Land-Change Driver Analysis
Land-use and land-cover change (LUCC) analysis is the land-change-science method for detecting how the Earth's surface is being transformed and explaining why, with particular attention to the social drivers behind the change. Its defining move, formalized by Eric Lambin and Helmut Geist, is to separate proximate causes, the direct human activities such as agricultural expansion, wood extraction, and infrastructure that physically alter land cover, from underlying driving forces, the demographic, economic, technological, institutional, and cultural factors that operate at a distance and push the proximate causes. Their meta-analysis of tropical deforestation showed that single-factor explanations are rare and that change is usually produced by synergistic combinations of drivers. The analysis chains remote sensing of cover change to a structured causal attribution, giving social scientists a rigorous way to link maps of deforestation or urbanization to the human forces that produce them.
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Sources
- Geist, H. J., & Lambin, E. F. (2002). Proximate Causes and Underlying Driving Forces of Tropical Deforestation. BioScience, 52(2), 143-150. DOI: 10.1641/0006-3568(2002)052[0143:PCAUDF]2.0.CO;2 ↗
- Lambin, E. F., & Geist, H. J. (Eds.). (2006). Land-Use and Land-Cover Change: Local Processes and Global Impacts. Springer (IGBP Series). ISBN: 9783540322016
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Land-Use and Land-Cover Change Analysis (Proximate Causes and Underlying Driving Forces). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/environmental-sociology/land-use-land-cover-change-analysis
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Set this method beside its closest kin and read them side by side — the library lays the books on the table; the choice is yours.
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