Diversified farming systems: an agroecological, systems-based alternative to modern industrial agriculture
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define diversified farming systems (DFS) as farming practices and landscapes that intentionally include functional biodiversity at multiple spatial and/or temporal scales in order to maintain ecosystem services that provide critical inputs to agriculture, such as soil fertility, pest and disease control, water use efficiency and pollination.
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Abstract: This Special Issue on Diversified Farming Systems is motivated by a desire to understand how agriculture designed according to whole systems, agroecological principles can contribute to creating a more sustainable, socially just, and secure global food system. We first define Diversified Farming Systems (DFS) as farming practices and landscapes that intentionally include functional biodiversity at multiple spatial and/or temporal scales in order to maintain ecosystem services that provide critical inputs to agriculture, such as soil fertility, pest and disease control, water use efficiency, and pollination. We explore to what extent DFS overlap or are differentiated from existing concepts such as sustainable, multifunctional, organic or ecoagriculture. DFS are components of social-ecological systems that depend on certain combinations of traditional and contemporary knowledge, cultures, practices, and governance structures. Further, as ecosystem services are generated and regenerated within a DFS, the resulting social benefits in turn support the maintenance of the DFS, enhancing its ability to provision these services sustainably. We explore how social institutions, particularly alternative agri-food networks and agrarian movements, may serve to promote DFS approaches, but note that such networks and movements have other primary goals and are not always explicitly connected to the environmental and agroecological concerns embodied within the DFS concept. We examine global trends in agriculture to investigate to what extent industrialized forms of agriculture are replacing former DFS, assess the current and potential contributions of DFS to food security, food sovereignty and the global food supply, and determine where and under what circumstances DFS are expanding rather than contracting. © 2012 by the author(s).
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Citations
Tree plantation for implementing the land utilization policies incorporate with sustainable development towards environmental concerns in Assam, India
TL;DR: This study assesses the effectiveness of tree plantations in Assam, India, to address environmental concerns and implement land utilization policies incorporating sustainable development, finding no significant differences in participant opinions on tree planting and sustainable farming practices.
Socio-economic, political, and institutional sustainability of agroforestry in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala
Sara Nicli,Jasmin Mantilla-Contreras,Roberto Waldemar Moya Fernandez,Markus Schermer,David Unger,Saskia Wolf,Stefan Zerbe +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify social, institutional, and economic factors that influence the adoption of agroforestry on the household and community level, taking the region Alta Verapaz in Guatemala as a case study.
•Dissertation
Reading what farmers write : an agroecological exploration of three farmers/authors’ proposals to develop ecological, productive and profitable farm enterprises
José Domingues Costa
- 11 Aug 2016
TL;DR: Salatin, Mark Shepard and Richard Perkins as discussed by the authors explored the accounts and proposals of three farmer-authors to create productive, profitable, ecological and enjoyable farm enterprises and discuss their contribution to a better agriculture, food system, and society.
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