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      Scaling up conservation agriculture: An exploration of challenges and opportunities through a stakeholder engagement process

      1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7
      Journal of Environmental Quality
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Increasing the resilience of agricultural landscapes requires fundamental changes to the dominant commodity production model, including incorporating practices such as reduced tillage, cover cropping, and extended rotations that reduce soil disturbance while increasing biological diversity. Increasing farmer adoption of these conservation systems offers the potential to transform agriculture to a more vibrant, resilient system that protects soil, air, and water quality. Adoption of these resilience practices is not without significant challenges. This paper presents findings from a participatory effort to better understand these challenges and to develop solutions to help producers overcome them. Through repeated, facilitated discussions with farmers and agricultural and conservation professionals across the U.S. state of Michigan, we confronted the policy, economic, and structural barriers that are inhibiting broader adoption of conservation systems, as well as identified policies, programs, and markets that can support their adoption. What emerged was a complex picture and dynamic set of challenges at multiple spatial scales and across multiple domains. The primary themes emerging from these discussions were barriers and opportunities, including markets, social networks, human capital, and conservation programs. Exacerbating the technical, agronomic, and economic challenges farmers face at the farm level, there are a host of community constraints, market access and availability problems, climatic and environmental changes, and policies (governmental and corporate) that cross‐pressure farmers when it comes to making conservation decisions. Understanding these constraints is critical to developing programs, policies, and state and national investments that can drive adoption of conservation agriculture.

          Core Ideas

          •  Farmer adoption of conservation agriculture is limited by barriers at multiple scales.

          •  Expanding conservation agriculture will require addressing economic and social barriers.

          •  Engaging with stakeholders is a necessary step to developing approaches to increase resilience.

          •  Resilience includes social and economic aspects as well as environmental sustainability.

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          Most cited references36

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          Using thematic analysis in psychology

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            Resilience Thinking: Integrating Resilience, Adaptability and Transformability

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              Developing a capacity for organizational resilience through strategic human resource management

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Journal of Environmental Quality
                J of Env Quality
                Wiley
                0047-2425
                1537-2537
                May 2023
                January 22 2022
                May 2023
                : 52
                : 3
                : 465-475
                Affiliations
                [1 ] National Wildlife Federation 203 W. Liberty St. Ann Arbor MI 48104 USA
                [2 ] W.K. Kellogg Biological Station Michigan State Univ. 3700 Gull Lake Dr. Hickory Corners MI 49060 USA
                [3 ] Current address: Michigan Agriculture Advancement 4420 Parman Rd Stockbridge MI 49285 USA
                [4 ] Michigan Agriculture Advancement 4420 Parman Rd Stockbridge MI 49285 USA
                [5 ] Current address: USDA Farm Service Agency 3001 Coolidge Rd., Suite 350 East Lansing MI 48823 USA
                [6 ] Groundwater, Surface Water, and Agriculture Michigan Environmental Council 602 W. Ionia St. Lansing MI 48933 USA
                [7 ] Current address: Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development 525 W. Allegan St. Lansing MI 48933 USA
                Article
                10.1002/jeq2.20317
                ed44160b-b07f-4846-b52d-3a5c8823b33b
                © 2023

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