Issue |
Agron. Sustain. Dev.
Volume 30, Number 1, January-March 2010
|
|
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Page(s) | 11 - 19 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/agro/2009028 | |
Published online | 07 October 2009 |
Review article
Farmer responses to climate change and sustainable agriculture. A review
Tasmanian Institute of Agricultural Research, University of
Tasmania, Private Bag
54, Hobart,
TAS
7001,
Australia
* Corresponding author:
frank.vanclay@utas.edu.au
Accepted: 3 August 2009
Climate change is a major issue for agricultural sustainability, and changes in farming practices will be necessary both to reduce emissions and to adapt to a changing climate and to new social expectations. A complicating factor is that the processes of behaviour change are complex and can be slow to occur. Discourse analysis is useful in understanding how the discourses farmers are embedded in contribute to resistance to change. Discourses are particular ways of using language in particular situations. They have wide ranging effects on beliefs, values and behaviours. Interviews were conducted in 2008 with 63 respondents, including 22 apple growers, 29 dairy farmers and 12 agricultural consultants in Tasmania, Australia. In undertaking a discourse analysis of the transcripts of these interviews utilising N-Vivo, four specific discourses were identified as being important in shaping farmers’ perspectives of climate change and sustainability: Money, Earth, Human responsibility and Questioning. Each discourse contributes to resistance to changing behaviour in particular ways. An understanding of these discourses offers a new approach to facilitating behaviour change.
Key words: climate change / agriculture / sustainability / discourse analysis / discourses / behaviour change / resistance / barriers to adoption / Tasmania
© INRA, EDP Sciences, 2009