Justifying Soil Protection and Sustainable Soil Management: Creation-Ethical, Legal and Economic Considerations

Autor(en): Hansjuergens, Bernd
Lienkamp, Andreas 
Moeckel, Stefan
Stichwörter: AGRICULTURAL LAND-USE; creation ethics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Environmental Studies; German Constitutional Law; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; justifying soil protection; Laudato si'; property rights; Science & Technology - Other Topics; sustainable soil management
Erscheinungsdatum: 2018
Herausgeber: MDPI
Journal: SUSTAINABILITY
Volumen: 10
Ausgabe: 10
Zusammenfassung: 
Fertile soils form an important basis for survival for humans, but also for animals, plants and ecosystems, on which all terrestrial organisms rely. Soil is not only of central importance to the global provision of food and in the fight against hunger; climate, biological diversity and water bodies are also highly dependent on soil quality. Soil conservation is therefore a decisive factor in the survival of humanity. Pope Francis also emphasized this in his encyclical ``Laudato si'''. However, increasing pressure is being exerted on soils, which poses an enormous challenge to the international community and thus also to the church. Against this background, in this article, which is based on a Memorandum of the German Bishops' Working Group on Ecological Issues, arguments and justifications for soil protection and sustainable soil management are developed from different angles-from a creation-ethical, a legal, and an economic perspective. All three perspectives point in the same direction, namely that in the use of soils public interests that serve the society and the environment should be given priority over private interests. These arguments may serve as an important reference point in political and societal debates about soils, and may support strategies for sustainable soil management.
DOI: 10.3390/su10103807

Show full item record

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric