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http://hdl.handle.net/10182/5050
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| Title: | The agriculture research group on sustainability programme: a longitudinal and transdisciplinary study of agricultural sustainability in New Zealand |
| Author: | Campbell, Hugh Fairweather, John Manhire, Jon Saunders, Caroline Moller, Henrik Reid, John Benge, Jayson Blackwell, Grant Carey, Peter Emanuelsson, Martin Greer, Glen Hunt, Lesley M. Lucock, Dave Rosin, Chris Norton, David MacLeod, Catriona Knight, Benjamin |
| Date: | Feb-2012 |
| Publisher: | Agriculture Research Group on Sustainability |
| Series/Report no.: | ARGOS research report: no. 07/12 |
| Item Type: | Monograph |
| Abstract: | This report provides an overview of the key design features of the Agriculture
Research Group on Sustainability (ARGOS) programme. This ongoing long-term
research project started in 2003, involving a group of around 20 social scientists,
ecologists, economists, and farm management experts in New Zealand. The
overarching mission of ARGOS is to understand the enablers and barriers to the
sustainability and resilience of agriculture, so as to enhance New Zealand’s economic,
social and environmental wellbeing. To achieve this mission, the ARGOS team has
designed and implemented a well-replicated and long-term programme of
longitudinal research on more than 100 whole working farms, across different
agricultural sectors, comparing a wide range of variables between three different
farming systems: conventional, integrated management (IM) and organic. The first
funded phase of this research programme has taken a systems and transdisciplinary
approach, with an emphasis on statistical rigour and standardisation of methods,
structured around the basic null hypothesis that there are no differences between the
three farming systems. The primary focus of this approach is to examine the efficacy
of alternative quality assurance (QA) schemes in delivering sustainable outcomes.
This working paper seeks to inform potential collaborators and other interested
parties about the way the ARGOS research programme has been structured, and to
describe the rationale for this design. To this end, the report first documents the
formation of the ARGOS group and the development of the aims and basic features of
the design of the first funded phase of the research programme. The process of
selection of agricultural sectors and individual farms within those sectors is described,
along with the rationale behind this selection process. We then describe the key
objectives of the research programme, and the way these were approached by
research teams from different disciplines. The importance of transdisciplinarity is then
discussed, providing insight into the associated benefits and pitfalls, and the lessons
that were learned in the process of designing and implementing a transdisciplinary
research programme. Finally, we discuss a number of issues surrounding the key
features of our study design, evaluating their respective benefits and costs, and
describe the future research directions suggested by the findings of the first phase of
the programme. |
| Persistent URL (URI): | http://hdl.handle.net/10182/5050 |
| Related: | Available from www.argos.org.nz |
| Related URI: | http://www.argos.org.nz/transdisciplinary_analysis.html |
| ISSN: | 1177-7796 1177-8512 |
| Rights: | Copyright © The Authors. |
| Appears in Collections: | ARGOS publications
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