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Browsing by Autor "Rachel Bezner Kerr"

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    Challenging Agroecology—Promise and Pitfalls for Agrarian Studies
    (Wiley, 2025) Ben M. McKay; Georgina Catacora‐Vargas; A. Castellanos-Navarrete; Rachel Bezner Kerr; Jessie K. Luna
    ABSTRACT Within agrarian studies, promoting agroecology is widely held as a key objective to animate progressive change with social and environmental benefits across rural regions. Yet, in practice, many questions remain salient concerning the political economy and social dynamics of agroecological transitions. On the one hand, different visions of agroecology exist in terms of both agricultural practices and their surrounding social relations. While a plurality of visions within the field is often celebrated, this conceptual flexibility can make analysis of what works, why, where, and for whom more challenging. On the other hand, agroecological transitions often present daunting challenges for resource poor farmers: a time lag for agroecological methods to become effective; a switch of markets and associated relationships; and new demands for farm and labour management in conditions of uncertain knowledge and constrained resources. These questions push the field of agrarian studies to move beyond simplified normative presentations of agroecology and grapple with the messy political economy of transitions. What are the social, political, and technical preconditions of success? How do agroecological transitions play out in communities and regions that often have internal divisions and conflicting interests? What are the respective roles—if any—of the state, social movements, or non‐governmental agencies in such processes? And, given the partial adoption of agroecology within various governmental realms, is there a risk of a bifurcation of agriculture wherein there is intensive industrial farming for an agrarian elite and agroecology prescribed for a neo‐subsistence rural poor? To address these themes, the Journal of Agrarian Change asked a series of authors to consider two interlinked questions. First, how does agrarian studies as a field of analysis challenge agroecology by contextualizing agroecological initiatives within the complex dynamics of agrarian change? Second, how do the normative goals and practical experiences of agroecology challenge agrarian studies to widen, adapt or reinvent its empirical foci and analytical tools?
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    Joint environmental and social benefits from diversified agriculture
    (American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2024) Laura Vang Rasmussen; Ingo Graß; Zia Mehrabi; Olivia M. Smith; Rachel Bezner Kerr; Jennifer Blesh; Lucas A. Garibaldi; Marney E. Isaac; Christina M. Kennedy; Hannah Wittman
    Agricultural simplification continues to expand at the expense of more diverse forms of agriculture. This simplification, for example, in the form of intensively managed monocultures, poses a risk to keeping the world within safe and just Earth system boundaries. Here, we estimated how agricultural diversification simultaneously affects social and environmental outcomes. Drawing from 24 studies in 11 countries across 2655 farms, we show how five diversification strategies focusing on livestock, crops, soils, noncrop plantings, and water conservation benefit social (e.g., human well-being, yields, and food security) and environmental (e.g., biodiversity, ecosystem services, and reduced environmental externalities) outcomes. We found that applying multiple diversification strategies creates more positive outcomes than individual management strategies alone. To realize these benefits, well-designed policies are needed to incentivize the adoption of multiple diversification strategies in unison.

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