Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.

This book explores relationships to change in agroecological transitions, based on two contrasting and ideal-typical stances, the determinist perspective and the open-ended perspective.at different scales such as agricultural systems, food systems, policy instruments..., thus reinforcing the potenti...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:EcoPolis Series ; v.37
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Brussels : : P.I.E. - Peter Lang SA Éditions Scientifiques Internationales,, 2021.
{copy}2021.
Year of Publication:2021
Edition:1st ed.
Language:French
Series:EcoPolis Series
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (320 pages)
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id 50030686247
ctrlnum (MiAaPQ)50030686247
(Au-PeEL)EBL30686247
(OCoLC)1290612820
collection bib_alma
record_format marc
spelling Lamine, Claire.
Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
1st ed.
Brussels : P.I.E. - Peter Lang SA Éditions Scientifiques Internationales, 2021.
{copy}2021.
1 online resource (320 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
EcoPolis Series ; v.37
Cover -- Copyright Information -- Table of contents -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- Preface Branching pathways in agroecological transformations (Andy Stirling) -- Taking into account the ontological relationship to change in agroecological transitions (Danièle Magda, Claire Lamine, Terry Marsden, Marta Rivera-Ferre) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Characterizing determinist and open-ended perspectives for transition -- 3. How different conceptualizations of the transition to sustainability encapsulate determinist and/or open-ended perspectives on change processes -- 4. The collective process: An attempt to enlighten agroecological transition mechanisms by clarifying our vision on change -- References -- Intertwining deterministic and open-ended perspectives in the experimentation of agroecological production systems: A challenge for agronomy researchers (Mireille Navarrete, Hélène Brives, Maxime Catalogna, Amélie Lefèvre, Sylvaine Simon) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Reconsidering experimentation on farming systems with agroecology -- 3. Methods -- 4. A large diversity in the way deterministic and open-ended perspectives coexist in experimentation -- 4.1. From a deterministic experimentation to a combination of the two perspectives -- 4.2. A planned coexistence between deterministic and open-ended perspectives to tackle uncertainty -- 4.3. A coexistence of open-ended and deterministic perspectives on both the short-term and the long-term time scales -- 4.4. A combination of deterministic and open-ended perspectives relating to a separation of roles between farmers and researchers -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Various forms of coexistence according the types of decision and over time -- 5.2. Limits to coexistence -- 5.3. From a dual vision towards intertwining various experiments embedding open-ended and deterministic perspectives.
6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Plant breeding for agroecology: A sociological analysis of the co-creation of varieties and the collectives involved (Sophie Tabouret, Claire Lamine, François Hochereau) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Three case studies in perennial plant breeding -- 2.1. Languedoc Wine: New actors that change the definition of a "sustainable" resistance4 -- 2.2. Rosé de Provence: Taking into consideration the practices of concerned actors -- 2.2. Prunus: A multi-actor process to open and discuss the list of relevant criteria -- 3. Discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Agroecological transitions at the scale of territorial agri-food systems (Marianne Hubeau, Martina Tuscano, Fabienne Barataud, Patrizia Pugliese) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Conceptual framework -- 3. Method and case study description -- 3.1. Step-by-step evolution towards a deterministic perspective in Flanders -- 3.2. Provence Verte food project: From open-ended to deterministic perspectives -- 3.3. Mirecourt: A test of a user-centred approach that emphasizes action and values -- 3.4. Spiralling up and out: The ECST experience in Coastal Dunes Regional Nature Park, Italy -- 4. Results and discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- How policy instruments may favour an articulation between open ended and deterministic perspectives to support agroecological transitions? Insights from a franco-brazilian comparison (Claire Lamine, Claudia Schmitt, Juliano Palm, Floriane Derbez, Paulo Petersen) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Analytical framework -- 3. Two innovative tools which focus on collective, multi-actors and territorial scales and dynamics -- 3.1. The Collective Mobilization for AgroEcology Call (MCAE) -- 3.2. Ecoforte -- 4. From the framing of AET by policy tools to their enactment by situated collectives.
4.1. MCAE: An open definition of agroecology and agroecological transitions that gives way to a diversity of pathways… (and controversies) -- 4.2. Ecoforte: Expanding and contextualizing agroecological visions -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Scope, actors and scale as key objects of the open-ended perspective claimed by both programmes -- 5.2. Modes of articulation of deterministic and open-ended perspectives -- 5.3. The role of researchers in the redefinition of "systematization" -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Teaching, training and learning for the agroecological transition: A French-Brazilian perspective (Moacir Darolt, Juliette Anglade, Pascale Moity- Maïzi, Claire Lamine, Florette Rengard, Vanessa Iceri, Amélie Genay, Cristian Celis) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Case studies -- 2.1. Technical courses in agroecology in state centres of professional education (CEEP): Brazil -- 2.2. The public agricultural teaching programs in France -- 2.3. Latin-American school of agroecology: ELAA (Lapa-Paraná-Brazil) -- 2.4. Faxinal Emboque, São Mateus do Sul, Paraná: Brazil - The institute of popular education - Instituto Equipe de Educação Popular (IEEP) -- 2.5. Mentorship system (InPACT collective): Ardèche - France -- 2.6. Reinventing experimental farms as new learning spaces: INRA Mirecourt, Lorraine - France -- 3. Discussion: The modes of articulation between determinist and open-ended perspectives -- 4. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- The manufacture of futures and the agroecological transition. Deciphering pathways for sustainability transition in France (Marc Barbier, Sarah Lumbroso, Jessica Thomas, Sébastien Treyer) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Analyzing activities of building representations of the future to identify ontological relationships to change.
3. The manufacture of futures around the agroecological transition in France -- 4. Methodology and empirical findings -- 4.1. The portfolio of case studies -- 4.2. Analytical grid -- 4.3. Results: Articulations between relationships to change in the activities of the manufacture of futures -- 5. Interpretation -- 5.1. The main features of the three types of activities of future building -- 5.2. Relationships to change behind the visions of the agroecology and the methodological tools used to build them -- 5.3. Relationships to change behind the expected impacts of the activities and the stakeholders and arenas targeted to reach them -- Conclusion -- References -- How access and dynamics in the use of territorial resources shape agroecological transitions in crop-livestock systems: Learnings and perspectives (Vincent Thénard, Gilles Martel, Jean- Philippe Choisis, Timothée Petit, Sébastien Couvreur, Olivia Fontaine, Marc Moraine) -- 1. How territorial resources and local dynamics support agroecological transitions -- 1.1 Resources involved in agroecological transitions -- 1.2 How agroecological LFS combine biodiversity and territory embeddedness -- 2. Looking at agroecological transitions in contrasting French territories -- 2.1 Territories description regarding territorial embeddedness and biodiversity mobilization -- Mediterranean area in Languedoc -- Oceanic area in Brittany -- Semi-continental area in Aveyron -- Tropical area in Reunion Island -- 2.2 Agroecological LFS multi-criteria assessment -- 3. From mobilized resources to LFS agroecological performances -- 3.1 LFS archetypes in case studies -- 3.2 Mobilized resources in the case studies -- 3.3 LFS agroecological performances in contrasted territories -- 4. Learnings and perspectives -- 4.1 What resources analysis tells us about transition dynamics?.
4.2 LFS agroecological transitions perspectives -- References -- The dynamics of agropastoral activities with regard to the agroecological transition (Charles-Henri Moulin, Laura Etienne, Magali Jouven, Jacques Lasseur, Martine Napoléone, Marie-Odile Nozières-Petit, Eric Vall, Arielle Vidal) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Agropastoralism and agroecology -- 2.1. Agropastoralism may be in line with the principles of agroecology -- 2.2. Agropastoral systems are changing -- 3. A framework to analyze livestock dynamics in agropastoral regions -- 4. In West African cotton areas, a dairy intensification pathway as a transition between two forms of agroecological livestock systems -- 4.1. Emergence of two pathways for dairy intensification -- 4.2. A pathway of dairy intensification consistent with agroecological principles at three levels -- 4.3. Public actors with a determinist perspective of dairy intensification -- 5. In the French Mediterranean, transitions at the farm and territory levels enable maintaining the agroecological logic of agropastoral livestock systems -- 5.1. Pathway of forage intensification: From agropastoral to cultivated grass-based livestock systems -- 5.2. A dynamic of adaptation of agropastoral farms -- 5.3. An agroecological transition at the territory level for agropastoral farms accessing feeds on cultivated lands -- 5.4. New territorial actors enable the emergence of new coordination mechanisms -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- What models of justice for the agroecological transition? The normative backdrops of the transition (Pierre M. Stassart, Antoinette M. Dumont, Corentin Hecquet, Stephanie Klaedtke, Camille Lacombe, Matthieu de Nanteuil) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The agroecological transition as an open-ended and non-relativist process -- 2.1. An open-ended process, oriented towards social transformation.
2.2. Normative supports of the agroecological transition.
This book explores relationships to change in agroecological transitions, based on two contrasting and ideal-typical stances, the determinist perspective and the open-ended perspective.at different scales such as agricultural systems, food systems, policy instruments..., thus reinforcing the potential diversity of transition pathways.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic books.
Magda, Danièle.
Rivera-Ferre, Marta*.
Marsden, Terry.
Print version: Lamine, Claire Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions Brussels : P.I.E. - Peter Lang SA Éditions Scientifiques Internationales,c2021 9782807618527
ProQuest (Firm)
EcoPolis Series
https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=30686247 Click to View
language French
format eBook
author Lamine, Claire.
spellingShingle Lamine, Claire.
Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
EcoPolis Series ;
Cover -- Copyright Information -- Table of contents -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- Preface Branching pathways in agroecological transformations (Andy Stirling) -- Taking into account the ontological relationship to change in agroecological transitions (Danièle Magda, Claire Lamine, Terry Marsden, Marta Rivera-Ferre) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Characterizing determinist and open-ended perspectives for transition -- 3. How different conceptualizations of the transition to sustainability encapsulate determinist and/or open-ended perspectives on change processes -- 4. The collective process: An attempt to enlighten agroecological transition mechanisms by clarifying our vision on change -- References -- Intertwining deterministic and open-ended perspectives in the experimentation of agroecological production systems: A challenge for agronomy researchers (Mireille Navarrete, Hélène Brives, Maxime Catalogna, Amélie Lefèvre, Sylvaine Simon) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Reconsidering experimentation on farming systems with agroecology -- 3. Methods -- 4. A large diversity in the way deterministic and open-ended perspectives coexist in experimentation -- 4.1. From a deterministic experimentation to a combination of the two perspectives -- 4.2. A planned coexistence between deterministic and open-ended perspectives to tackle uncertainty -- 4.3. A coexistence of open-ended and deterministic perspectives on both the short-term and the long-term time scales -- 4.4. A combination of deterministic and open-ended perspectives relating to a separation of roles between farmers and researchers -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Various forms of coexistence according the types of decision and over time -- 5.2. Limits to coexistence -- 5.3. From a dual vision towards intertwining various experiments embedding open-ended and deterministic perspectives.
6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Plant breeding for agroecology: A sociological analysis of the co-creation of varieties and the collectives involved (Sophie Tabouret, Claire Lamine, François Hochereau) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Three case studies in perennial plant breeding -- 2.1. Languedoc Wine: New actors that change the definition of a "sustainable" resistance4 -- 2.2. Rosé de Provence: Taking into consideration the practices of concerned actors -- 2.2. Prunus: A multi-actor process to open and discuss the list of relevant criteria -- 3. Discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Agroecological transitions at the scale of territorial agri-food systems (Marianne Hubeau, Martina Tuscano, Fabienne Barataud, Patrizia Pugliese) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Conceptual framework -- 3. Method and case study description -- 3.1. Step-by-step evolution towards a deterministic perspective in Flanders -- 3.2. Provence Verte food project: From open-ended to deterministic perspectives -- 3.3. Mirecourt: A test of a user-centred approach that emphasizes action and values -- 3.4. Spiralling up and out: The ECST experience in Coastal Dunes Regional Nature Park, Italy -- 4. Results and discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- How policy instruments may favour an articulation between open ended and deterministic perspectives to support agroecological transitions? Insights from a franco-brazilian comparison (Claire Lamine, Claudia Schmitt, Juliano Palm, Floriane Derbez, Paulo Petersen) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Analytical framework -- 3. Two innovative tools which focus on collective, multi-actors and territorial scales and dynamics -- 3.1. The Collective Mobilization for AgroEcology Call (MCAE) -- 3.2. Ecoforte -- 4. From the framing of AET by policy tools to their enactment by situated collectives.
4.1. MCAE: An open definition of agroecology and agroecological transitions that gives way to a diversity of pathways… (and controversies) -- 4.2. Ecoforte: Expanding and contextualizing agroecological visions -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Scope, actors and scale as key objects of the open-ended perspective claimed by both programmes -- 5.2. Modes of articulation of deterministic and open-ended perspectives -- 5.3. The role of researchers in the redefinition of "systematization" -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Teaching, training and learning for the agroecological transition: A French-Brazilian perspective (Moacir Darolt, Juliette Anglade, Pascale Moity- Maïzi, Claire Lamine, Florette Rengard, Vanessa Iceri, Amélie Genay, Cristian Celis) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Case studies -- 2.1. Technical courses in agroecology in state centres of professional education (CEEP): Brazil -- 2.2. The public agricultural teaching programs in France -- 2.3. Latin-American school of agroecology: ELAA (Lapa-Paraná-Brazil) -- 2.4. Faxinal Emboque, São Mateus do Sul, Paraná: Brazil - The institute of popular education - Instituto Equipe de Educação Popular (IEEP) -- 2.5. Mentorship system (InPACT collective): Ardèche - France -- 2.6. Reinventing experimental farms as new learning spaces: INRA Mirecourt, Lorraine - France -- 3. Discussion: The modes of articulation between determinist and open-ended perspectives -- 4. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- The manufacture of futures and the agroecological transition. Deciphering pathways for sustainability transition in France (Marc Barbier, Sarah Lumbroso, Jessica Thomas, Sébastien Treyer) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Analyzing activities of building representations of the future to identify ontological relationships to change.
