5 results
Search Results
2. Policy Reform and the Sustainability of Farming in the Uplands of the United Kingdom: Conflicts between Environment and Social Support.
- Author
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Midmore, Peter, Sherwood, Anne-Marie, and Roughley, Gabriella
- Subjects
AGRICULTURE & the environment ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL networks ,GREEN movement - Abstract
ABSTRACT: The European Union's support for farming in ‘less favoured areas’ (LFAs) is currently implemented in the United Kingdom through headage payments for cattle and sheep, although reforms to the system are under way. These payments have caused environmental concern, since, although formally social in nature, they are implicated in processes of agricultural intensification and management practices that reduce ecosystem integrity and landscape interest. In this paper, we examine the extent to which enhancement of the policy mix could take such concerns into account. Initially, we review the evidence of environmental change, also taking into account afforestation and increasing recreational demands on the hills and uplands. An analysis of the environmental perspective is interwoven with current economic, cultural and social difficulties, based on summaries of farmer attitudes drawn from a range of inquiries. We then examine options proposed for change, particularly the conversion of the Hill Livestock Compensatory Allowances headage payments to an area-based compensation, and greater cross-compliance with environmental preconditions. We conclude that scope exists for improved integration of social support for farming with measures to conserve and enhance the environment in hill and upland areas. However, more coherent policies that encompass marketing to pro-ecological, pro-social consumers, education and research, community and infrastructure could strike a more effective balance in attaining objectives for farming and society as a whole, by according a pivotal role to organic farming as a standard for low-input agriculture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Facilitating the Diffusion of Alternative Cropping Systems for Mountain Agriculture in Vietnam.
- Author
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Castella, Jean-Christophe, Eguienta, Yann K., and Tran Trong Hieu
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURE , *SUSTAINABLE agriculture , *CROPPING systems , *SOIL management , *MOVEMENT of fertilizers in soils , *LAND degradation , *SHIFTING cultivation , *DOMESTIC animals , *LIVESTOCK systems - Abstract
In the mountain areas of Northern Vietnam, the past decade was marked by rapid changes in agricultural production systems. Under the new land policies, some farmers had no other choice than to return to the traditional slash and burn cropping systems. Now, however, land allocation to individuals prevents farmers from shifting cultivation to newly cleared land, which is necessary to regenerate soil fertility, and thus for slash and burn practices to remain sustainable. As a consequence, in some villages there is an increasing risk of land degradation. As livestock feeding relies mainly on natural resources, land degradation results in chronic shortages of forage and more generally to a crisis in traditional production systems. To tackle these issues, the Mountain Agrarian Systems Program has designed alternative cropping systems based on direct seeding under a cover crop. Beside their widely recognized role in the conservation of soil and natural resources, these innovative techniques also provide good forage for the farm animals. However, their diffusion implies a profound reorganization of the crop-livestock systems at complementary scales from field, farm, and up to the village community. Accompanying such changes requires that all partners jointly develop communication procedures based on a common knowledge base. In this paper we discuss the spatial compartment model, a graphic discussion and simulation tool used to represent a village in a way that allows both researchers and local stakeholders to understand and visualize their individual and collective situations. We used the model to test a set of cropping innovations through a participatory simulation with local farmers. The farmers were very interested in the new techniques, and some began to test them on their own land. The spatial compartment model proved to be an effective communication tool between scientists and local stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Assessing ecosystem services and biodiversity tradeoffs across agricultural landscapes in a mountain region.
- Author
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Geneletti, Davide, Scolozzi, Rocco, and Adem Esmail, Blal
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL landscape management ,ECOSYSTEM services ,AGRICULTURAL ecology - Abstract
The ability of agricultural areas to produce non-commodity outputs in addition to food and fiber, i.e. multifunctionality, is increasingly at the core of policies promoting sustainability. Assessing the potential benefits for biodiversity and understanding tradeoffs among multiple ecosystem services (ES) from agricultural areas remain key challenges, especially in mountainous landscapes. Through a case-study approach, we assess the tradeoffs and synergies between the ES associated with agricultural areas. We map and assess the ES provided by seven study areas in northern Italy, aiming to provide guidance on the relationship between the agricultural land use intensity and provision of ES. In total, we performed a quantitative evaluation of 10 ES indicators, followed by their thematic aggregation and correlation analyses to gain a better understanding of the spatial ES tradeoffs. Our findings highlight that the transition to intensive forms of agricultural exploitation, in addition to the loss of habitats, also involves a reduction in cultural services. EDITED BY Matthias Schröter [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Socioeconomic Improvement through Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (MAPs) Cultivation in Uttarakhand, India.
- Author
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Chauhan, RajendraSingh
- Subjects
MEDICINAL plants ,AROMATIC plants ,MARKETING strategy ,AGRICULTURAL productivity - Abstract
Traditional cereal crop production is uneconomic, and diversification in cropping system is necessary in mountain regions. A pilot project was introduced on medicinal and aromatic plants (MAPs) cultivation with semi-processing and market strategy. Fast growing MAPs with high economic potential were given priority. A cooperative society was organized for quality control and proper marketing. Farmers got additional income with sale of MAPs that could improve socioeconomy. In the depressing scenario of the deteriorating farming condition, emerging experience of MAPs farming give hope for better living standard of mountain peoples. Cultivation of economically viable MAPs can improve socioeconomy of farmers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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