Back to Search Start Over

Contextualising farmer perspectives on regenerative agriculture: A post-productivist future?

Authors :
Beacham, Jonathan D.
Jackson, Peter
Jaworski, Coline C.
Krzywoszynska, Anna
Dicks, Lynn V.
Source :
Journal of Rural Studies; Aug2023, Vol. 102, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Within agri-food scholarship, longstanding debates have focused on the empirical applicability and conceptual utility of differing agricultural paradigms. These have often dovetailed with considerations around the future of agriculture in countries such as the UK given a shift in emphasis away from the central tenets of a high-input, yield-oriented productivism. Alternative diagnoses, particularly in notions of a post-productivist paradigm, have proven influential in capturing broad changes in the restructuring of agricultural activity. Whilst debates around the characterisation of these paradigms continue, they highlight distinct contestations in broader (and shifting) questions around what agriculture should be 'for', e.g. whether environmental 'goods' should be valued more highly than material production. Situating our paper within these ongoing debates, we draw on farmer perspectives in examining the adoption of regenerative agricultural practices in two farmer clusters in the East and South-West of England respectively. As a diverse array of practices which appear favourably positioned in a post-Brexit policy environment, we explore the ways in which regenerative agriculture can be understood as seeking to reconcile productivist and post-productivist tendencies. Drawing attention to the tensions, contradictions and uncertainties at play in these farmer perspectives, we highlight: the environmental and emotional appeal of regenerative agriculture compared to its adoption for more pragmatic (economic) reasons; the parallels and differences between regenerative agriculture and organic production; and the multiple sources of trusted information drawn upon by farmers in an uncertain policy environment. We conclude the paper by reflecting on the need to better contextualise and conceptualise contemporary interest in regenerative agriculture within longer theoretical lineages, in which the voice of farmers themselves must be central. • The paper presents the results of in-depth interviews with members of two farmer clusters regarding the adoption of regenerative farming practices in the UK • The results are situated within theoretical debates about the transition from productivism to post-productivism • Farmers discuss the emotional appeal of regenerative farming and other (environmental and economic) motivations for adopting regenerative practices • Comparisons with organic farming are discussed including the potential benefits of certification and the risks of corporate capture • Uncertainties in the policy environment, the volatile costs of agricultural inputs and the geopolitical situation in Ukraine were all mentioned as factors affecting the uptake of regenerative farming in the UK, prompting a need for reliable information from trusted sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07430167
Volume :
102
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Rural Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
171851245
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrurstud.2023.103100