3. The manufacture of futures around the agroecological transition in France -- 4. Methodology and empirical findings -- 4.1. The portfolio of case studies -- 4.2. Analytical grid -- 4.3. Results: Articulations between relationships to change in the activities of the manufacture of futures -- 5. Interpretation -- 5.1. The main features of the three types of activities of future building -- 5.2. Relationships to change behind the visions of the agroecology and the methodological tools used to build them -- 5.3. Relationships to change behind the expected impacts of the activities and the stakeholders and arenas targeted to reach them -- Conclusion -- References -- How access and dynamics in the use of territorial resources shape agroecological transitions in crop-livestock systems: Learnings and perspectives (Vincent Thénard, Gilles Martel, Jean- Philippe Choisis, Timothée Petit, Sébastien Couvreur, Olivia Fontaine, Marc Moraine) -- 1. How territorial resources and local dynamics support agroecological transitions -- 1.1 Resources involved in agroecological transitions -- 1.2 How agroecological LFS combine biodiversity and territory embeddedness -- 2. Looking at agroecological transitions in contrasting French territories -- 2.1 Territories description regarding territorial embeddedness and biodiversity mobilization -- Mediterranean area in Languedoc -- Oceanic area in Brittany -- Semi-continental area in Aveyron -- Tropical area in Reunion Island -- 2.2 Agroecological LFS multi-criteria assessment -- 3. From mobilized resources to LFS agroecological performances -- 3.1 LFS archetypes in case studies -- 3.2 Mobilized resources in the case studies -- 3.3 LFS agroecological performances in contrasted territories -- 4. Learnings and perspectives -- 4.1 What resources analysis tells us about transition dynamics?.
4.2 LFS agroecological transitions perspectives -- References -- The dynamics of agropastoral activities with regard to the agroecological transition (Charles-Henri Moulin, Laura Etienne, Magali Jouven, Jacques Lasseur, Martine Napoléone, Marie-Odile Nozières-Petit, Eric Vall, Arielle Vidal) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Agropastoralism and agroecology -- 2.1. Agropastoralism may be in line with the principles of agroecology -- 2.2. Agropastoral systems are changing -- 3. A framework to analyze livestock dynamics in agropastoral regions -- 4. In West African cotton areas, a dairy intensification pathway as a transition between two forms of agroecological livestock systems -- 4.1. Emergence of two pathways for dairy intensification -- 4.2. A pathway of dairy intensification consistent with agroecological principles at three levels -- 4.3. Public actors with a determinist perspective of dairy intensification -- 5. In the French Mediterranean, transitions at the farm and territory levels enable maintaining the agroecological logic of agropastoral livestock systems -- 5.1. Pathway of forage intensification: From agropastoral to cultivated grass-based livestock systems -- 5.2. A dynamic of adaptation of agropastoral farms -- 5.3. An agroecological transition at the territory level for agropastoral farms accessing feeds on cultivated lands -- 5.4. New territorial actors enable the emergence of new coordination mechanisms -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- What models of justice for the agroecological transition? The normative backdrops of the transition (Pierre M. Stassart, Antoinette M. Dumont, Corentin Hecquet, Stephanie Klaedtke, Camille Lacombe, Matthieu de Nanteuil) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The agroecological transition as an open-ended and non-relativist process -- 2.1. An open-ended process, oriented towards social transformation.
2.2. Normative supports of the agroecological transition.
author_facet Lamine, Claire.
Magda, Danièle.
Rivera-Ferre, Marta*.
Marsden, Terry.
author_variant c l cl
author2 Magda, Danièle.
Rivera-Ferre, Marta*.
Marsden, Terry.
author2_variant d m dm
m r f mrf
t m tm
author2_role TeilnehmendeR
TeilnehmendeR
TeilnehmendeR
author_sort Lamine, Claire.
title Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
title_full Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
title_fullStr Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
title_full_unstemmed Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
title_auth Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
title_new Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
title_sort agroecological transitions, between determinist and open-ended visions.
series EcoPolis Series ;
series2 EcoPolis Series ;
publisher P.I.E. - Peter Lang SA Éditions Scientifiques Internationales,
publishDate 2021
physical 1 online resource (320 pages)
edition 1st ed.
