocate money and equipment.
• Arrange administrative matters and logistics:
- Check and arrange security clearances for staff and equipment, e.g. for the purchase and
use of maps, air photographs and computers.
- Budget for staff, equipment and transport costs.
- Provide for:
• transport (vehicles, spares, fuel, servicing);
• equipment;
• office facilities.
- Provide and coordinate technical support:
• inputs from other agencies
• field assistance
• laboratory
• cartography
• secretarial
-Make provision for wet or hot seasons, public and local holidays, contingencies and
iteration of steps in the planning process.
Opportunities
Planning involves seeking and appraising opportunities for closing the gap between the present situation
and the goals. Opportunities are presented by untapped human and land resources, new technology and
economic or political circumstances.
The people present opportunities in the form of labour, skills and culture and, not least, the ability to
adjust to change and to survive adversity. Cooperation at the local level may be promoted by
encouraging the participation of land-use groups in the planning process and through buyer and producer
organizations.
The land may have underdeveloped regions or unexploited resources such as water power, economic
minerals or scenery and wildlife. The location of the planning area may give it a strategic advantage for
trade or defence. The land nearly always has the potential for greater or more diverse production, given
investment in management.
New crops and land uses may be available. Circumstances may have changed so much, e.g. through
population growth, that it is no longer possible to solve problems by improving the existing land use. A
completely new use may be necessary, e.g. irrigation.
Improved technology can transform the productive potential of the land - for example fertilizers,
pesticides, improved drainage or irrigation practices, new ways to store or process products, improved
crop and livestock varieties. Research and extension services play key roles in developing, adapting and
introducing new technology.
Economic opportunities include new sources of capital, new or improved markets, changes to the price
structure, the improvement of transport and communications. Often, the application of improved
technology to land is rendered difficult or impossible by the relative prices of inputs and products.
Government action may create opportunities, for example by the reform of land tenure and
administrative structure and through policies of taxation, pricing, subsidies and investment.
At this stage, the opportunities considered need not be specified in great detail but should be
wide-ranging to include all possibilities that appear realistic (a process sometimes called
"brainstorming").
Options for change
There is usually more than one way to tackle a problem. Alternatives may be needed to give due
attention to the interests of competing groups and serve as a starting point for negotiations. The plan that
is finally accepted may include aspects of more than one option.
The options developed in this step will depend on the goals, the strategy pursued to reach these goals,
opportunities and problems presented by the people and the land and the finance and other resources
available. For example, problems of food production will demand agricultural or economic action;
opportunities for tourism will depend on ways of attracting and accommodating tourists.
Options can be described in terms of ways and means:
• Non-land-use planning options. In the example illustrated by Figure 7, population policy and food aid
are beyond the scope of land-use planning.
• Allocations of land use. Land-use types are allocated to specific areas of land; for example, irrigated
farming to bottomlands, forestry to steep slopes and stream reservations. This option is widely applied in
new settlement schemes but is more difficult to apply where land is already occupied.
• New land uses. A complete change is made by introducing new kinds of land use not previously
practiced in the area, for example irrigation.
• Improvements to land-use types. Improvements are made to existing farming systems or other land-use
types in order to make them more productive or sustainable. The improvements must be brought about
through extension services, often combined with improved infrastructure and services (e.g. supplies of
inputs). This option follows directly from the analysis of problems. It is one of the principal means of
bringing about change in areas that have already been settled.
• Standards. Standards may consist of planning guidelines or limits. For example, conservation standards
might specify "no cultivation within 40 m of streams or on slopes greater than 12°"; limits to safeguard
life and property might specify "no housing or industrial development in designated flood hazard or
landslide zones". Standards of this kind, however, are hard to enforce, unless the problems that have led
to their being broken are addressed.
Other standards refer to land management, for example standards for terrace construction, fertilization or
land drainage. Interest rates on loans for farm improvement may be limited, to 5 percent for instance. For
subsequent land evaluation, these management standards are built into the defined land-use types.
Procedures
There is no fixed procedure for selection of alternatives for change. Some courses of action will be
suggested by farmers, others by extension staff or people with an interest in the area, while the planners
may develop still others from the information obtained in Step 3. What is essential is to keep all
interested people informed and seek their views. Some guidelines are as follows:
• Focus on questions regarding what action can be taken within the plan. Some decisions may have
been made already at a higher level of planning. For example, it may have been decided at the national
level to build a road through the planning area. The choice to be made locally is the route, based on how
it will best serve the existing or planned settlements.
• Consider alternative land-use strategies. None of the following strategies are likely to be followed
alone. They represent extremes to be used as a basis for an analysis and comparison of different courses
of action.
- No change. Continue the present systems of land use. Since there are problems, this is unlikely to be
adopted, but examination of its consequences is useful to see if suggested improvements are any better.
- Maximum production. This may be for all products, for selected products (e.g. food crops), for
maximum financial benefit or to support the greatest number of people on the land.
- Minimum public investment. To bring about improvements which benefit the people while making the
lowest demands on scarce investment funds.
- Maximum conservation. Maximum production in the short term may lead to accelerating erosion or
pollution. The alternative of maximum conservation may be costly or may imply a lower level of
production.
- Maximum equity. A deliberate attempt to give added benefits to poorer sections of the community or to
minority groups.
• Identify a range of possible solutions. Options may be built around various themes. The planner must
find the theme that is most relevant to the goals and the planning area. Again, a compromise between
extremes will be necessary.
- Types of production. Which type of production should be encouraged: commercial, subsistence or a
combination of the two? How should land and resources be allocated between the different kinds of
production?
- Production or conservation? A trade-off between these alternatives is often necessary in the short term.
Standards, and hence allocation of land to different uses, may differ between these alternatives. For
example, the maximum slope angle of cultivated land may be 20° in the "production" alternative and 8°
in the "conservation" alternative.
- Self-reliance or outside investment? An alternative favouring self-reliance would be based on
traditional crops, intermediate technology and local credit. An alternative requiring outside assistance
might introduce more sophisticated technology, perhaps new crops and outside finance.
Identify a wide range of possible solutions that meet each of the demands in the planning area. For
example, if a shortage of fuelwood is a problem, then all the land not already cultivated could be put into
fuelwood plantations, even though much of the area is grazed and there is also a shortage of pasture.
Alternatively, fuel could be imported, if this is feasible, without planning for any change in fuelwood
production.
• Develop options within the extremes. Develop options that have a realistic chance of being
implemented. Moderate the maximum range of options by social imperatives, budgetary and
administrative constraints, the demands of competing land uses and an initial assessment of land
suitability. Thus, the planner addressing the fuelwood and grazing problems might develop three options:
to allocate 20 percent of the area to fuelwood plantations, retain 30 percent of the area in grazing and
import fuel to meet the continuing but reduced need; to meet the fuelwood demand by having 30 percent
of the area under plantations, with a reduction in pasture; or the same as the second option, but with a
parallel extension effort in intensive livestock production to compensate for the reduction in grazing area.
Compatible land uses can be combined to satisfy a number of demands. For example, multiple forest
management methods can be developed that combine elements of wood production, watershed
protection, wildlife and recreation. Agroforestry technologies exist that permit the production of
fuelwood or fodder with food crops on the same land, or that combine soil conservation with production.
At the end of Step 4, promising land-use types have been identified and specified in terms of what they
have to achieve, for example "integrated arable and livestock farming to increase livestock production
and stabilize soil loss". At this stage, however, information about the requirements and potential of these
land-use types is very incomplete. Results from Steps 5 and 6 may show that promising options are not
viable, thereby making it necessary to reconsider the alternatives in Step 4.
Public and executive discussion of problems and alternatives
A further stage of responsibility now lies with the decision-makers. The planning team prepares the
problem statements (from Step 3) and the alternatives for change in terms that are suitable for public and
executive discussion: clear, brief summaries, but with detailed evidence available for scrutiny. The
alternatives are presented to representatives of the local people, government officials and other interested
agencies.
A basic decision is whether, in the light of work to date, the original goals still appear to be attainable.
Assuming this to be so, two choices must now be made: which problems are to be given priority and
which are the most promising alternatives for further study. Finally, the decision-maker can draw
attention to action needed at other levels of land-use planning (e.g. at the national level, arising from a
district-level plan) and action desirable outside the scope of land-use planning.
Following these decisions, targets for this subsequent work must be specified. A partial reiteration of
Step 2 may now be necessary, planning subsequent steps more specifically than before. If necessary, an
additional or revised budget and time schedule must be prepared.
CHECKLIST
Step 4
IDENTIFICATION OF OPPORTUNITIES FOR CHANGE
Responsibility: planning team
• Based on the goals from Step I and problem statements from Step 3, isolate problems for which
solutions other than land-use planning must be sought.
Generate a range of options for solving each problem, in terms of:
- opportunities: the people, land resources, improved technology, economic measures,
government action;
-land-use strategies: no change, maximum production, minimum investment, maximum
conservation, maximum equity;
- kinds of production, the role of conservation, self-reliance versus external investment.
• Develop realistic options that best meet the needs of production, conservation and sustainability and
that minimize conflicts of land use.
• Prepare outline budgets and time frames for each option.
• Present the problem statements (from Step 3) and the alternatives for change in terms suitable for
public and executive discussion.
Responsibility: decision-makers
• Decide if the goals are attainable.
• Select the priority problems.
• Choose the most promising alternatives for a feasibility study; specify targets.
• Specify action needed at other levels of planning.
Having selected relevant land qualities, it is necessary to decide which land characteristics are to be used
for measuring them. For example, the quality "erosion hazard" requires information on rainfall intensity,
slope angle and soil properties.
A compromise must be reached between characteristics that most closely define the land quality and
those that are less precise but on which information is more readily available. Out of necessity, the
choice is limited to those characteristics for which information is already available or can be gathered
quickly. If there is no information on a critical land quality, surveys must be carried out or research
initiated.
Land evaluations are sometimes conducted directly in terms of land characteristics, e.g. by using rainfall
instead of availability of water, slope angle instead of erosion hazard. There is, in fact, a hidden use of
land qualities in this way of doing things, since plants do not actually require rainfall but do require water
(which might alternatively be obtained from a high water-table in a dry area, for example). In practice,
evaluations carried out carefully using either qualities or characteristics give quite similar results.
Mapping of land units and their characteristics
In Step 3, land units were identified as a basis for the diagnosis of problems. It may now be necessary to
map these units in more detail, e.g. by dividing land systems into land facets or complex soil mapping
units into soil series. The criterion for choice of land units is that they are expected to respond to
management in a relatively similar way at the scale of the study.
Whether it is now necessary as part of the land-use plan to conduct original surveys depends on the
requirements of the plan and the detail and reliability of the information available. Soil surveys,
agroclimatic studies, forest inventories and pasture resource inventories are major sources. For land-use
planning at the national level, reconnaissance surveys at scales of about 1:250000 may be adequate;
district-level planning will need at least semi-detailed surveys at a scale of about 1:50000.
