Linking the social, economic, and agroecological: a resilience framework for dairy farming
Type de document
journalArticle
Langue source
Anglais
Titre français
Titre anglais
Linking the social, economic, and agroecological: a resilience framework for dairy farming
Auteur(s)
- CRADOCK-HENRY Nicholas
Editeur(s)
Autre(s)
Id
ZFFLVJXQ
Version
2387
Date ajout
28 janvier 2021 16:53
Date modification
28 janvier 2021 16:53
Résumé anglais
Agriculture is a major economic driver in Aotearoa-New Zealand (New Zealand), led by export earnings from dairy
farming. Dairying is uniquely exposed to climatic- and nonclimatic socioeconomic stressors, which have their greatest effects on
production and yield. The growing need to consider these and other changes is accelerating efforts aimed at ensuring greater resilience,
adaptability, and flexibility within the industry. To gain insight into these dynamics at the farm-level, a resilience-based assessment
framework was piloted with three different types of dairy farming systems, following extensive drought on the east coast of the North
Island. Using a participatory and bottom-up approach, the framework was used to qualitatively explore the potential significance of
varying social, economic, and agroecological attributes between high-input, low-input, and organic systems, and their implications for
resilience. The “lock in trap” of highly intensive systems, although profitable in the near term, may be less resilient to climate shocks
because these are likely to occur in conjunction with changing market and financial risks. Low-input systems are less dependent, in
particular, on fossil fuels and are associated with higher levels of farmer satisfaction and well-being. Organic farming provides ecological
benefits, and the financial premium paid to farmers may act as a short-term buffer. The framework provides insight into the current
context at the farm level and can draw out individual perspectives on where to target interventions and build resilience. Results
demonstrate the potential of in-depth qualitative assessments of resilience, which can usefully complement quantitative metrics. The
framework can be used as the basis for further empirical assessment and inform the design of similar approaches for cross-sector
comparative analysis, large-N surveys, or modelling. Furthermore, the preliminary characterization of resilient farm-systems has the
potential to contribute to broader sustainability frameworks for agriculture and can inform strategic adaptation planning in the face
of climate change.
Note
None
CRAW tags
- AB - Utile à l'AB
- FREDO adaptation aux changements globaux
- FREDO durabilité
- FREDO production et filière
- GEO Nouvelle-Zélande
- social-ecological system
- adaptation
- adaptive systems
- farming system
- laitier
- networks
- rendement
- resilience
- vulnerability
WEB tags
Titre de la publication
Ecology and Society
Volume
26
Date caractères
2021/01/21
Date publication
21 janvier 2021
Doi
10.5751/ES-12122-260103
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Il est donc plus fiable et permanent qu'une URL classique
Issn
1708-3087
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Url publication