contents Cover -- Copyright Information -- Table of contents -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- Preface Branching pathways in agroecological transformations (Andy Stirling) -- Taking into account the ontological relationship to change in agroecological transitions (Danièle Magda, Claire Lamine, Terry Marsden, Marta Rivera-Ferre) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Characterizing determinist and open-ended perspectives for transition -- 3. How different conceptualizations of the transition to sustainability encapsulate determinist and/or open-ended perspectives on change processes -- 4. The collective process: An attempt to enlighten agroecological transition mechanisms by clarifying our vision on change -- References -- Intertwining deterministic and open-ended perspectives in the experimentation of agroecological production systems: A challenge for agronomy researchers (Mireille Navarrete, Hélène Brives, Maxime Catalogna, Amélie Lefèvre, Sylvaine Simon) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Reconsidering experimentation on farming systems with agroecology -- 3. Methods -- 4. A large diversity in the way deterministic and open-ended perspectives coexist in experimentation -- 4.1. From a deterministic experimentation to a combination of the two perspectives -- 4.2. A planned coexistence between deterministic and open-ended perspectives to tackle uncertainty -- 4.3. A coexistence of open-ended and deterministic perspectives on both the short-term and the long-term time scales -- 4.4. A combination of deterministic and open-ended perspectives relating to a separation of roles between farmers and researchers -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Various forms of coexistence according the types of decision and over time -- 5.2. Limits to coexistence -- 5.3. From a dual vision towards intertwining various experiments embedding open-ended and deterministic perspectives.
6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Plant breeding for agroecology: A sociological analysis of the co-creation of varieties and the collectives involved (Sophie Tabouret, Claire Lamine, François Hochereau) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Three case studies in perennial plant breeding -- 2.1. Languedoc Wine: New actors that change the definition of a "sustainable" resistance4 -- 2.2. Rosé de Provence: Taking into consideration the practices of concerned actors -- 2.2. Prunus: A multi-actor process to open and discuss the list of relevant criteria -- 3. Discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Agroecological transitions at the scale of territorial agri-food systems (Marianne Hubeau, Martina Tuscano, Fabienne Barataud, Patrizia Pugliese) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Conceptual framework -- 3. Method and case study description -- 3.1. Step-by-step evolution towards a deterministic perspective in Flanders -- 3.2. Provence Verte food project: From open-ended to deterministic perspectives -- 3.3. Mirecourt: A test of a user-centred approach that emphasizes action and values -- 3.4. Spiralling up and out: The ECST experience in Coastal Dunes Regional Nature Park, Italy -- 4. Results and discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- How policy instruments may favour an articulation between open ended and deterministic perspectives to support agroecological transitions? Insights from a franco-brazilian comparison (Claire Lamine, Claudia Schmitt, Juliano Palm, Floriane Derbez, Paulo Petersen) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Analytical framework -- 3. Two innovative tools which focus on collective, multi-actors and territorial scales and dynamics -- 3.1. The Collective Mobilization for AgroEcology Call (MCAE) -- 3.2. Ecoforte -- 4. From the framing of AET by policy tools to their enactment by situated collectives.
4.1. MCAE: An open definition of agroecology and agroecological transitions that gives way to a diversity of pathways… (and controversies) -- 4.2. Ecoforte: Expanding and contextualizing agroecological visions -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Scope, actors and scale as key objects of the open-ended perspective claimed by both programmes -- 5.2. Modes of articulation of deterministic and open-ended perspectives -- 5.3. The role of researchers in the redefinition of "systematization" -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Teaching, training and learning for the agroecological transition: A French-Brazilian perspective (Moacir Darolt, Juliette Anglade, Pascale Moity- Maïzi, Claire Lamine, Florette Rengard, Vanessa Iceri, Amélie Genay, Cristian Celis) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Case studies -- 2.1. Technical courses in agroecology in state centres of professional education (CEEP): Brazil -- 2.2. The public agricultural teaching programs in France -- 2.3. Latin-American school of agroecology: ELAA (Lapa-Paraná-Brazil) -- 2.4. Faxinal Emboque, São Mateus do Sul, Paraná: Brazil - The institute of popular education - Instituto Equipe de Educação Popular (IEEP) -- 2.5. Mentorship system (InPACT collective): Ardèche - France -- 2.6. Reinventing experimental farms as new learning spaces: INRA Mirecourt, Lorraine - France -- 3. Discussion: The modes of articulation between determinist and open-ended perspectives -- 4. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- The manufacture of futures and the agroecological transition. Deciphering pathways for sustainability transition in France (Marc Barbier, Sarah Lumbroso, Jessica Thomas, Sébastien Treyer) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Analyzing activities of building representations of the future to identify ontological relationships to change.