Natural resource surveys take a substantial amount of time and will delay the planning procedure.
However, past experience has shown that to proceed with land development projects without adequate
resource data can lead to disasters, both for production and conservation. In practice, resource surveys
and studies of land-use types can proceed at the same time, with frequent interchanges of information.
TABLE 5
Structure of the FAO land suitability classification
S SUITABLE The land can support the land use indefinitely and benefits justify inputs
S1 Highly suitable Land without significant limitations. Include the best 20-30% of suitable
land as S1. This land is not perfect but is the best that can be hoped for
S2 Moderately suitable Land that is clearly suitable but which has limitations that either reduce
productivity or increase the inputs needed to sustain productivity
compared with those needed on S1 land
S3 Marginally suitable Land with limitations so severe that benefits are reduced and/or the
inputs needed to sustain production are increased so that this cost is only
marginally justified
N NOT SUITABLE Land that cannot support the land use on a sustained basis, or land on
which benefits do not justify necessary inputs
N1 Currently not suitable Land with limitations to sustained use that cannot be overcome at a
currently acceptable cost
N2 Permanently not suitable Land with limitations to sustained use that cannot be overcome
Examples of classes in the third category
S2e Land assessed as S2 on account of limitation of erosion hazard
S2w Land assessed as S2 on account of inadequate availability of water
N2e Land assessed as N2 on account of limitation of erosion hazard
Note: There is no standard system for letter designations of limitations; first-letter reminders should be
used where possible.
Setting limiting values for land-use requirements
Limiting values are the values of a land quality or land characteristic that determine the class limits of
land suitability for a certain use. The standard FAO land suitability classification is shown in Table 5.
The first and most important decision is to separate land that is suitable from that which is not. Important
criteria for deciding on the suitability of land for a specific use are sustainability and ratio of benefits to
costs.
• The land should be able to support the land use on a sustained basis. This means that the use must not
progressively degrade the land. Many changes of land use cause an initial loss of land resources: for
example, when forest is cleared for tea plantations or for arable farming, there is always a loss of forest
habitat and wildlife as well as of soil and accumulated plant nutrients.
From then on, a good level of productivity must be maintained by the new system of management. For
example, if soil erosion is not controlled, the new land-use type cannot be sustained. According to the
land-use type, the upper limit of the land quality "erosion hazard" might be set in terms of slope, as
follows:
- plantation tea, high level of management: 20
- smallholder tea, average level of management: 15
- rain-fed arable crops with simple soil conservation practices: 8
• The use should yield benefits that justify the inputs. The user has to make a reasonable living from the
land. Local experience will usually be the best guide. Alternatively, a financial analysis can be
undertaken.
It is then possible to distinguish up to three classes of suitability, although this is not always necessary.
Land classed as highly suitable is the best land for the specified use; moderately suitable land is clearly
fit for the use but has limitations; while marginally suitable land falls near to (but above) the limit for
suitability. Land that is not suitable may be subdivided into permanently not suitable, where there are
limitations to sustained use that are clearly impractical to overcome; and currently not suitable, where
such limitations could be overcome but not at a currently acceptable cost.
TABLE 6
Example of land requirements for a specified land-use type (bunded rice)
Land qualities Land Limiting values for land characteristics
characteristics S1 S2 S3 N
Sufficiency of Mean annual >24 21-24 18-21 <18
energy temperature,
(°C) or
Elevation (m)* 0-600 600-1200 1200-1800 >1800
Sufficiency of 75% probability >1300 900-1300 500-900 <500
water rainfall (mm)
Soil drainage class Poorly Imperfectly Moderately Excessively
drained drained well drained drained
Soil texture C, ZC, SC, SCL, ZL, Z SL S, LS
ZCL, L
Soil depth (cm) >80 60-80 40-60 <40
Sufficiency of pH of flooded soil 6-7 56 4.5-5 <4.5
nutrients 7-8 8-8.5 >8.5
Salinity hazard ECe (mS cm-1) <3 3-5 5-7 >7
Ease of water Slope angle <1 1 -2 2-6 >6
control (degrees)
Ease of Stones and rock Nil 1-5 5-10 >10
cultivation outcrops (%)
* Elevation is used to assess sufficiency of energy where temperature data are not available; these values
apply to Sri Lanka.
Source: Dent and Ridgway (1986).
The construction of a table of limiting values for each land suitability class (see Table 6) is a central
operation in land evaluation. To do this, information is needed on the performance of a land-use type
over a range of sites, taken either from trials or the experience of land users.
The land requirements for several individual crops can be combined to assess the needs of a land-use
type that includes several crops grown together or in rotation.
Matching land use with land
The first stage in matching is to compare the requirements of each land-use type with the land qualities of
each land unit. The simplest procedure is to:
• check measured values of each land quality or characteristic against the class limits;
• allocate each land unit to its land suitability class according to the most severe limitation
(Fig. 8).
For cases in which at least one limitation is enough to render the land unsuitable for the use, the method
of taking the most severe limitation is valid. For example, for maize cultivation it is of no use having
level land and sufficient rainfall if the soils are highly saline. For less severe values of limitations,
alternative methods of combining ratings for individual qualities can be used.
Matching, however, can become a wider process than the simple comparison of requirements with
qualities. Wherever this initial comparison shows certain land units to be unsuitable for a given use, the
specification of the land-use type can be examined to see if, by modifying it, the suitability of those land
units can be raised.
Figure 8: Example of the process of qualitative land suitability classification
Thus, if suitability has been downgraded owing to erosion hazard, a new land-use type could be designed
with the addition of contour-aligned hedgerows or other soil conservation measures. The use of
fast-maturing crop varieties in areas with a short growing season is another example. By adapting the
land-use types to meet the limitations present in the area in this way, higher overall suitabilities can be
achieved.
A further possibility is the introduction of land improvements, inputs which bring about relatively
permanent improvements in the characteristics of the land. Examples are drainage of land that is too wet
or terracing of steeplands. In this way, the land is adapted to the requirements of the land use. Land
improvements invariably require maintenance as well as capital expenditure.
Qualitative and quantitative land evaluation
Some decisions need only qualitative land evaluation: for example, identifying the critical importance of
certain areas for important land uses such as for an export crop. Quantitative economic evaluations,
however, require estimates of crop yields, rates of tree growth, or other measures of performance. It is
not realistic to predict the performance of each land suitability class unless data are available on plant
growth (or other measures of performance) and the relevant inputs from well-characterized sites, and
unless the physical characteristics of the land mapping units are equally well known. Quantitative models
have been developed for several major crops but these demand good data. Even when predictions are
based on carefully controlled trials, they may be confounded in practice by variations in management.
Therefore, try to estimate a range of performance under the likely standards of management.
Figure 9: A land suitability map: areas suited for forestry, Sandakan Residence, Sabah, Malaysia
Scale 1:2000000
Prepared by the Directorate of Overseas Surveys, 1976.
Source: Thomas, Lo and Hepburn (1976).
Land suitability classification
The comparison of requirements of land-use types with properties of land units is brought together in a
land suitability classification. Suitability is indicated separately for each land-use type, showing whether
the land is suitable or not suitable, including - where appropriate - degrees of suitability (Table 5). The
major reasons for lowering the classifications, i.e. the land limitations, should be indicated (because of
erosion hazard in one area or a high water-table in another, for instance). In large or complex surveys
involving many mapping units land evaluation can be assisted by the use of geographic information
systems (see p. 77). A major facility is that, if the land suitability data are entered into such system, when
a change is made to one or more limiting values, new maps of land suitability can be rapidly produced.
The outputs from Step 5 are:
• land suitability maps, showing the suitability of each land unit for each land-use type (Fig.
9);
• descriptions of these land-use types.
The descriptions of land-use types are given in a degree of detail appropriate to the level of planning. At
the national level, only outline descriptions of major kinds of land use may be needed. At district and
local levels, land-use type descriptions should specify the management, inputs (e.g. seeds, fertilizer, fuel)
and estimated production (see Table 3). Such information will later be needed to make provision for the
supply of inputs and for storage, distribution and marketing (Step 9).
Planning for research
The evaluation process in this step will almost certainly have shown up information deficiencies. The
tolerances of plants (or of crop cultivars, tree provenances) to particular land limitations are rarely known
with any precision. Where new land-use types are proposed for introduction to the area, it will be
necessary to conduct trials (on-station and on-farm) to validate their performance before they can be
safely recommended for adoption. Gaps in knowledge of land resources may also have been revealed,
thus calling for additional surveys.
It is impracticable to delay the land-use plan until all such research has been completed; but, at the same
time, it is unwise to proceed if there is a serious lack of information. Action can be taken in two ways:
• Outside the land-use plan. Draw the attention of national and international research
agencies as well as universities and donors to the need for research in specified aspects if
land development of the area is to proceed on a proper basis of knowledge.
• Within the land-use plan. Based on existing local institutions (strengthened if necessary),
set up trials or other research activities as part of the land-use plan itself.
Either of these ways will form a "research loop", feeding back information for making more reliable
evaluations and more productive and sustainable land use in the future. Do not be put off by the
apparently long time scale, three to five years as a minimum, of most kinds of research. By anticipating
likely problems, there is a better chance of results becoming available when they are needed.
CHECKLIST
Step 5
LAND SUITABILITY EVALUATION
Responsibility: planning team
• Describe land-use types in sufficient detail for subsequent analysis.
• Select land qualities and land characteristics to be used in comparisons of land-use requirements with
land.
• Map the land units and determine their relevant land characteristics and qualities.
• Set limiting values to land-use requirements, to be used for determining class limits for land
suitability. Take into account sustainability and the ratio of benefits to inputs.
• Match land use with land:
- compare land-use requirements with land qualities or characteristics to determine
provisional land suitability classes;
- consider modifications to land-use types, in order that they become better suited to the
land;
- consider land improvements that could make the land better suited to the land use.
• Map land suitability for each land-use type.
• Plan for research needed: additional surveys, research by outside agencies or within the land-use plan.
Plate 5: Environmental problems from capital works. The Volta Dam, Ghana - Large engineering
projects create dramatic local environmental changes but may also have far-reaching indirect
impacts. A reduction in the sediment load of the Volta River has changed the pattern of coastal
erosion and sedimentation more than 100 km away
One way of doing this is to model the performance of different options and their effects on representative
land users. A word of caution is necessary: quantitative data are not necessarily better, more reliable or
more accurate than qualitative data. Sophisticated models need a lot of data and make assumptions that
should be clearly understood before the models are applied to particular problems. There will be many
cases where a qualitative judgement is more appropriate.
Environmental impact
The land suitability evaluation has already classified as "not suitable" any land use that continually
degrades the land. An analysis of environmental impact goes further. It compares what will happen under
each alternative system of management in terms of the quality of life of the whole community and takes
account of effects both within and beyond (off-site effects) the planning area.
In-depth knowledge of physical, chemical and biological processes and how these interact with society is
needed to foresee the likely environmental impact of a specific land-use system. Often, the impact of a
particular activity may be long term or several stages removed from the primary cause of the problem.
For example, in Sri Lanka coastal erosion and flooding have been caused by the exploitation of
protective underwater coral barriers for lime production. In West Africa, current coastal erosion has been
attributed to big dams, built on major rivers over 20 years ago, which have intercepted the supply of
sediment to the coastal zone (Plate 5).
Following are examples of the environmental effects to be considered:
• Soil and water resources. Hazard of soil erosion, landslides and sedimentation; security of water supply
and water quality within and beyond the planning area.
• Pasture and forest resources. Degradation of rangelands, clearance or degradation of forests.
• Quality of wildlife habitat. Structure and composition of forests, grasslands and wetlands; critical areas
needed to maintain wild plant and animal communities, including germplasm conservation; side-effects
of terrestrial developments on wetland ecosystems;
• Scenic and recreational value for tourism and leisure industries. Tolerance of the disturbance
associated with leisure, and compatibility with other land uses.
Economic analysis
In Step 5, land suitability is expressed either in qualitative terms (highly, moderately and marginally
suitable, or not suitable) or in quantitative physical terms (e.g. crop or timber yield). By comparing the
production and other benefits with inputs in terms of money, an extra quantitative measure of land
suitability is provided (see Financial and economic analysis, p. 81).
An underlying assumption of financial and economic analysis is that market prices, established in
competitive markets, reflect social values. Where there is no competitive market for a resource, which is
often the case with renewable land resources and family labour, some other measure of worth has to be
found.
Financial analysis looks at profitability from the point of view of a farmer or other private investor, by
comparing the producers' revenues with their costs. Farmers will not practice a land use unless, from
their point of view, it pays. Financial analysis can answer some immediate, practical questions:
• Is this crop, or land use, the most profitable option?
• Where can this crop be grown, or land use practiced, most profitably?
Economic analysis estimates the value of a system of land use to the community as a whole. For
example, if prices to the producer are reduced by taxes or held at an artificially high value by subsidies,
these taxes or subsidies have to be eliminated to arrive at a shadow price for production. Costs have to be
treated in the same way.
Where there are clear economic consequences of environmental effects, for example the reduction of
sediment in rivers, the money value to the community can be estimated and included in economic
analysis.
Comparisons of financial with economic analysis can highlight the need for policy changes. A particular
land use, for example high stocking rates on communal grazing land (which is free to the producer), may
be degrading pastures and soils, thus destroying land resources. If financial analysis shows the use to be
advantageous from the farmers' point of view, it is likely to continue, however environmentally or, in the
longer term, socially damaging it is. Economic analysis should take account of damage to land resources
and the consequent lowering of their productivity. Policy changes will be needed to make a socially
desirable kind of land use equally advantageous to the farmer. Similarly, financial analysis may
demonstrate that farmers do not have an incentive to produce a surplus for sale. If government policy
requires increased production, a change of pricing policy may be an effective way to provide incentives
to achieve the desired change.
Limitations of economic analysis
Economic analysis is easier where there is general agreement on social values and development goals
and where there are freely competitive markets. It is complicated where there are distortions of the
market or where development brings unintended side-effects, such as pollution or the loss of communal
resources, e.g. access to grazing or fuelwood. It is the job of the planner to identify these side-effects and
to assess their economic costs.
A serious limitation of economic analysis is that it is biased in favour of quick-yielding investments. The
technique of discounted cash flow analysis, which is used to convert costs and benefits arising in the
future to present-day values, has the effect that benefits accruing more than about 25 years in the future
have virtually no present value at discount rates greater than 10 percent (Figs 10 and 11). This makes it
difficult to justify long-term investments, especially in forestry. The choice of discount rate has more
effect on the value of any long-term agricultural or forestry development than the predicted yields of
crops or timber.
Finally, costs and prices can change within a few years and projections of their future levels are risky.
For example, it may be found that oil-palm is a more profitable crop shall rubber at present-day costs and
prices but, by the time these crops are producing, the position may have reversed. There is no easy
solution to this problem. For perennial crops or forestry, it may prove better to adopt land uses that
perform best in physical terms, rather than seeking short-term price advantages. Economic calculations
must be updated periodically during the planning period.
Strategic planning
Strategic planning must take a medium- to long-term view to avoid closing options for the future.
Land-use policy must take account of land suitability, the current economic situation, the production and
services obtainable in relation to the expected future needs and the possibility of meeting demands from
elsewhere.
Land with severe physical limitations usually offers few viable options. Land-use planning is more
difficult for land that is well suited for many different uses. Besides physical and economic suitability,
one needs to know the critical importance of land for specified uses. This means estimating not only
whether a particular area is physically suitable but also whether it is important that this specific area of
land should be used in a particular way. Examples are protected sites for the preservation of rare plant
communities or the prevention of urban encroachment on to prime farmland.
This issue can be addressed by first devising realistic alternative scenarios of future needs and then
comparing estimates of the potential production with the target production. If a target can be met easily,
no particular area of land is likely to be critical for that use and, therefore, flexibility of land use is high.
But if most of the physically suitable land will be needed to meet the target, all such land is critical and
flexibility of land use is low.
Figure 10: Current worth of $1000 received in future years at different discount rates
Figure 11: Current worth of a benefit of $1000 received ten or 20 years hence at different discount
rates, compared with present costs
Social impact
The most profitable land use for each parcel of land can be calculated in financial and economic terms
but this does not fully represent the effects on the community. Social impact analysis studies the effects
of proposed changes on different groups of people. Particular attention should be given to effects on
women, ethnic minorities and the poorest sections of the community.
There are no fixed procedures for assessing the social impact of a proposed change of land use. The
social purpose of the land-use plan should be laid down at the outset and the impact of each system of
land use can be judged against this goal. Examples of social factors that might be considered are:
• Population. Its projected size, distribution and age structure; the desirability or otherwise
of migration.
• Basic needs. Food security, lessening of risk (e.g. in planning subsistence production as
compared with cash cropping).
• Employment and income opportunities. For example, mechanization may have been
considered as a means of achieving lower production costs but this could lead to
unemployment.
• Land tenure and customary rights. For example, grazing and water rights.
• Administrative structure and legislation with in which planning must operate.
• Community stability.
Understanding how present land-use decisions are made is essential in order to understand the full
economic and social implications of any proposed change. Farming systems analysis can provide an
integrated view by taking the farm family as the decision-making unit. The case will often be that, what
appears to be the optimum land use when viewed from a district level, is impracticable at the farming
system level. This is because individual families have to satisfy their needs from their own farm, which
will not include all kinds of land nor the same proportions as the district or catchment as a whole.
Interface of land-use planning with rural development planning
Often, a change in land use will require investment in physical infrastructure (roads, storage and
processing facilities) and services (marketing, credit, veterinary). New or enlarged settlements also need
infrastructure and social services, such as water supply, health and education services. These social gains
from a rural development plan may compensate for benefits that have to be foregone, such as the
restriction of communal grazing. In this respect, land-use planning merges with rural development
planning while changes in land use may support improved facilities for the community.
CHECKLIST
Step 6
APPRAISAL OF ALTERNATIVES: ENVIRONMENTAL, ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL
ANALYSIS
Responsibility: planning team
• The following studies refer first to individual combinations of land use with land units that have been
classed as suitable in physical terms and, second, to alternative combinations of land use that are being
considered in the plan.
- Environmental impact assessment: soil and water resources, pasture and forest resources, wildlife
conservation, resources for tourism and recreation; off-site effects.
- Financial analysis: are the proposed land-use types profitable for the farmer or other land users?
- Economic analysis: what is the value of the proposed changes to the community, within and beyond
the planning area? Are there areas of land of critical importance (for production or conservation) for
certain uses?
- Social impact: what effects will the proposed changes have on different sections of the community,
especially women, minority groups and the poor?
- Strategic planning: how do the proposed changes in laud use affect wider aspects of rural
development planning, including national goals?
Contents - Previous - Next
Contents - Previous - Next
Note:
... data not available.
l.u. = livestock units.
The tasks of storage, retrieval and interpretation of a large and heterogeneous mass of information can be
assisted by computerized methods. These can be used for the repetitive task of comparing the predicted
performance of land units against multiple criteria and can present the user with the consequences of
alternative decisions in terms of the optimum land-use pattern and goals achievement.
For the increasingly complex tasks of selecting sites for development projects, allocating land among
several land uses, developing policies on land use as well as allocating resources, hundreds of individual
land units and many alternative land uses may have to be considered. The decision-maker must take into
account a variety of practical considerations, including:
• the expressed preferences of the local people;
• the interests of minority groups;
• national policies;
• constraints, e.g. of land tenure and availability of inputs;
• the maintenance of environmental standards;
• practicability - potential implementing agencies should be consulted;
• costs and the availability of funding.
TABLE 9
Example of a tabular plan format1
Land units Mountains Basins
12-28° slopes Terrace Bottomland Steep knolls
8-20° slopes
Present land use Subtropical mixed Well-managed paddy. tobacco and Badly managed
broadleaf forest, 30% vegetables tea or waste
degraded
Problems Accessibility, landslips, Water shortage in dry periods: low Severe soil
soil erosion on recently incomes. modest rice yield on coarser erosion: low
logged sites soils. Flooding in bottomland. Water yields
pollution from paper mill effluent
Planned changes Replant degraded land. Increased Fish pond project Upgrade better tea
Bamboo and spruce fertilizer use and sites. Farm
plantations on lower high yielding rice woodlots of quick
gentle slopes: pines on on best paddy growing species
poorer sites irrigated soils to release for the rest
fruit trees more permeable
soils for
Standards Strict control of logging Upgrade extension services. Advise on For tea. mulch
within limits of agrochemical practices to avoid during replanting
regeneration. Extraction pollution. Weirs to control water supply. and pruning: build
routes to avoid landslip Do not use field runoff for fish ponds. back sloping
hazards Divert paper mill effluent terraces and
protected
waterways
1 Thisis essentially a legend to the planning map which shows the land units and locations
of special projects such as the fish ponds and farm woodland projects.
At this point the decision-maker can appraise the overall situation and, if dissatisfied with the
achievement of any particular policy guideline, can adjust the weighting of the criteria or introduce new
ones. With the aid of a computer, a new land-use pattern and its suitability scores can be produced
quickly and, perhaps over several iterations between the decision-maker and the decision support system,
an optimum solution may be arrived at.
Good land-use decisions can be arrived at without the assistance of a computerized decision support
system. The procedure is the same whether a computer is used or not but the computer package enables
the decision-maker to take account of much more information and to learn from predicted consequences
of alternative decisions.
