Duncan, R2018-08-102017-12Duncan, R. (2017). 'Lag-effect' politics and the politicisation of New Zealand farmers: Where to from here? Lincoln Planning Review, 8(1-2), 39-48.1175-0987https://hdl.handle.net/10182/10129Responding to diffuse agricultural pollution is plagued by the considerable period of time it can take before ecological thresholds are breached and the impacts of actions on land become evident in water. Reflecting on the recent election campaign and the findings of research conducted in 2013 to understand farmers’ perspectives on media claims that agriculture is diminishing New Zealand’s ‘100% Pure’ brand, this paper examines the social and political dimensions of this lag-effect and argues that the politicisation of New Zealand farmers has gone too far. The paper examines the implications of lag-effect politics for farmers and the new government that has inherited an already fraught implementation phase of the National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management.pp.39-48en©The Authorswater managementpoliticsNew Zealand farmersNational Policy Statement for Freshwater Management'Lag-effect' politics and the politicisation of New Zealand farmers: Where to from here?Journal ArticleANZSRC::0701 Agriculture, Land and Farm ManagementANZSRC::1606 Political ScienceANZSRC::079901 Agricultural Hydrology (Drainage, Flooding, Irrigation, Quality, etc.)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike