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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/41310
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| Title: | Innovation brokers in High Nature Value farming areas: a strategic approach to engage effective socioeconomic and agroecological dynamics |
| Authors: | Bernard, Claire Poux, Xavier Herzon, Irina Moran, James Pinto-Correia, Teresa Dumitras, Diana Ferraz-de-Oliveira, Maria Isabel Gouriveau, Fabrice Goussios, Dimitris Jitea, Mugurel Kazakova, Yanka Koivuranta, Riina Lerin, Francois Ljung, Magnus Lomba, Angela Mihai, Valentin Puig de Morales, Maite Vlahos, George |
| Keywords: | high nature value farming; innovation brokerage; landscape-territorial vision; strategic environmental analysis; territorial prospective analysis |
| Issue Date: | 2023 |
| Abstract: | High Nature Value (HNV) farmlands currently retain most of the biodiversity associated with agricultural landscapes
in Europe. In a time of globalized food systems, the social-ecological conditions to maintain these low-intensity and thus less productive
HNV farming systems are difficult to meet. Halting the loss of HNV farmland requires fostering the socioeconomic viability of HNV
farming systems that is compatible with social, cultural, and ecological values. Pursuing such viability calls for tailored actions to steer
the development of HNV farming systems based on the strength of their local assets. Such a transformational learning process involves
changing the territorial dynamic towards better integration of biodiversity at several levels of management (from farm to territorial
level). Based on the description and analysis of ten HNV territories distributed across Europe, we explore how HNV innovation brokers
can strategically engage with local actors to preserve the environmental characteristics of HNV farmland areas while improving their
socioeconomic viability. The aim of this research is to improve the understanding of the range of approaches and strategies of innovation
brokers to meet the challenges of HNV farmland conservation. The study analyzes the different innovation processes that took place
in each area, concentrating on the engagement phase. Our results demonstrate that HNV farming situations across Europe are quite
diverse from an agroecological and socioeconomic point of view. There are distinct conservation challenges and associated risks for
each HNV farming context. The need for a strategic approach to HNV conservation at landscape–territory level is discussed. The key
role of innovation brokers is highlighted, together with the need for a strategic approach to innovation brokerage, which is explicit in
relation to territorial needs and the changes required. We demonstrate the importance of the landscape–territorial vision as an entry
point for shaping HNV farming systems towards socially desirable scenarios. |
| URI: | https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-13522-280120 http://hdl.handle.net/10174/41310 |
| Type: | article |
| Appears in Collections: | MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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