Second major consultation
The draft plan should now be submitted for public scrutiny. This is the last chance to bring in outside
opinions about the plan and, for most people, it is their first chalice to find out in detail what the plan is
supposed to achieve and how it will affect them.
In the final analysis, most land-use decisions will be taken by the thousands of individual land users, all
making decisions from their own points of view. l se every available means to achieve public
involvement - through meetings, posters, the press, broadcasts and government agencies. Many countries
have no established tradition or mechanism for public consultation. Consultation may be organized
through government, political party mechanisms or traditional systems.
Allow adequate time for reviews and comments, as determined by the decision-maker or planning
regulations, and fix a deadline for the receipt of comments.
Review comments and resolve conflicts
Since the comments may be numerous, a systematic process for dealing with them must be adopted. The
planners can:
• group the comments according to land use, land users or products;
• assign comments by subject area to a member of the planning team for responses;
• list proposed changes in the draft plan;
• submit comments, responses and proposed changes to the decision-maker.
The decision-makers must decide:
-whether the responses to the comments are adequate;
- which, if any, changes should be made to the draft plan.
Not everyone will be satisfied with the plan. Whatever compromises or adjustments are made, there will
still be people who disagree. This should not prevent most of the community from benefiting from the
plan. Some way must be found to resolve conflicts. Essentially, this has to be by negotiation, with all
sides having the opportunity to prepare and present their case. The consequences of decisions at different
planning levels, above and below that of the plan, must be considered, with two-way flows of
information (see Fig. 1).
The critical point in Step 7 is reached with selection of the option that is judged to be the best. This forms
the basis for subsequent preparation of the plan. The data and evaluation of other options are not
discarded, but recorded in the report, since they may be needed for later revision.
Finally, the decision-maker must authorize subsequent steps; that is, the preparation of the chosen plan.
At the local level, this may simply require an executive decision, with preparation and implementation
proceeding directly. At the district level, there may now be a need to formulate implementation as a new
project requiring further funding and additional staff, in which case there will be a time delay between
Steps 7 and 8. At the national level, the most likely action at this point is for the ''national master
land-use plan" (or similar title) to be submitted for approval at the highest level of government, after
which it will form the basis for policy decisions.
CHECKLIST
Step 7
CHOICE OF THE BEST OPTION
Responsibility: planning team
• Set out a series of options for the allocation or recommendation of land-use types to land units. Also
state their evaluation in terms of land suitability and environmental, economic and social analysis.
• Set out the consequences of these options in terms of the goals and planning objectives.
• Present the options and their consequences in a way that is appropriate for review.
Responsibility: planning team and decision-makers
• Make arrangements for consultations with the communities affected as well as with the implementing
agencies; obtain views about feasibility and acceptability.
• Assemble and review the comments received. In the light of these, make any necessary changes to the
options.
Responsibility: decision-makers
• Decide if the response to comments is adequate.
• Consider the options in terms of goals and policy criteria.
• Choose the best option.
• Authorize preparation of the plan.
Following this, reasons for the choices and decisions made must be given, again both in outline and in some detail. These explanations are needed by
funding agencies wishing to review the soundness of the proposals from technical, economic or other viewpoints. The basic data also constitute a baseline
for future monitoring and revision of the plan. The more basic information available, the easier it becomes to revise the plan in the future (Step 10).
Logistic planning
The planner must next consider the practical details of implementing the plan: decide the means, assign responsibility for getting the job done and lay
down a timetable for implementation. Set targets that are realistically obtainable, not based on optimism. It may be possible to use experience from
previous development programmes to indicate the rate of change that can be achieved in practice. Certainly, the plan must be in accordance with what the
people concerned are prepared to do.
Logistic planning is a wide-ranging process, calling for previous experience of similar projects. Some guidelines for tasks that need to be done are:
• Draw up a planning base map, showing areas chosen for development year by year. Tabulate these areas.
• Based on the above, itemize the needs for:
- land improvements;
- supporting services;
- physical infrastructure;
- credit and other internal financial services.
• On the same basis, together with the management specifications for land-use types, calculate the inputs needed, for example:
- seed/germplasm (crop cultivars, tree provenances);
- fertilizers, by type;
- pesticides;
- irrigation equipment.
• Plan priority land improvements, for example water storage and supply, roads, drains and other engineering works.
• Plan extension programmes and incentives.
• Identify who is to be responsible for which activity. In particular, junior staff must know what is expected of them and must be given adequate
incentives.
• Ensure that there are adequate arrangements for financing staff costs, inputs and credit.
• Give particular attention to provision for maintenance of all capital works.
• Discuss the details of the arrangements with the decision-maker and relevant agency staff in terms of:
- feasibility and acceptability;
- availability of advisory staff;
- availability of logistic support;
- availability of supervision.
• Assess the need for staff training.
• Make the necessary arrangements for research, within the plan or through outside agencies.
• Establish a procedure for reviewing the plan's progress (Step 10).
Staffing, timing and costs
As one form of summary of the logistic planning, list the requirements for implementation in terms of:
• Staffing: specialists, technical staff, labour.
• Timing: the intended scheduling of changes, drawn up as tables.
• Costs: the finance needed to implement the plan, its scheduling year by year and proposed sources of funding.
• Financial control, including independent audit.
Format of the plan
One of the main difficulties in drafting a land-use plan is the wide range of readership that needs to be informed. This ranges from senior government
ministers, who have time only to read outline summaries of what is to be d one, to technical staff responsible for implementation and the field extension
staff who will have to apply the findings to local areas.
To meet the needs of these different users, it has frequently been found useful to divide the plan into the following sections:
• Executive summary. Written for non-technical decision-makers; a summary of the land-use situation, its problems, the opportunities and the
recommendations for action, i.e. the focal point. Reasons for decisions taken are given, but only briefly. Clear, concise writing is of the highest
importance. This section should include at least one key map, the (master) land-use plan and possibly other maps at small scales. It is typically 20 to 50
pages long at the most.
• Main report. Explains the methods, findings and factual basis of the plan. Written for technical and planning staff who want to know details, including
reasons for decisions taken. Often five to ten times as long as the executive summary.
• Maps volume. An integral part of the main report, presented separately for convenience of binding.
• Appendixes. Give the technical data that support the main report. These may run to several volumes. They include the results from original surveys
conducted as part of the plan, e.g. soil surveys, forest inventories, records of river flow.
Box 9
Example of headings for a land-use plan
TITLE
Land-use plan for...
• Note that until the plan has been approved by the decision-maker, it is a "proposed land-use plan".
SUMMARY
• Highlight problems, recommendations and the main reasons for these recommendations.
INTRODUCTION
• The long-term goals for the planning area and the purpose of the plan
• Relationship with other documents. Briefly describe legislation and any higher-level plans as well as local plans that are related to this plan.
• Description of the planning area. A brief overview of location, area, population, land resources, current land use and production
MANAGEMENT PROBLEMS AND OPPORTUNITIES
• Statement of land-use problems and opportunities.
• Rationale for the selected option.
• Summary of the changes the plan will bring about, by subject area or geographic area.
DIRECTION
• List land-use types and standards that apply to the whole planning area and to individual planning units.
• Identify projects. Illustrate with maps and diagrams.
• Time scale for action.
MONITORING AND REVISION
• Describe the procedure for reviewing progress and revising the plan.
WORK PLAN FOR IMPLEMENTATION
• List individual projects with details of location, time, resources required and responsibility for implementation.
APPENDIXES
• Supporting information:
- physical environment, planning units, agroclimate and soil data;
- population, settlement, infrastructure, tenure;
- present land use;
- land-use types and land requirements;
- land suitability;
- economic projections.
Systems analysis
Data are often processed by means of systems analysis; that is, the analysis and modelling of interrelated
processes. A system to be modelled must have defined boundaries. Within the system there are often
stores of flows (of materials, energy, money, etc.). External flows cross the system boundaries as inputs
and outputs. For example, in modelling nutrient dynamics in a plant-soil system, stores of nutrients occur
in the plants, the organic soil fraction and the mineral soil fraction; internal flows refer, for example, to
litter fall, humification and plant uptake from soil; and external flows to inputs such as atmospheric
nitrogen fixation and outputs such as harvest of crops, or to the loss of nutrients in eroded soil. In
modelling a farming system, some of the flows will refer to materials, such as seed and fertilizers, and
others to energy or money.
Accounts of systems analysis, its potential and problems are given in:
• Arnold and Bennett (1975).
• Bennett and Thomas (1982).
• Biswas (1982).
• IIASA (1980).
• Morris (1977).
• National Research Council (1976).
• Quade and Miser (1982).
• Romero and Rehman (1989).
• Rossmiller (1978).
Geographic information systems
A geographic information system (GIS) is a computer-based system of storage and manipulation of data
which is organized by area or location. Areas can be identified by a grid of cells (cell-based or raster
systems), or information can be stored by means of the boundaries of mapped areas, e.g. land units or
administrative units (polygon-based systems). A GIS enables different kinds of information to be recalled
and combined; for example, areas that are both suitable for export crops and within a specified distance
of an all-weather road could be overlain and mapped.
Most kinds of data processing undertaken on a GIS can also be done manually, by overlay of transparent
maps, comparison and calculation. For small areas and few mapping units, this is the quickest way to do
it. A GIS becomes efficient where there are numerous mapping units and many combinations of data are
needed.
A GIS can offer valuable facilities to land-use planners. First, disaggregated data can be stored and
retrieved by location. For example, crop yields may have been collected in order to calculate a financial
measure of performance like the gross margin; these data can be stored and subsequently retrieved and
used again for other purposes. Point data can be stored as such, rather than being lost by incorporation
into mapping units. Thus, in a soil survey, data such as soil depth and texture, gathered for individual
locations in the field, can be stored and retrieved for use in land evaluation. A further facility is to
undertake complex and manually tedious calculations using any combination of the data in store. In this
way, tables and maps of interpreted information can be produced very quickly. More important, the data
can be updated or corrected and the methods of calculation revised by changing the computer program so
that new maps and tables can be produced rapidly.
The cost of a GIS is now low and quite powerful systems can be run on personal computers. Systems
have been developed for land-use planning, ranging from those that are relatively simple and easy to use
(e.g. Ridgway and Jayasinghe, 1986) to complex ones (e.g. Wood and Dent, 1983; Schultink, 1987).
Accounts of the nature and potential of GISs are given in Burrough (1986) and Maguire, Goodchild and
Rhind (1991). The IDRISI system is relatively easy to use and its capacity is substantial. The CRIES
system (Schultink, 1987) and the ILWIS system (Valenzuela, 1988) are specifically designed for land
resource evaluation. A powerful but very complex system is ARC / INFO.
