Market instruments, biosecurity and place-based understandings of animal disease

被引:33
|
作者
Enticott, Gareth [1 ]
机构
[1] Cardiff Univ, Sch Geog & Planning, Cardiff CF10 3WA, S Glam, Wales
关键词
Biosecurity; New Zealand; Market instruments; Animal disease; Risk based trading; Local knowledge; FARMERS; NEOLIBERALISM; COMMENSURATION; ERADICATION; GOVERNANCE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jrurstud.2016.04.008
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Neoliberal approaches to managing animal disease use Market Instruments (MIs) to promote biosecurity citizenship amongst farmers. MIs create risk-based trading markets that make disease risks visible, and establish and reward appropriate farming practices. However, for other policies the use of MIs is often context dependent and related to farmers' existing values and practices. This paper considers how different spatial imaginations of disease and place attachment amongst farmers modifies the meaning of disease control MIs. Using the example of bovine Tuberculosis in New Zealand, the paper examines its Risk Based Trading scheme known as 'C status' designed to limit the movement of cattle. Drawing on qualitative interviews in a farming community in the West Coast, the paper shows how farmers accept the legitimacy of C status to create biosecurity citizenship. At the same time, farmers recognise different spaces of disease risk that vary according to landscape and climate, farming practices, and cattle genetics: factors not recognised within C status. These absences, together with farmers' attachment to place, and their adaptive plans to live with disease, can minimise the significance of MIs. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:312 / 319
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Place-based brand experience, place attachment and loyalty
    Cardinale, Sylvia
    Nguyen, Bang
    Melewar, T. C.
    MARKETING INTELLIGENCE & PLANNING, 2016, 34 (03) : 302 - 317
  • [32] Non-place and the future of place-based education
    Bertling, Joy G.
    ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION RESEARCH, 2018, 24 (11) : 1627 - 1630
  • [33] Towards a chronotopic theory of "place" in place-based education
    van Eijck, Michiel
    Roth, Wolff-Michael
    CULTURAL STUDIES OF SCIENCE EDUCATION, 2010, 5 (04) : 869 - 898
  • [34] Place-based understandings of 'risk' and 'danger' through a gendered lens - experiences of sexual violence in a deprived coastal town in the UK
    Wenham, Aniela
    Jobling, Hannah
    JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES, 2024, 27 (09) : 1324 - 1340
  • [35] Redefining Expectations for Place-based Philanthropy
    Mack, Katelyn P.
    Preskill, Hallie
    Keddy, James
    Jhawar, Moninder-Mona K.
    FOUNDATION REVIEW, 2014, 6 (04): : 30 - +
  • [36] Evaluating the effectiveness of place-based media
    Lucas, J
    Prensky, D
    MEASURING ADVERTISING EFFECTIVENESS, 1997, : 371 - 383
  • [37] Place-based education in an urban environment
    Russell-Ciardi, Maggie
    MUSEUM INTERNATIONAL, 2006, 58 (03) : 71 - 77
  • [38] Neighbourhood stigma and place-based policies
    Koster, Hans R. A.
    van Ommeren, Jos
    ECONOMIC POLICY, 2024, 38 (114) : 289 - 339
  • [39] Validation of place-based models of care
    Calkins, M
    Meehan, R
    Briller, S
    GERONTOLOGIST, 2001, 41 : 319 - 319
  • [40] Moving to Action on Place-Based Health
    Khullar, Dhruv
    Chokshi, Dave A.
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2020, 323 (08): : 698 - 699