Have farmers had enough of experts?

被引:0
|
作者
Niki A. Rust
Petra Stankovics
Rebecca M. Jarvis
Zara Morris-Trainor
Jasper R. de Vries
Julie Ingram
Jane Mills
Jenny A. Glikman
Joy Parkinson
Zoltan Toth
Regina Hansda
Rob McMorran
Jayne Glass
Mark S. Reed
机构
[1] Newcastle University,Centre for Rural Economy, School of Natural and Environmental Sciences
[2] Food and Rural Affairs,Department for Environment
[3] Lancaster House,Georgikon Campus
[4] Institute of Advanced Studies Kőszeg,School of Science
[5] Institute of Agronomy,Strategic Communication Group
[6] Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences,Countryside and Community Research Institute (CCRI)
[7] Auckland University of Technology,Georgikon Campus
[8] Sustainable Fibre Alliance,Thriving Natural Capital Challenge Centre and Rural Policy Centre, Department of Rural Economy, Environment & Society
[9] Wageningen University,undefined
[10] University of Gloucestershire,undefined
[11] Instituto de Estudios Sociales Avanzados (IESA-CSIC),undefined
[12] Griffith Business School,undefined
[13] Griffith University,undefined
[14] Institute of Agronomy,undefined
[15] Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences,undefined
[16] Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC),undefined
来源
Environmental Management | 2022年 / 69卷
关键词
Innovation; Social learning; Social media; Sustainable agriculture; Technology adoption; Trust; Soil management;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The exponential rise of information available means we can now, in theory, access knowledge on almost any question we ask. However, as the amount of unverified information increases, so too does the challenge in deciding which information to trust. Farmers, when learning about agricultural innovations, have historically relied on in-person advice from traditional ‘experts’, such as agricultural advisers, to inform farm management. As more farmers go online for information, it is not clear whether they are now using digital information to corroborate in-person advice from traditional ‘experts’, or if they are foregoing ‘expert’ advice in preference for peer-generated information. To fill this knowledge gap, we sought to understand how farmers in two contrasting European countries (Hungary and the UK) learnt about sustainable soil innovations and who influenced them to innovate. Through interviews with 82 respondents, we found farmers in both countries regularly used online sources to access soil information; some were prompted to change their soil management by farmer social media ‘influencers’. However, online information and interactions were not usually the main factor influencing farmers to change their practices. Farmers placed most trust in other farmers to learn about new soil practices and were less trusting of traditional ‘experts’, particularly agricultural researchers from academic and government institutions, who they believed were not empathetic towards farmers’ needs. We suggest that some farmers may indeed have had enough of traditional ‘experts’, instead relying more on their own peer networks to learn and innovate. We discuss ways to improve trustworthy knowledge exchange between agricultural stakeholders to increase uptake of sustainable soil management practices, while acknowledging the value of peer influence and online interactions for innovation and trust building.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 44
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Have farmers had enough of experts?
    Rust, Niki A.
    Stankovics, Petra
    Jarvis, Rebecca M.
    Morris-Trainor, Zara
    de Vries, Jasper R.
    Ingram, Julie
    Mills, Jane
    Glikman, Jenny A.
    Parkinson, Joy
    Toth, Zoltan
    Hansda, Regina
    McMorran, Rob
    Glass, Jayne
    Reed, Mark S.
    ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2022, 69 (01) : 31 - 44
  • [2] Had enough of experts?
    Gallagher, Michael
    EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY, 2018, 50 (14) : 1320 - 1321
  • [3] 'People in this country have had enough of experts': Brexit and the paradoxes of populism
    Clarke, John
    Newman, Janet
    CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES, 2017, 11 (01) : 101 - 116
  • [4] We have had enough
    Sigurjonsson, Havar
    LAEKNABLADID, 2024, 110 (09): : 430 - 432
  • [5] HAVE WE HAD ENOUGH + IS MULTICULTURALISM ENOUGH
    SUMIDA, SH
    WOMENS STUDIES-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL, 1992, 20 (3-4): : 234 - 242
  • [6] WHEN WILL FARMERS HAVE ENOUGH
    BERG, GL
    FARM CHEMICALS, 1969, 132 (05): : 78 - &
  • [7] HAVE WE HAD ENOUGH SCIENCE
    不详
    CHEMISTRY & INDUSTRY, 1976, (18) : 747 - 747
  • [8] Have people 'had enough of experts'? The impact of populism and pandemic misinformation on institutional trust in comparative perspective
    Stetka, Vaclav
    Brandao, Francisco
    Mihelj, Sabina
    Toth, Fanni
    Hallin, Daniel
    Rothberg, Danilo
    Ferracioli, Paulo
    Klimkiewicz, Beata
    INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY, 2024,
  • [9] 'HAVE THE MEN HAD ENOUGH' - FORSTER,M
    DUCHENE, A
    TLS-THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, 1989, (4486): : 300 - 300
  • [10] HAVE THE MEN HAD ENOUGH - FORSTER,M
    BOSTON, A
    NEW STATESMAN & SOCIETY, 1989, 2 (41): : 36 - 37