Natural resource surveys
There is a large number of publications on the survey of natural or environmental resources: following is
a selection.
• Bunting (1987): a collection of methods that have been used for agro-ecological characterization and
classification; see especially the chapters by Young (1987) and Brinkman (1987).
• Dent and Young (1981): an account of soil survey methods, suited to different scales and purposes, and
of land evaluation, including a comparison of the FAO framework with other methods.
• FAO (1979b): soil survey methods for irrigation planning.
• FAO (1984c, 1987): agroclimatological data for Africa and Asia, respectively.
• Landon (1991): a useful reference for many aspects of soil evaluation and classification
• Carver (1981): air photography in land-use planning.
• Lindgren (1985): applications of remote sensing methods in land-use planning.
Box 11
Climatic data for land-use planning
LAND QUALITIES CLIMATIC CHARACTERISTICS
• Sufficiency of energy • Temperature regime, sunshine hours, day length
• Frost hazard • Probability of frost (local occurrence - not adequately recorded
in standard data)
• Sufficiency of water • Reference evaporation Eo
Crop water requirement = Eo x crop coefficient
Rainfall probability
Effective rainfall
• Irrigation need/drought hazard • Rainfall probability - crop water requirement
• Length of growing season • Period of energy and water sufficiency
• Hazard of high winds, high • Probability of occurrence in the growing season
temperature, hail, low humidity
• Erosion hazard • Rainfall intensity
The Agricultural Studies Unit of CIAT has created land system and agroclimatic databases to support
agricultural research management. These and complementary agronomic techniques help CIAT in the
selection of high-yielding crop varieties with farm-effective organic and mineral fertilizer
recommendations for a given ecosystem, while contributing to the successful conservation and use of soil
resources in tropical South America (Cochrane et al., 1984).
Rural land-use analysis
Three methods have been described for the analysis of problems of rural land use: farming systems
analysis, diagnosis and design and rapid rural appraisal. These have much in common: all are centred on
interviews with a sample of rural land users, preferably stratified according to identified classes of
farming system. The methods are not confined to problem diagnosis but include elements of later steps in
land-use planning, particularly the design of improved land-use types and social analysis.
Farming systems analysis. (Fresco et al., 1992; FAO, 1991b, p. 147-152.) This is centred on the
identification of farm-level constraints and aims to develop adapted technologies for specific farming
systems. The publications cited outline how it can be combined with land evaluation as an integrated
sequence, i.e. land evaluation and farming systems analysis (LEFSA).
Diagnosis and design (D&D). (Raintree, 1987a; Young, 1986.) This approach was developed
specifically for the design of agroforestry systems but can be applied to other types of land use.
Diagnosis means the identification of problems with land-use systems and the analysis of their causes;
design is the formulation of promising land-use types that might help solve these problems. The analogy
is with the medical profession where a doctor must diagnose an illness before it can be treated. One way
in which diagnosis and design can be integrated with land evaluation procedures is given in Young
(1986).
Rapid rural appraisal. (Abel et al., 1989; FAO, 1989a; McCracken, Pretty and Conway, 1988). This
approach is intended as a relatively rapid way of acquiring (in a matter of weeks) essential information
on existing rural land-use systems, including the problems they entail.
Modelling
There is a large and increasing number of computer models relevant to different aspects of land-use
planning. Most models consist essentially of quantitative predictions based on input data, for example the
prediction of plant evapotranspiration from weather data or the prediction of net present return from data
on inputs, production, costs and prices. Note that:
• models are only as reliable as the data which are entered into them;
• wherever possible, models should be calibrated for the planning area, its climate, soil
types, etc.; data should be entered and the results compared with an independent measure,
for instance crop yield.
Box 12
Water resource data for land-use planning
• Present water use
- River abstraction, tanks, groundwater
-Location of abstraction points, sluices, dams, wells and boreholes, with yields
• Present storage capacity of tanks and reservoirs
• Reliable yield of water for each river catchment - 75% and 90% probability low flow (from
hydrograph records) or 75% and 90% probability rainfall - Eo over seven- or ten-day day periods x area
of catchment
• Safe yield of groundwater (from test pump data or well records)
• Depth below surface of useful groundwater
• Location of aquifers
• Water quality
• Location of irrigable land
• Legal and customary rights
Figure 16: Example of the relationship between a land characteristic and plant growth: the effect
of soil pH on the growth of storage roots of sweet potato
Source: Hackett (1988).
Results from modelling can be combined with a GIS to show the spatial extent of the effects modelled
(e.g. crop yield, tree growth).
Examples of the purposes for which modelling has been applied in land-use planning are:
• Agriculture (Heady and Srivastara, 1975).
• Crop growth, for example the CERES/DSSAT set of models (Jones and Kiniry, 1986); WOFOST (van
Diepen et al., 1988).
• Crop water requirements (FAO, 1977; 1979a).
• Decision-making in land-use planning (Cocks et al., 1983; Ive, 1984; Ive and Cocks, 1987).
• Forestry and agroforestry (Davey, Prinsley and White, 1991).
• Land evaluation, e.g. automated physical land evaluation (APLE); automated land evaluation system
(ALES) (Beck, Burrough and McCormack, 1987; Higgins et al., 1987; van Keulen et al., 1987).
• Soil erosion, e.g. the universal soil loss equation (USLE) (Wischmeier and Smith, 1978); soil loss
estimator for southern Africa (SLEMSA) (Elwell and Stocking, 1982).
• Soil response to land use, e.g. soil changes under agroforestry (SCUAF) (Young and Muraya, 1990);
CENTURY (Parson et al., 1989).
• Descriptions of a range of models applicable, with references, are found in Bunting (1987) and Davey,
Prinsley and White (1991).
Land evaluation
Land evaluation in its broad sense covers Steps 1 to 6 in Chapter 3, from the setting of goals to land
suitability evaluation, including environmental, economic and social analysis. It has been most widely
applied as qualitative (physical) land evaluation, as in Step 5. Among the information to be found in land
evaluation handbooks are checklists of descriptors for land-use types, land qualities and land
characteristics as relevant to different kinds of land use.
The basis of the approach is described in FAO (1976). Other accounts are given in Dent and Young
(1981) and McCrae and Burnham (1981). Recent developments in quantitative land evaluation, including
computer programs and modelling, are described in Beek, Burrough and McCormack (1987). Detailed
guidelines are available on land evaluation for:
• rain-fed agriculture (FAO, 1983);
• irrigated agriculture (FAO, 1985a);
• forestry (FAO, 1984a);
• extensive grazing (FAO, 1991b).
Requirements for plant growth
The FAO Soil Resources, Management and Conservation Service is establishing a two-level database
(ECOCROP 1 and 2) covering the ecological requirements and responses of plants, with emphasis on
economic crops. ECOCROP 1 which, by July 1993, contained data for 1200 species, identifies arable
crop, pasture and tree species for defined environments.
In ECOCROP 2, designed to support a wide range of existing and future models, information is held in
the form of pairs of coordinates representing the response of a whole plant or plant process at a given
level of an environmental factor, with specified values for the other factors. For example, growth rate at a
given temperature or rate of photosynthesis at a given light intensity. The aim will be to have at least
three or four of such pairs in order to define a response curve.
At an intermediate level, empirical relationships for plant/ environment response have been collected for
a large number of plants by Hackett (1988).
Some countries have begun to collect data on plant growth requirements at a national level under the
direction of national soil survey or land-use planning organizations. Other local systems will be found in
previous land evaluation surveys. Criteria should not be taken uncritically from previous surveys but
rather examined and, if possible, tested.
Financial and economic analysis
Financial and economic analysis for the purpose of land-use planning uses essentially the same basic
methods as do other kinds of project analysis. The foundation of this method is set out in Gittinger
(1982) and Bridger and Wipenny (1983). The application of economic analysis to natural resources is
discussed in Pearce and Turner (1990), Wipenny (1991) and Whitby and Willis (1978).
A specific problem encountered is that of choosing the discount rate for investments of which the returns
will not be received for many years, e.g. most kinds of forestry. This is discussed by Leslie (1987). The
application of economics to land-use planning is discussed in Harrison (1977).
Decision-making
• Romero and Rehman (1989).
People's participation
• Huizer (1983).
Land tenure
• FAO (1989b): appraisal of tree and land tenure.
• Raintree (1987b): land and tree tenure in agroforestry.
• Dale and McLaughlin (1988): cadastral aspects of land-use planning.
Implementation
• Mollett (1984).
Legislation for land use
• FAO (1971).
• Roberts (1977).
• FAO (1985b).
Glossary
Note: For terms in bold, see separate entries.
Agroclimatic region
An area of land that is suited to a specified range of crops, defined in terms of its temperature and rainfall
regimes and, especially, its growing period.
Agro-ecosystem
An ecosystem based on agriculture. A farm, or component of a farm, treated as an ecosystem.
Agroforestry
A collective name for land-use systems in which woody perennials (trees, shrubs, etc.) are grown in
association with herbaceous plants (crops, pastures) and /or livestock, in a spatial arrangement, a rotation
or both, and in which there are both ecological and economic interactions between the tree and non-tree
components of the system.
Air photographs
Photographs of the land surface taken from aircraft, usually at a vertical angle, normally at scales of from
1:50000 to 1:5000. For interpretation, air photographs are viewed stereoscopically to give a
three-dimensional impression. Landforms, vegetation, land use and some infrastructure (especially roads
and tracks) can be directly seen on air photographs, while soil properties, geology and other land
properties require indirect interpretation and administrative boundaries cannot be seen. Air photographs
can also be used as base maps for presentation of a land-use plan. Air photographs may be panchromatic
(black and white), colour (true colour) or false colour (see false colour imagery). Also called aerial
photographs.
Aquaculture
Management of any plant or animal that lives in water, e.g. fish farming, shrimp farming.
Benefit-cost ratio
The present value of the benefits from an enterprise (farm, forest, etc.) divided by the present value of
its costs.
Cadastral survey
The inventory and register of landownership on maps.
Conservation requirements
The conditions of land necessary or desirable to achieve conservation of natural resources under a given
land-use type.
Critical path method
A way of planning the operations needed to complete a land-use planning project by identifying the
individual operations needed and plotting how each task has to be related to the others in time.
Crop requirements
The conditions of land necessary or desirable for the successful growth of a crop.
Decision-maker
An executive person or group responsible for land-use policy, action and allocation of resources.
Digitized may
Mapped information stored in numerical form as a series of coordinates (north, east) and their values or
properties (e.g. altitude, soil series, land use).
Discounted cash flow analysis
A method of financial analysis and economic analysis in which future benefits and future costs are
reduced to a lower value, which is judged to be their present value, by discounting.
Discounting
The reverse of adding interest. The value of a cost incurred, or benefit received, is reduced by an annual
percentage, i.e. the discount rate, to obtain its present value.
