Farmers ’ use of fundamental knowledge to re-design their cropping systems: situated contextualisation processes

Publication date: Available online 3 December 2016 Source:NJAS - Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences Author(s): Quentin Toffolini, Marie-Hélène Jeuffroy, Pierre Mischler, Jérôme Pernel, Lorène Prost When they re-design their cropping systems to move towards agroecology, farmers implement practices that involve biological processes. Such practices have been qualified as knowledge-intensive, as they involve the renewal of agronomic principles and numerous interactions between the systems’ components and their regulation. Several studies recognize the value of discussing knowledge on systems’ functioning and component properties with farmers, in relation to technical change processes. This paper investigates some processes of coordination of fundamental and generic knowledge on biological processes, on the situated knowledge that farmers may use when introducing technical changes in their own cropping system, and on the integrated approach to agroecological processes. We perform an inductive inquiry, in the framework of an iterative and instrumental analysis of case studies. We chose five cases of different step-by-step cropping system re-design situations. Through our crosscutting analysis, we highlight the fundamental knowledge on biological objects that the farmers mobilized, and we describe some aspects of the processes involved in its contextualization. In particular, we describe four patterns of connection between fundamental knowledge and farmers’ action...
Source: NJAS Wageningen Journal of Life Sciences - Category: Biology Source Type: research
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