Mini Reference Library
Difference between landscape approaches and jurisdictional approaches
Landscape approaches involve collaboration of stakeholders within a defined natural or social geography, such as a watershed, biome, or company sourcing area. These approaches seek to reconcile competing social, economic, and environmental goals through ‘integrated landscape management’ – a multi-stakeholder approach that builds consensus across different sectors with or without government entities.
Jurisdictional approaches are a type of landscape approach operating within sub-national or national administrative boundaries with active government involvement. Some engage multiple jurisdictions within a biome or physiographic region.
Each approach seeks to achieve sustainability at scale through an inclusive process engaging diverse stakeholders, and this L/JI guidance describes interventions relevant to both.
Business case for companies to engage in L/JIs
Responsible companies that aim to eliminate commodity-driven deforestation will find landscape/jurisdictional approaches an important strategy that complements their own efforts to clean up individual supply chains. The specific business case for undertaking the interventions described in this guidance accompanies each intervention. To elaborate the overall business case for engagement in L/JIs, consider these resources:
- Value beyond value chains (see especially p.16)
- “5 reasons companies are collaborating to end deforestation”
- Implementing responsible sourcing: Using landscape/jurisdictional initiatives
- Engaging with landscape initiatives: A practical guide for companies
Credibility surrounding corporate claims on L/JIs
Important new thinking helps clarify what businesses may credibly claim about their interventions to address land use change and climate objectives at landscape/jurisdictional scales.
How companies can decide where to engage L/JIs
Where to engage will largely depend on a company’s geographic footprint, risk exposures, sustainability goals, and other factors. Following are some resources that explore which factors to consider or what places to prioritize:
- Engaging with landscape initiatives: A practical guide for companies
- A “commodity-first” approach to identifying landscapes for private sector engagement
- Scaling regional forest conservation through place-based approaches
- The state of jurisdictional sustainability: Synthesis for practitioners and policymakers
L/JI case descriptions and lessons learned
This guidance offers brief real-world examples that illustrate how companies have intervened, but the following resources provide lengthier L/JI descriptions and lessons learned from their implementation.
- Tackling deforestation through a jurisdictional approach: Lessons from the field
- Early lessons from jurisdictional REDD+ programs and low emissions development programs
- Jurisdictional approaches to reducing palm oil driven deforestation in Indonesia
- Exploring the reality of the jurisdictional approach as a tool to achieve sustainability commitments in palm oil and soy supply chains
- Role of jurisdictional tropical forest programs
- Agri-business partnerships for sustainable landscapes case studies