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  1. Partnerships in pandemics: tracing power relations in community engaged scholarship in food systems during COVID-19.Laura Jessee Livingston - 2023 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (1):217-229.
    The COVID-19 pandemic dramatically disrupted food and educational systems, laying bare institutional inadequacies and structural inequalities. While there has been ample discussion on impacts to the food system and higher education institutions separately, there has been little written through the perspective of people who navigate both. Farmers, researchers, graduate students, chefs, and many stakeholders contribute to community engaged scholarship (CES) in food systems, facing novel obstacles and opportunities with the spread of the pandemic. In this article, I utilize institutional ethnography (...)
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  • Case studies on smallholder farmer voice: an introduction to a special symposium.Harvey S. James & Iddisah Sulemana - 2014 - Agriculture and Human Values 31 (4):637-641.
    In the spring of 2013, project leaders who received funding from the John Templeton Foundation’s program “Can GM Crops Help to Feed the World?” met in England to discuss progress on funded projects and to identify common objectives and research interests. The collection of essays in this special symposium is one outcome of that meeting. This introduction provides background on the symposium’s theme of understanding the challenges to smallholder farmers having a voice. Farmer voice is important not only in debates (...)
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  • Stakeholder participation in agricultural research projects: a conceptual framework for reflection and decision-making. [REVIEW]Andreas Neef & Dieter Neubert - 2011 - Agriculture and Human Values 28 (2):179-194.
    Recent discourse in the field of participatory agricultural research has focused on how to blend various forms and intensities of stakeholder participation with quality agricultural science, moving beyond the simple “farmer-first” ideology of the 1980s and early 1990s. Yet, most existing frameworks of participation in agricultural research still adhere to a linear typology of participatory research with an inherent claim of “the more participation, the better.” In this article, we propose a new framework that looks at participatory research elements along (...)
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  • Moving beyond the numbers: a participatory evaluation of sustainability in Dutch agriculture. [REVIEW]Marleen van de Kerkhof, Annemarie Groot, Marien Borgstein & Leontien Bos-Gorter - 2010 - Agriculture and Human Values 27 (3):307-319.
    Environmental pollution, animal diseases, and food scandals have marked the agricultural sector in the Netherlands and elsewhere in the 1990s. The sector was high on the political and societal agenda and plans were developed to redesign the sector into a more sustainable direction. Generally, monitoring of the agricultural sector is done by means of quantitative indicators to measure social, ecological, and economic performance. To give more attention to the normative character of sustainable development, the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature, and (...)
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