Discount rate
The interest rate used to assess the present value of a future value by discounting. To simulate the
investment behaviour in the private sector, the discount rate is set equal to the required rate of return in
that sector. To calculate the social value of benefits and costs, an appropriate social discount rate should
be used.
Diagnosis and design
An approach to, and set of methods for, the diagnosis of problems of land-use systems and the design of
improved land-use systems which will help to solve these problems. Originally developed for the design
of agroforestry systems, but can be applied to other kinds of land use. Also referred to as D&D.
District-level land-use planning
A level of land-use planning between the national and local levels, typically but not necessarily that of
the administrative district. Intermediate map scales are used. Land-use development projects are often at
the district level. (See local-level land-use planning and national-level land-use planning.)
Ecosystem
A functioning, interacting system composed of living organisms and their environment. The concept is
applicable at any scale, from the planet as an ecosystem to a microscopic colony of organisms and its
immediate surroundings.
Economic analysis
Analysis that views the money value of a land-use system for the community as a whole.
Emergency planning
Land-use planning in response to a perceived problem for which action is urgently needed.
Environmental impact analysis
A procedure to predict the effects of changes in land use on the environment, particularly effects on
water, soils, vegetation and human health and well-being.
Erosion hazard
The risk of soil erosion occurring under specified conditions, or in a specified area. Erosion hazard may
be expressed in qualitative terms (severe, moderate, slight, etc.) or quantitative terms (as predicted soil
loss in tonnes per hectare per year).
False colour imagery
Special film which records infrared radiation (which is not visible) as if it were red light; to make room
for the infrared, the visible colours are moved across the spectrum so that red light is recorded as green
and green as blue. False colour film can be used in air photographs or satellite imagery. False colour is
valuable in distinguishing different kinds of vegetation and crops, as living vegetation contains
chlorophyll which reflects infrared radiation strongly.
Farming system
A class consisting of all farms with similar land use, environment and economy; comprising the farm
household, its land and the systems of cropping or livestock production for consumption or sale. A
farming system is a decision-making unit and a land-use system based on agriculture.
Farming systems analysis
Investigation of farm-level constraints, translation of this knowledge into improved technology and
testing of this technology.
Financial analysis
Analysis which looks at the money value of a system to the farmer, other land-user or private investor.
Geographic information system (GIS)
A computer system for storage, analysis and retrieval of information, in which all data are spatially
referenced by their geographic coordinates (north, east). In addition to primary data, such as climatic and
soil characteristics, a GIS can be used to calculate derived values, such as erosion hazard, forest yield
class, or land suitability for specified land-use types. Data are usually derived from maps and derived
values can be printed out as maps.
Goal
One of the major objectives of a land-use plan, defined in generalized terms, often those of policy.
Gross margin analysis
The calculation of the annual income of a single enterprise by taking the value of sales and subtracting
the variable costs of production to obtain a margin of profit or loss.
Growing period
A continuous period of the year during which temperature and soil water availability are sufficiently high
to permit plant growth. In most of the tropics, the growing period is determined by water availability
within rooting depth- in the soil. In the temperate zone, low temperature is often limiting. In areas with
bimodal rainfall distribution there may be two growing periods each year. The term applies primarily to
annual crops, since deep-rooted trees can continue to grow when the top 2 m or more of soil is dry.
Incremental planning
Land-use planning based on small improvements to land-use systems, made one at a time.
Information management
Gathering, storing and analysing information needed for a specific purpose, such as land-use planning.
Infrastructure
Permanent installations constructed to assist economic activity, such as roads, irrigation or drainage
works, buildings and communication systems.
Integrated survey
See land systems survey.
Internal rate of return
A financial or economic indicator of the net benefits expected from a project or enterprise, expressed as a
percentage. In financial analysis, the internal rate of return can be compared with the rate of interest
prevalent in the market.
Land
An area of the earth's surface, including all elements of the physical and biological environment that
influence land use. Thus land refers not only to soil but also landforms, climate, hydrology, vegetation
and fauna, together with land improvements such as terraces and drainage works.
Land capability classification
A classification of land in terms of its potential for use in specified ways and with specified management
practices, generally as a sequence of capability classes 1, 2, 3... (or I, II, III...). Class 1 is treated as the
"best" land, being suited to most types of use, while successively higher-numbered classes have more
limitations and less flexibility of use. The United States Department of Agriculture's land capability
classification is the best known, but adaptations to other countries have been made. The approach is
different from that of land suitability evaluation, although the two can be reconciled.
Land characteristic
An attribute of land that can be measured or estimated, for example slope angle, soil depth or mean
annual rainfall.
Land evaluation
The assessment of the suitability of land for specified uses. Assessment is made in terms of production,
sustainability, the inputs needed to obtain that production, and (in the case of quantitative land
suitability classification), economic return.
Land facet
A subdivision of a land system, consisting of an area of land which is fairly uniform with respect to
properties that affect land use, e.g. has a narrow range of slope angle or soil type.
Land information system
A collection of information relevant to suitability for land use, particularly land characteristics. Land
information systems are generally, but not necessarily, stored in geographic information systems.
Land quality
A complex attribute of land which affects its suitability for specific uses in a distinct way. For example,
the land quality "availability of water" directly affects crop yields and, therefore, land suitability for
different crops. Most land qualities can only be assessed by modelling the interaction of a number of
land characteristics. For example, availability of water is modelled from data on rainfall, available
water capacity of the soil, potential evapotranspiration.
Land tenure
The ownership or leasing system of land, or of the rights to use it.
Landsat
A United States series of earth resource satellites first launched in 1972. Systematic, repeated digital data
on the reflectance of, or radiation from, the earth's surface are acquired, and these can be interpreted in
terms of land characteristics. Data are collected separately for different visible and invisible
wavebands, which can be combined for interpretation. Under favourable conditions, the ground
resolution can reach 30 m. Compare Spot.
Land suitability
The fitness of land for a specified kind of use.
Land suitability class
One of a set of classes for evaluating land suitability. The FAO system consists of three levels of
classification: suitable or not suitable (S or N); degrees of suitability, e.g. highly, moderately or
marginally suitable (S1, S2 or S3); and a letter indicating the major land limitation that has led to the
class allocation (e.g. S2w = water limitation, S2e = erosion hazard limitation. (See Table 5, p. 40.)
Land system
An area of land with a recurring pattern of landforms, soils and vegetation and having a relatively
uniform climate. Alternatively defined as an area of land with a recurring pattern of land facets.
Land systems survey
A survey of land resources based on mapping of land systems; usually land facets are also either
identified or mapped. Otherwise called integrated survey.
Land unit
An area of land which possesses specific land characteristics and land qualities and which can be
mapped.
Land use
The management of land to meet human needs. This includes rural land use and also urban and
industrial use.
Land-use plan
A coherent set of decisions about the use of land and ways to achieve the desired use. A land-use plan
includes: a definition of goals; an ordering of land and human and material resources; an explicit
statement of the methods, organization, responsibilities and schedule to be used; and agreed targets.
Land-use planning
The systematic assessment of land and water potential, alternative patterns of land use and other
physical, social and economic conditions, for the purpose of selecting and adopting land-use options
which are most beneficial to land users without degrading the resources or the environment, together
with the selection of measures most likely to encourage such land uses. Land-use planning may be at
international, national, district (project, catchment), or local (village) levels. (See district-, local- and
national-level land-use planning.) It includes participation by land users, planners and
decision-makers and covers educational, legal, fiscal and financial measures.
Land-use requirement
Land conditions necessary or desirable for the successful and sustained practice of a given land-use
type. Includes crop requirements or plant growth requirements, management requirements and
conservation requirements.
Land users
All people who obtain their livelihood directly, either wholly or partly, from the land, e.g. farmers,
foresters, pastoralists, staff of national parks.
Land-use system
A specific land-use type applied to a particular area of land.
Land-use type
A kind of land use described in enough detail to assess its land-use requirements and to plan the
necessary inputs. The amount of detail varies with the level, scale and purposes of the survey, from
generalized land-use types, such as "dairy farming" or "irrigated agriculture" in reconnaissance surveys,
to detailed descriptions of plants, management, inputs, etc. in more intensive surveys.
Levels of land-use planning
The scale and intensity of a land-use plan, which may be at the national, district or local level.
Limiting value
The value of a land quality, or land characteristics, identified as marking the boundary between land
suitability classes.
Limitation
A land quality, or land characteristic, which adversely affects the potential of land for a specified kind
of use, e.g. salinity, storm damage hazard.
Local-level land-use planning
Planning based on a village or other local community. Large map scales are used, such as 1:10000. Also
referred to as village level land-use planning.
Logistic planning
Planning for the arrangement of inputs (capital and recurrent) and supplies, personnel and scheduling, for
land use or for the implementation of a land-use plan.
Map scale
The ratio between distances on the ground and distances on a map. Small scales refer to maps which
cover a large area such as a country on one map sheet, e.g. a scale of 1:1000000. Large scales refer to
maps which cover a small area on one map sheet, e.g. a scale of 1:10000.
Matching
This term is used in two ways. In its narrower sense, the process of comparing land-use requirements
with land qualities or land characteristics, to arrive at a land suitability classification. In its broader
sense, the process of adaptation of land-use types, and consideration of land improvements, so as to
arrive at land-use types which are better suited to the land.
Modelling
The construction of physical, conceptual or mathematical simulations of the real world. Models help to
show relationships between processes (physical, economic or social) and may be used to predict the
effects of changes in land use.
Monitoring
The collection of information for the purpose of assessment of the progress and success of a land-use
plan. Monitoring is used for the purpose of revising the original plan or to gather experience for future
plans.
National-level land-use planning
Applied to planning at national government level which deals with the country's land, water or other
resources as a whole. Small map scales are used. In large countries, planning of the major administrative
divisions has some of the characteristics of national-level planning.
Natural resources
The resources of the land relevant to its potential for land use, e.g. climate, water, soils, pastures, forests.
Net present value
The present value of the benefits of an enterprise minus the present value of its costs.
Objective
A specific aim, expressing something to be achieved as part of the goals of a land-use plan.
On-farm research
Experimental work conducted on farms. There is a spectrum of research types, ranging from
researcher-managed to farmer-managed.
On-station research
Experimental work conducted on experimental stations.
Partial farm budget
A budget of only part of a farm enterprise, assuming that only certain elements will change while the
remainder will be constant; for example, the budget of a dairy enterprise on a mixed arable-dairy farm. It
compares the marginal cost of an activity within the enterprise with the marginal increase in benefit that
the activity will bring. Distinguished from whole farm budget.
Planner, planners, planning team
The person or group responsible for the preparation of a land-use plan, working in close cooperation with
the land users and the decision-makers.
Planning
The exercise of foresight, systematically examining alternative proposals for action to attain specified
goals and objectives. Includes the description of the desired future state of affairs and of the actions
needed to bring about this state.
Plant growth requirements
The conditions of land necessary for the successful growth of a plant. The same as crop requirements,
except that plant growth requirement applies to any plant, not necessarily an agricultural crop.
Present value
The value of an enterprise at the present time, after applying the process of discounting to its costs or
benefits.
Program
The standard spelling of a computer program.
Programme
A set of interactive, synchronized activities or projects aimed at achieving defined objectives by means
of ongoing activities.
Project
A set of activities with defined objectives to be completed in a certain time span.
Qualitative land suitability classification
Land suitability classification in which the results are expressed in qualitative terms only, without
specific estimates of inputs, outputs or costs and returns. The description "qualitative" refers to the results
of the suitability classification, not the conduct of the land evaluation.
Quantitative land suitability classification
Land suitability classification in which the results are expressed in numerical terms which permit
comparison between suitabilities for different kinds of use. Usually these are economic terms, but
quantitative physical comparisons are possible between uses with the same objective, e.g. between
different pasture systems in terms of livestock carrying capacity or different forestry systems in terms of
wood production.
Rapid rural appraisal
An exploratory survey procedure carried out by a multidisciplinary team to gain a quick overview of a
local land-use situation. It involves review of existing data, remote sensing, field observation and
interviews with land users, local government officials and others; it may cover both physical and
socio-economic aspects.
Remote sensing
In land-use planning, remote sensing refers to the gathering of information through the use of air
photographs and satellite imagery. Remote sensing should be conducted in conjunction with field
surveying on the ground.
Research
A set of activities directed towards the advancement of knowledge. Applied in land-use planning to
improvements in the performance or management of land-use types (e.g. by better crop varieties, better
scheduling of irrigation water), or to the prevention of problems encountered (e.g. pests and diseases).
Experimental research may be on-station or on-farm research.
Risk analysis
An analytical technique in which the probabilities of occurrence of an adverse event (e.g. drought,
hurricane, drop in the market price of a product) are estimated for each critical element of a project.
Repeated calculations (normally by computer) are then made of a measure of the value of the project,
with each element entering into successive computations according to the probability of its occurrence.
Rural land use
Land use other than urban and industrial use. Including agriculture (rain-fed and irrigated), livestock
production, forestry, agroforestry, aquaculture, wildlife conservation, recreation and tourism.
Satellite imagery
Remote sensing imagery gathered by earth-orbiting satellites, including Landsat and Spot. Images are in
specific wavebands (visible, infrared, etc.), which may be combined for purposes of interpretation.
Images look like photographs but are not obtained by photographic methods, hence the term "images" or
"imagery". Data from satellite imagery can be interpreted visually or analysed by computers in digitized
form; they can also be entered directly into geographic information systems.
Sectoral agencies
Government departments or other agencies with a limited, specific field of responsibility, e.g. ministries
or departments of agriculture, forestry, veterinary services, or a water or irrigation authority.
Sensitivity analysis
An analytical technique to deal with uncertainty about future events and values. It consists of varying one
element (e.g. rainfall, market price), or a combination of elements, and determining the effect of those
changes on the outcome of a project. In economic analysis, the effect of the changes on a measure of
project value is calculated.
Shadow price
In economic analysis, this is any distortion of a free market price which is made in order to reflect the
real scarcity value of goods or services, including labour. An example of a shadow price is the
elimination of the effect of taxes or subsidies.
Social analysis
The analysis of a plan in terms of its impact of different sections of the community. Social analysis gives
particular attention to the interests of minority groups, women and the poor.
Social discount rate
The discount rate used to estimate the social value (or value to the community as a whole) of an
enterprise. It is sometimes held that, to reflect social values, the social discount rate should be lower than
the discount rate used in the private sector.
Soil conservation
Activities aimed at minimizing the loss of soil by erosion. Soil conservation can be achieved by earth
structures, such as banks and ditches, or by biological means, particularly maintaining a soil cover of
living plants or plant litter. Soil conservation is also used in a wider sense to refer to all activities aimed
at conserving the fertility of the soil.
Soil erosion
Removal of soil by wind, water or landsliding at a substantially faster rate than that at which soil-forming
processes can replace it. Soil erosion is a result of human activities such as clearance of vegetation and
cultivation of sloping land without adequate soil conservation measures.
Soil landscape
A soil mapping unit defined by its landform pattern and associated soils.
Soil mapping unit
Any unit describing the spatial distribution of soils, which can be mapped. Soil mapping units may be
simple, consisting of one type of soil, or complex, consisting of two or more types of soil.
Soil profile
A vertical section through the soil, as seen in a soil pit. Usually, this reveals several more or less distinct
soil horizons which differ in colour, texture and other properties.
Spot
(Satellite probatoire d'observation de la terre.) A French series of earth resource satellites, first launched
in 1986. Under favourable conditions, the ground resolution can reach 10 m. Compare Landsat.
Standard
In land-use planning, standards refer to planning guidelines or limits, including conservation standards,
standards for land-use management, standards for construction of capital works or standards for
economic measures, e.g. loan interest rates.
Steeplands
Areas in which the slopes are predominantly steep or moderately steep and which therefore have
distinctive land-use problems, e.g. high erosion hazard, landsliding and difficulty of road construction.
Strategy
The logical framework for coordinating decisions that link development goals with the actions intended
to achieve those goals.
Sustainability
See sustainable land use.
Sustainable land use
The central concept underlying use of this term is production combined with conservation. Alternative
definitions are:
• land use which maintains production at or above its present level while, at the same time,
conserving the natural resources (water, soil, pastures, forests, etc.) on which that production
depends;
• land use which does not progressively degrade its productive capacity;
• land use which meets the needs of the present while at the same time conserving resources
for future generations (WCED, 1987).
The achievement of sustainable land use is not confined to technical measures, but includes the economic
and social conditions necessary for the success of these. The term sustainability is used in more or less
the same sense.
System
A functional arrangement of components that process inputs into outputs, for example a farm. Systems
display properties which result from the interaction of their components.
Systems analysis
The analysis and modelling of interrelated processes and operations with a view to designing a more
efficient use of resources.
Tree tenure
The ownership, or rights to the use, of trees. Tree tenure is sometimes different from land tenure.
Variable costs
In financial analysis, the costs of production that can be attributed specifically to the activity being
analysed. For example, in wheat production, the costs of seed, fertilizer, cultivation and harvesting are
specific to the wheat crop and, therefore, form its variable costs.
Village-level land-use planning
An alternative term for local-level land-use planning.
Wetlands
Areas that are frequently flooded or waterlogged and so possess a distinct ecosystem adapted to a high
water-table, e.g. a saltmarsh, a mangrove swamp or freshwater fen.
Whole farm budget
A budget of an entire farm enterprise. Distinguished from partial farm budget.
Bibliography
Abel, N.O.J., Drinkwater, M.J., Ingram, J., Okafor, J. & Prinsley, R.T. 1989. Guidelines for training
in rapid appraisal for agroforestry research and extension. Amelioration of soils by trees. London,
Commonwealth Science Council; Harare, Zimbabwe, Forestry Commission. 117 pp.
Arnold, G.W. & Bennett, D. 1975. The problem of finding an optimum solution. In G. E. Dalton, ed.
Study of agricultural systems, p. 129-173. Barking, Essex, UK, Applied Science Publishers.
Beatty, M.T., Petersen, G.W. & Swindale, L.D., eds. 1978. Planning the uses and management of
land. Agronomy 21. Madison, USA, Am. Soc. Agron. 1028 pp.
Beek, K.J., Burrough, P.A. & McCormack, D.E., eds. 1987. Quantitative land evaluation procedures.
ITC Publication 6. Enschede, the Netherlands, ITC.
Bennett, D. & Thomas, J.F., eds. 1982. On rational grounds: systems analysis in catchment land use.
Amsterdam, Elsevier.
Biswas, A.K. 1982. Water management: applying systems analysis in developing countries. Ceres,
15(6): 40-42.
Brammer, H. 1983. Manual on Upazilla land use planning. Dacca, Bangladesh, Ministry of Local
Government, Rural Development and Cooperatives. 74 pp.
Bridger, G.A. & Wipenny, J.T. 1983. Planning development projects: a practical guide to the choice
and appraisal of public sector investments. London, Overseas Development Administration. 209 pp.
Brinkman, R. 1987. Agro-ecological characterization, classification and mapping. Different approaches
by the International Agricultural Research Centres. In A. H. Bunting, ed. Agricultural environments:
characterization, classification and mapping, p. 31-42. Wallingford, UK, CAB International.
Bunting, A.H., ed. 1987. Agricultural environments: characterization, classification and mapping.
Wallingford, UK, CAB International. 335 pp.
Burrough, P.A. 1986. Principles of geographical information systems for land resources assessment.
Monographs on Soil and Resources Survey No. 12. Oxford, UK, Clarendon. 193 pp.
Carver, A. J. 1981. Air photography for land use planners. Harare, Zimbabwe, Department of
Conservation and Extension. 76 pp.
Cochrane, T.T., Sánchez, L.G., de Azevedo, L.G., Porras, J.A. & Garver, C.L. 1984. Land in
tropical America, Vol. 1. CIAT and EMBRAPA-CPAC. Cali, Colombia, CIAT 144 pp.
Cocks, K.D., Ive, J.R., Davis, J.P. & Baird, I.A. 1983. SIRO-PLAN and LUPLAN: an Australian
approach to land use planning. Environment and Planning, B10 (3): 331-355.
Corker, I. 1983. Land use planning handbook, Tanzania. Surbiton, UK, Land Resources Development
Centre, Overseas Development Administration. 178 pp.
Dale, P. F. & McLaughlin, J. D. 1988. Land information management: an introduction with special
reference to cadastral problems in Third World countries. Oxford, UK, Clarendon.
Davey, S.M., Prinsley, R. & White, D.H., eds. 1991. Forestry and agroforestry. Agric. Syst. Inf. Tech.
Newsl., 3(3). Canberra, Australia, Bureau of Rural Resources.
Davidson, D.A. 1980. Soils and land use planning. London, Longman. 129 pp.
Dent, D.L. & Ridgway, R.B. 1986. A land use planning handbook for Sri Lanka. FD 2, SRL 79/058.
Colombo, Sri Lanka, Land Use Policy Planning Division, Ministry of Lands and Land Development. 389
pp.
Dent, D. & Young, A. 1981. Soil survey and land evaluation. London, Allen and Unwin. 278 pp.
Elwell, H.A. & Stocking, M.A. 1982. Developing a simple yet practical method of soil-loss estimation.
Trop. Agric. (Trinidad), 59: 43-48.
FAO. 1971. Legislative principles of soil conservation. FAO Soils Bulletin No. 15. Rome, FAO.
