Fachbereich 9 - Wirtschaftswissenschaften

Forschungszentrum INSTITUT FÜR UMWELTSYSTEMFORSCHUNG


Navigation und Suche der Universität Osnabrück


Hauptinhalt

Topinformationen

20. Januar 2023 : Dr. Katrin Prager online zu Gast beim 29. Systemwissenschaftlichen Kolloquium

Dr. Katrin Prager von der School of Geosciences der University of Aberdeen präsentierte ihre Forschung am 30. November 2022 im Rahmen des 29. Systemwissenschaftlichen Kolloquiums am Institut für Umweltsystemforschung.

Der Titel ihrer Präsentation war "How can we use policy instruments to support farmer cooperation for environmental benefits? - Learning from the Countryside Stewardship Facilitation Fund". In ihrer Präsentation stellte Dr. Prager ein Politikprogramm zur Förderung von pro-umweltlicher Kooperation zwischen Landwirtinnen und Landwirten in England vor. 
Mehr Informationen zu ihrer Forschung https://www.abdn.ac.uk/geosciences/people/profiles/katrin.prager

In ihrem Abstract beschreibt Dr. Katrin Prager das Thema ihres Vortrags wie folgt:
How can we use policy instruments to support farmer cooperation for environmental benefits? - Learning from the Countryside Stewardship Facilitation Fund
Farmers cooperate in different ways and for different purposes, but cooperating in the implementation of agri-environmental measures is rare, and represents a di
erent, more unique, case in relation to cooperation. Nevertheless, it is attractive to policy makers to supplement agri-environment schemes (AES) with mechanisms to incentivise farmer cooperation in order to achieve management that is coordinated at ‘landscape-scale’ and thus more effective for certain ecosystem services such as water quality, and biodiversity. In this talk, I will introduce the Countryside Stewardship Facilitation Fund (CSFF) in England as a policy intervention to develop cooperation amongst farmers and agree the agri-environmental management priorities that they plan to take forward across their holdings. Data from empirical research on the actual operation of six CSFF-funded groups in Cumbria and East Anglia was analysed from a social capital and collective action perspective. I found that key elements of social capital (connectedness, trust, norms) differed between cases, leading to different starting points for establishing groups. The resulting cooperation in agri-environmental management also varied depending on pre-existing networks. The CSFF supported steps to increase the capacity of individuals (and in some cases groups) to deliver agri-environmental outcomes via a facilitator, but struggled to create self-sustaining groups of farmers collaborating on agri-environmental management. The design of similar policy interventions needs to be explicit what kind of farmer cooperation is aimed for. It also needs to take into account the time required for building the prerequisite social capital, tensions between priorities of farmer-led groups and state-funded AES, and trade-offs between group cohesion and landscape-scale working.