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The ‘Neighbourhood Effect’: A multidisciplinary assessment of the case for farmer co-ordination in agri-environmental programmes
Authors:Lee-Ann Sutherland  Doreen GabrielLaura Hathaway-Jenkins  Unai Pascual  Ulrich SchmutzDan Rigby  Richard GodwinSteven M Sait  Ruben SakrabaniWilliam E Kunin  Tim G BentonSigrid Stagl
Institution:a James Hutton Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen AB15 8QH, UK
b Institute of Integrative & Comparative Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
c Department of Environmental Science and Technology, Cranfield University, Cranfield, Bedford MK43 0AL, UK
d University of Cambridge, Department of Land Economy, 19 Silver St., Cambridge, UK
e Henry Doubleday Research Association (Garden Organic), Ryton Organic Gardens, Coventry CV8 3LG, UK
f University of Manchester, School of Economic Studies, Manchester M13 9PL, UK
g University of Sussex, SPRU - Science and Technology Policy Research, Brighton BN1 9QE, UK
h IKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science, Alameda Urquijo, 36-5, 48011 Bilbao Spain
Abstract:In this paper we present a multi-disciplinary analysis of the potential impacts of undertaking similar environmental actions on multiple farms in a small geographic area, using organic farming as a proxy for a co-ordinated approach. Recent papers have called for more co-ordinated efforts between farmers in terms of their environmental actions, but there has been limited applied research demonstrating the environmental benefits or the economic and social implications to farmers of this approach. Comparative analysis of biodiversity, soil and water, and farm profitability were undertaken in England on 32 matched farms in areas of low and high organic farming concentration; qualitative interviews were also conducted with 48 farmers living in two of the eight areas. Findings demonstrate higher overall levels of biodiversity on organic farms (particularly in “hotspot” areas) but this was not universal across the species groups investigated. Higher water infiltration rates were found in organic grasslands, which could prove to be a useful measure to combat flooding. In terms of the technical efficiency of producing these environmental gains, conventional and organic farms in hotspot areas demonstrated equivalent efficiency from a financial perspective. Socio-cultural research identified the different amounts of trust farmers have in their neighbours, based in part on their performance as ‘good farmers’. We discuss the neighbourhood effect with a multi-disciplinary approach and conclude that encouraging local farmer co-ordination can have clear environmental benefits without high economic cost, but must be undertaken with caution - specifically regarding the trade-offs between benefits, local geophysical and social characteristics, and assumptions made about inter-farmer trust.
Keywords:Organic farming  Multidisciplinary research  Agri-environmental schemes  Landscape  Farmer co-ordination  Biodiversity
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