3. The manufacture of futures around the agroecological transition in France -- 4. Methodology and empirical findings -- 4.1. The portfolio of case studies -- 4.2. Analytical grid -- 4.3. Results: Articulations between relationships to change in the activities of the manufacture of futures -- 5. Interpretation -- 5.1. The main features of the three types of activities of future building -- 5.2. Relationships to change behind the visions of the agroecology and the methodological tools used to build them -- 5.3. Relationships to change behind the expected impacts of the activities and the stakeholders and arenas targeted to reach them -- Conclusion -- References -- How access and dynamics in the use of territorial resources shape agroecological transitions in crop-livestock systems: Learnings and perspectives (Vincent Thénard, Gilles Martel, Jean- Philippe Choisis, Timothée Petit, Sébastien Couvreur, Olivia Fontaine, Marc Moraine) -- 1. How territorial resources and local dynamics support agroecological transitions -- 1.1 Resources involved in agroecological transitions -- 1.2 How agroecological LFS combine biodiversity and territory embeddedness -- 2. Looking at agroecological transitions in contrasting French territories -- 2.1 Territories description regarding territorial embeddedness and biodiversity mobilization -- Mediterranean area in Languedoc -- Oceanic area in Brittany -- Semi-continental area in Aveyron -- Tropical area in Reunion Island -- 2.2 Agroecological LFS multi-criteria assessment -- 3. From mobilized resources to LFS agroecological performances -- 3.1 LFS archetypes in case studies -- 3.2 Mobilized resources in the case studies -- 3.3 LFS agroecological performances in contrasted territories -- 4. Learnings and perspectives -- 4.1 What resources analysis tells us about transition dynamics?.
4.2 LFS agroecological transitions perspectives -- References -- The dynamics of agropastoral activities with regard to the agroecological transition (Charles-Henri Moulin, Laura Etienne, Magali Jouven, Jacques Lasseur, Martine Napoléone, Marie-Odile Nozières-Petit, Eric Vall, Arielle Vidal) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Agropastoralism and agroecology -- 2.1. Agropastoralism may be in line with the principles of agroecology -- 2.2. Agropastoral systems are changing -- 3. A framework to analyze livestock dynamics in agropastoral regions -- 4. In West African cotton areas, a dairy intensification pathway as a transition between two forms of agroecological livestock systems -- 4.1. Emergence of two pathways for dairy intensification -- 4.2. A pathway of dairy intensification consistent with agroecological principles at three levels -- 4.3. Public actors with a determinist perspective of dairy intensification -- 5. In the French Mediterranean, transitions at the farm and territory levels enable maintaining the agroecological logic of agropastoral livestock systems -- 5.1. Pathway of forage intensification: From agropastoral to cultivated grass-based livestock systems -- 5.2. A dynamic of adaptation of agropastoral farms -- 5.3. An agroecological transition at the territory level for agropastoral farms accessing feeds on cultivated lands -- 5.4. New territorial actors enable the emergence of new coordination mechanisms -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- What models of justice for the agroecological transition? The normative backdrops of the transition (Pierre M. Stassart, Antoinette M. Dumont, Corentin Hecquet, Stephanie Klaedtke, Camille Lacombe, Matthieu de Nanteuil) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The agroecological transition as an open-ended and non-relativist process -- 2.1. An open-ended process, oriented towards social transformation.
2.2. Normative supports of the agroecological transition.
isbn 9782807618534
9782807618527
genre Electronic books.
genre_facet Electronic books.
url https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=30686247
illustrated Not Illustrated
oclc_num 1290612820
work_keys_str_mv AT lamineclaire agroecologicaltransitionsbetweendeterministandopenendedvisions
AT magdadaniele agroecologicaltransitionsbetweendeterministandopenendedvisions
AT riveraferremarta agroecologicaltransitionsbetweendeterministandopenendedvisions
AT marsdenterry agroecologicaltransitionsbetweendeterministandopenendedvisions
status_str n
ids_txt_mv (MiAaPQ)50030686247
(Au-PeEL)EBL30686247
(OCoLC)1290612820
carrierType_str_mv cr
hierarchy_parent_title EcoPolis Series ; v.37
is_hierarchy_title Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.