FAO. 1976. A framework for land evaluation. FAO Soils Bulletin No. 32. Rome, FAO. 72 pp. Also
published as Publication 22. Wageningen, the Netherlands, ILRI. 87 pp.
FAO. 1977. Crop water requirements. FAO Irrigation and Drainage Paper No. 24. Rome, FAO. 144 pp.
FAO. 1979a. Yield response to water. FAO Irrigation and Drainage Paper No. 33. Rome, FAO. 144 pp.
FAO. 1979b. Soil survey investigations for irrigation. FAO Soils Bulletin No. 42. Rome, FAO, 188 pp.
FAO. 1983. Guidelines: land evaluation for rainfed agriculture. FAO Soils Bulletin No. 52. Rome,
FAO. 237 pp.
FAO. 1984a. Land evaluation for forestry. FAO Forestry Paper No. 48. Rome, FAO. 123 pp.
FAO. 1984b. Guidelines for land use planning, Ethiopia. Assistance to Land Use Planning Project, FAO
Technical Report No. 10. Rome, FAO. 160 pp.
FAO. 1984c. Agroclimatological data for Africa, Vols 1 and 2. FAO Plant Production and Protection
Series No. 22. Rome, FAO.
FAO. 1985a. Guidelines: land evaluation for irrigated agriculture. FAO Soils Bulletin No. 55. Rome,
FAO. 229 pp.
FAO. 1985b. The role of legislation in land use planning for developing countries. FAO Legislative
Study No. 31. Rome, FAO. 160 pp.
FAO. 1987. Agroclimatological data for Asia, Vols 1 and 2. FAO Plant Production and Protection Series
No. 23. Rome, FAO.
FAO. 1989a. Community forestry rapid appraisal. FAO Community Forestry Note No. 3. Rome, FAO.
90 pp.
FAO. 1989b. Rapid appraisal of tree and land tenure. FAO Community Forestry Note No. 5. Rome,
FAO.
FAO. 1991a. Guidelines: land evaluation for extensive grazing. FAO Soils Bulletin No. 58. Rome, FAO.
158 pp.
FAO. 1991b. Land use planning applications. Proceedings of the FAO Expert Consultation, 1990,
Rome, Italy, 10-14 December 1990. World Soil Resources Reports 68. Rome, FAO. 206 pp.
Fresco, L.O, Huizing, H.G.J., van Keulen, H., Luning, H.A. & Schipper, R.A. 1992. Land evaluation
and farming systems analysis for land use planning. FAO/ITC/Wageningen Agricultural University.
(unpubl. FAO Working Document)
Gittinger, J. P. 1982. Economic analysis of agricultural projects, 2nd ed. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins
University Press. 505 pp.
Greenhow, T. 1991. Lesotho community land use planning. A manual. Maseru, Lesotho, Ministry of
Agriculture and Marketing. 106 pp.
Hackett, C. 1988. Matching plants and land. Natural Resources Series No. 11. Canberra, Australia,
CSIRO Division of Water and Land Resources. 82 pp.
Harrison, A.J. 1977. Economics and land use planning. London, Croom Helm. 250 pp.
Heady, E.O. & Srivastara, U.K. 1975. Spatial sector programming models in agriculture. Ames, Iowa
State University Press.
Higgins, G.M., Kassam, A. H., van Velthuizen, H.T. & Purnell, M.F. 1987. Methods used by FAO to
estimate environmental resources, potential outputs of crops and population-supporting capacities in the
developing nations. In A.H. Bunting, ed. Agricultural environments: characterization, classification and
mapping, p. 171-184. Wallingford, UK, CAB International.
Hill, I.D., ed. 1979. Land resources of central Nigeria. Agricultural development possibilities. Surbiton,
UK, Land Resources Development Centre, Overseas Development Administration.
Huizer, G. 1983. Guiding principles for people's participation projects; design, operation, monitoring
and ongoing evaluation. Rome, FAO.
IIASA. 1980. Beware the pitfalls. A short guide to avoiding common errors in systems analysis.
Executive Report 2. Laxenburg, Austria, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. 23 pp.
ILRI. 1980. Framework for regional planning in developing countries. ILRI Publication 26.
Wageningen, the Netherlands, ILRI. 345 pp.
Ive, J.R. 1984. LUPLAN: Microsoft BASIC, CP/M users manual. Technical Memorandum 84/5,
Canberra, Australia, CSIRO Division of Water and Land Resources.
Ive, J.R. & Cocks, K.D. 1987. The value of adding searching and profiling capabilities to a land use
planning package. Soil Survey and Land Evaluation, 7: 87-94.
Jones, C.A. & Kiniry, J.R., eds. 1986. CERES - Maize. A simulation model of maize growth and
development. College Station, Texas A&M University Press. 194 pp.
Laconte, P. & Haimes, Y.Y. 1985. Water resources and land use planning; a systems approach. NATO
Advanced Studies Institute Series. The Netherlands, Nijhoff.
Landon, J.R., ed. 1991. Booker tropical soil manual. Harlow, UK, Longman. 474 pp.
Lang, R. & Armour, A. 1980. Environmental planning resource book. Canada, Lands Directorate. 355
pp.
Leslie, A.J. 1987. A second look at the economics of natural management systems in tropical mixed
forests. Unasylva, 39: 47-58.
Lindgren, D.T. 1985. Land use planning and remote sensing. Part II. Remote sensing input to GIS.
London, Nijhoff. 176 pp.
Maguire, D.J., Goodchild, M.F. & Rhind, D.W., eds. 1991. Geographical information systems:
principles and applications, Vols 1 and 2. Harlow, UK, Longman.
McCracken, J.A., Pretty, J.N. & Conway, G.R. 1988. An introduction to rapid rural appraisal for
agricultural development. London, IIED. 96 pp.
McCrae, S.G. & Burnham, C.P. 1981. Land evaluation. Oxford, UK, Clarendon. 239 pp.
Mollett, J.A. 1984. Planning for agricultural development. London, Croom Helm. 384 pp.
Morris, R.M. 1977. The systems approach in teaching resource planners. Agric. Syst., 2: 227-238.
National Research Council. 1976. Systems analysis and operations research; a tool for policy and
program planning for developing countries. Washington, DC, United States National Academy of
Sciences. 98 pp.
OAS. 1984. Integrated regional development planning; guidelines and case studies from OAS
experience. Department of Regional Development, Organization of American States in cooperation with
United States National Park Service and USAID. 497 pp.
Parton, W.J., Sanford, R.L., Sanchez, P.A. & Stewart, J.W.B. 1989. Modelling soil organic matter
dynamics in tropical soils. In D. C. Coleman, J. M. Oades & G. Uehara, eds. Dynamics of soil organic
matter in tropical ecosystems, p. 153-171. Manoa, Hawaii, University of Hawaii.
Pearce, D.W. & Turner, R.K. 1990. Economics of natural resources and the environment. Baltimore,
Johns Hopkins University Press. 373 pp.
Quade, S. & Miser, H.J. 1982. What is systems analysis? Options, 10-13. Laxenburg, Austria,
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis.
Raintree, J.B. 1987a. D&D user's manual: an introduction to agroforestry diagnosis and design.
Nairobi, Kenya ICRAF. 110 pp.
Raintree, J.B. 1987b. Land, trees and tenure. Proc. International Workshop on Tenure Issues in
Agroforestry. Nairobi, Kenya, ICRAF; and Madison, USA, Land Tenure Center 412 pp.
Ramalho Filho, T.A., Pereira, E.G. & Beek, K.J. 1978. Sistema de avaliação da aptidão agrícola das
terras. Brasília, Brazil, MASUPLAN, BINAGRA.
Ridgway, R.B. & Jayasinghe, G. 1986. The Sri Lanka land information system. Soil Survey and Land
Evaluation, 6: 20-25.
Roberts, N.A. 1977. The government in land development: studies of public landownership policy in
seven countries. Lexington, USA, Lexington Press. 249 pp.
Romero, C. & Rehman, T. 1989. Multiple criteria analysis for agricultural decisions. Amsterdam,
Elsevier.
Rossmiller, G.E. 1978. Agricultural sector planning: a general system simulation approach. East
Lansing, USA, Michigan State University.
Schultink, G. 1987. The CRIES resource information system; computer-aided land resource evaluation
for development. Soil Survey and Land Evaluation, 7: 47-62.
Thomas, P., Lo, F.K.C. & Hepburn, A.J. 1976. The land capability classification of Sabah. Land
Resource Study 25. Surbiton, UK. Land Resources Development Centre, Overseas Development
Administration.
Valenzuela, R. 1988. ILWIS Overview ITC J. 1988-1: 4-14 (special ILWIS Issue). Enschede, the
Netherlands, ITC.
van Diepen, C.A., Rappoldt, C., Wolf, J. & van Keulen, H. 1988. CWFS crop growth simulation
model WOFOST. Documentation version 4.1. Wageningen, the Netherlands, Centre for World Food
Studies.
van Keulen, H., Berkhout, J. A. A., van Diepen, C. A., van Heemst, H. D. J., Janssen, B. H.,
Rappoldt, C. & Wolf, J. 1987. Quantitative land evaluation for agro-ecological characterization. In A.
H. Bunting, ed. Agricultural environments: characterization, classification and mapping. Wallingford,
UK, CAB International.
Vargas, E. 1992. Análisis y clasificación del uso y cobertura de la sierra con interpretación de
imágenes. Bogota, Colombia, IGAC. 113 pp.
WCED. 1987. Our common future. Oxford, UK, Oxford University Press. 400 pp.
Whitby, M.C. & Willis, K.G. 1978. Rural resource development: an economic approach. London,
Methuen. 303 pp.
Wipenny, J.T. 1991. Values for the environment: a guide to economic appraisal. London, HMSO. 277
pp.
Wischmeier, W.H. & Smith, D.D. 1978. Predicting rainfall erosion losses - a guide to conservation
planning. Agriculture Handbook 557. Washington, DC, USDA. 58 pp.
Wood, S.R. & Dent, F.J. 1983. LECS. A land evaluation computer system methodology. Bogor,
Indonesia, Centre for Soil Research, Ministry of Agriculture/UNDP/FAO. 221 pp.
Young, A. 1986. Land evaluation and diagnosis and design: towards a reconciliation of procedures. Soil
Survey and Land Evaluation, 5: 61-76.
Young, A. 1987. Methods developed outside the International Agricultural Research Centres. In A. H.
Bunting, ed. Agricultural environments: characterization, classification and mapping, p. 43-64.
Wallingford, UK, CAB International.
Young, A. & Muraya, P. 1990. SCUAF: Soil Changes Under Agroforestry. Computer program with
user's handbook. Version 2. Nairobi, Kenya, ICRAF. 124 pp. (including program on diskette)
Zimbabwe Federal Department of Conservation and Extension. 1989. Land-use planning
procedures. Harare, Government Stationery Office.
Contents - Previous