container_title EcoPolis Series ; v.37
author2_original_writing_str_mv noLinkedField
noLinkedField
noLinkedField
marc_error Info : MARC8 translation shorter than ISO-8859-1, choosing MARC8. --- [ 856 : z ]
_version_ 1792331071853953024
fullrecord <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><collection xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim"><record><leader>11487nam a22004933i 4500</leader><controlfield tag="001">50030686247</controlfield><controlfield tag="003">MiAaPQ</controlfield><controlfield tag="005">20240229073851.0</controlfield><controlfield tag="006">m o d | </controlfield><controlfield tag="007">cr cnu||||||||</controlfield><controlfield tag="008">240229s2021 xx o ||||0 fre d</controlfield><datafield tag="020" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">9782807618534</subfield><subfield code="q">(electronic bk.)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="020" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="z">9782807618527</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(MiAaPQ)50030686247</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(Au-PeEL)EBL30686247</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(OCoLC)1290612820</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="040" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">MiAaPQ</subfield><subfield code="b">eng</subfield><subfield code="e">rda</subfield><subfield code="e">pn</subfield><subfield code="c">MiAaPQ</subfield><subfield code="d">MiAaPQ</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="100" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Lamine, Claire.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="245" ind1="1" ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="250" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1st ed.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1"><subfield code="a">Brussels :</subfield><subfield code="b">P.I.E. - Peter Lang SA Éditions Scientifiques Internationales,</subfield><subfield code="c">2021.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="c">{copy}2021.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource (320 pages)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">EcoPolis Series ;</subfield><subfield code="v">v.37</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Cover -- Copyright Information -- Table of contents -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Foreword -- Preface Branching pathways in agroecological transformations (Andy Stirling) -- Taking into account the ontological relationship to change in agroecological transitions (Danièle Magda, Claire Lamine, Terry Marsden, Marta Rivera-Ferre) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Characterizing determinist and open-ended perspectives for transition -- 3. How different conceptualizations of the transition to sustainability encapsulate determinist and/or open-ended perspectives on change processes -- 4. The collective process: An attempt to enlighten agroecological transition mechanisms by clarifying our vision on change -- References -- Intertwining deterministic and open-ended perspectives in the experimentation of agroecological production systems: A challenge for agronomy researchers (Mireille Navarrete, Hélène Brives, Maxime Catalogna, Amélie Lefèvre, Sylvaine Simon) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Reconsidering experimentation on farming systems with agroecology -- 3. Methods -- 4. A large diversity in the way deterministic and open-ended perspectives coexist in experimentation -- 4.1. From a deterministic experimentation to a combination of the two perspectives -- 4.2. A planned coexistence between deterministic and open-ended perspectives to tackle uncertainty -- 4.3. A coexistence of open-ended and deterministic perspectives on both the short-term and the long-term time scales -- 4.4. A combination of deterministic and open-ended perspectives relating to a separation of roles between farmers and researchers -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Various forms of coexistence according the types of decision and over time -- 5.2. Limits to coexistence -- 5.3. From a dual vision towards intertwining various experiments embedding open-ended and deterministic perspectives.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Plant breeding for agroecology: A sociological analysis of the co-creation of varieties and the collectives involved (Sophie Tabouret, Claire Lamine, François Hochereau) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Three case studies in perennial plant breeding -- 2.1. Languedoc Wine: New actors that change the definition of a "sustainable" resistance4 -- 2.2. Rosé de Provence: Taking into consideration the practices of concerned actors -- 2.2. Prunus: A multi-actor process to open and discuss the list of relevant criteria -- 3. Discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Agroecological transitions at the scale of territorial agri-food systems (Marianne Hubeau, Martina Tuscano, Fabienne Barataud, Patrizia Pugliese) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Conceptual framework -- 3. Method and case study description -- 3.1. Step-by-step evolution towards a deterministic perspective in Flanders -- 3.2. Provence Verte food project: From open-ended to deterministic perspectives -- 3.3. Mirecourt: A test of a user-centred approach that emphasizes action and values -- 3.4. Spiralling up and out: The ECST experience in Coastal Dunes Regional Nature Park, Italy -- 4. Results and discussion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- How policy instruments may favour an articulation between open ended and deterministic perspectives to support agroecological transitions? Insights from a franco-brazilian comparison (Claire Lamine, Claudia Schmitt, Juliano Palm, Floriane Derbez, Paulo Petersen) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Analytical framework -- 3. Two innovative tools which focus on collective, multi-actors and territorial scales and dynamics -- 3.1. The Collective Mobilization for AgroEcology Call (MCAE) -- 3.2. Ecoforte -- 4. From the framing of AET by policy tools to their enactment by situated collectives.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">4.1. MCAE: An open definition of agroecology and agroecological transitions that gives way to a diversity of pathways… (and controversies) -- 4.2. Ecoforte: Expanding and contextualizing agroecological visions -- 5. Discussion -- 5.1. Scope, actors and scale as key objects of the open-ended perspective claimed by both programmes -- 5.2. Modes of articulation of deterministic and open-ended perspectives -- 5.3. The role of researchers in the redefinition of "systematization" -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- Teaching, training and learning for the agroecological transition: A French-Brazilian perspective (Moacir Darolt, Juliette Anglade, Pascale Moity- Maïzi, Claire Lamine, Florette Rengard, Vanessa Iceri, Amélie Genay, Cristian Celis) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Case studies -- 2.1. Technical courses in agroecology in state centres of professional education (CEEP): Brazil -- 2.2. The public agricultural teaching programs in France -- 2.3. Latin-American school of agroecology: ELAA (Lapa-Paraná-Brazil) -- 2.4. Faxinal Emboque, São Mateus do Sul, Paraná: Brazil - The institute of popular education - Instituto Equipe de Educação Popular (IEEP) -- 2.5. Mentorship system (InPACT collective): Ardèche - France -- 2.6. Reinventing experimental farms as new learning spaces: INRA Mirecourt, Lorraine - France -- 3. Discussion: The modes of articulation between determinist and open-ended perspectives -- 4. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- The manufacture of futures and the agroecological transition. Deciphering pathways for sustainability transition in France (Marc Barbier, Sarah Lumbroso, Jessica Thomas, Sébastien Treyer) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Analyzing activities of building representations of the future to identify ontological relationships to change.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">3. The manufacture of futures around the agroecological transition in France -- 4. Methodology and empirical findings -- 4.1. The portfolio of case studies -- 4.2. Analytical grid -- 4.3. Results: Articulations between relationships to change in the activities of the manufacture of futures -- 5. Interpretation -- 5.1. The main features of the three types of activities of future building -- 5.2. Relationships to change behind the visions of the agroecology and the methodological tools used to build them -- 5.3. Relationships to change behind the expected impacts of the activities and the stakeholders and arenas targeted to reach them -- Conclusion -- References -- How access and dynamics in the use of territorial resources shape agroecological transitions in crop-livestock systems: Learnings and perspectives (Vincent Thénard, Gilles Martel, Jean- Philippe Choisis, Timothée Petit, Sébastien Couvreur, Olivia Fontaine, Marc Moraine) -- 1. How territorial resources and local dynamics support agroecological transitions -- 1.1 Resources involved in agroecological transitions -- 1.2 How agroecological LFS combine biodiversity and territory embeddedness -- 2. Looking at agroecological transitions in contrasting French territories -- 2.1 Territories description regarding territorial embeddedness and biodiversity mobilization -- Mediterranean area in Languedoc -- Oceanic area in Brittany -- Semi-continental area in Aveyron -- Tropical area in Reunion Island -- 2.2 Agroecological LFS multi-criteria assessment -- 3. From mobilized resources to LFS agroecological performances -- 3.1 LFS archetypes in case studies -- 3.2 Mobilized resources in the case studies -- 3.3 LFS agroecological performances in contrasted territories -- 4. Learnings and perspectives -- 4.1 What resources analysis tells us about transition dynamics?.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">4.2 LFS agroecological transitions perspectives -- References -- The dynamics of agropastoral activities with regard to the agroecological transition (Charles-Henri Moulin, Laura Etienne, Magali Jouven, Jacques Lasseur, Martine Napoléone, Marie-Odile Nozières-Petit, Eric Vall, Arielle Vidal) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Agropastoralism and agroecology -- 2.1. Agropastoralism may be in line with the principles of agroecology -- 2.2. Agropastoral systems are changing -- 3. A framework to analyze livestock dynamics in agropastoral regions -- 4. In West African cotton areas, a dairy intensification pathway as a transition between two forms of agroecological livestock systems -- 4.1. Emergence of two pathways for dairy intensification -- 4.2. A pathway of dairy intensification consistent with agroecological principles at three levels -- 4.3. Public actors with a determinist perspective of dairy intensification -- 5. In the French Mediterranean, transitions at the farm and territory levels enable maintaining the agroecological logic of agropastoral livestock systems -- 5.1. Pathway of forage intensification: From agropastoral to cultivated grass-based livestock systems -- 5.2. A dynamic of adaptation of agropastoral farms -- 5.3. An agroecological transition at the territory level for agropastoral farms accessing feeds on cultivated lands -- 5.4. New territorial actors enable the emergence of new coordination mechanisms -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- What models of justice for the agroecological transition? The normative backdrops of the transition (Pierre M. Stassart, Antoinette M. Dumont, Corentin Hecquet, Stephanie Klaedtke, Camille Lacombe, Matthieu de Nanteuil) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The agroecological transition as an open-ended and non-relativist process -- 2.1. An open-ended process, oriented towards social transformation.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">2.2. Normative supports of the agroecological transition.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">This book explores relationships to change in agroecological transitions, based on two contrasting and ideal-typical stances, the determinist perspective and the open-ended perspective.at different scales such as agricultural systems, food systems, policy instruments..., thus reinforcing the potential diversity of transition pathways.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="590" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries. </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="655" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="a">Electronic books.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="700" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Magda, Danièle.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="700" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Rivera-Ferre, Marta*.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="700" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Marsden, Terry.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1="0" ind2="8"><subfield code="i">Print version:</subfield><subfield code="a">Lamine, Claire</subfield><subfield code="t">Agroecological Transitions, Between Determinist and Open-Ended Visions</subfield><subfield code="d">Brussels : P.I.E. - Peter Lang SA Éditions Scientifiques Internationales,c2021</subfield><subfield code="z">9782807618527</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="797" ind1="2" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">ProQuest (Firm)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="830" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">EcoPolis Series</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="856" ind1="4" ind2="0"><subfield code="u">https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=30686247</subfield><subfield code="z">Click to View</subfield></datafield></record></collection>