Ever Tried to Map Sustainable Agriculture?

Feb 24, 2016

Ever Tried to Map Sustainable Agriculture?

Feb 24, 2016

Workshop in Sonoma County
Sonoma County workshop participants doing some mind mapping.
At a half-day workshop on Friday, February 5th, 22 leading voices in Sonoma County's agricultural community came together at UC Cooperative Extension Sonoma County to co-define sustainable agriculture. The workshop, part of a statewide research project on sustainable agriculture knowledge, was funded by UC Agriculture and Natural Resources (UC ANR) and the UC Davis Agricultural Sustainability Institute.

It was run by researcher Michael Levy, a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of Environmental Science and Policy at UC Davis, along with Mark Lubell, an influential social network scientist at UC Davis. Levy asked participants to define sustainable agriculture by drawing "mental models" consisting of the important aspects of sustainable agriculture and how they affect each other.

Counties that participated in the mapping exercise
Counties that participated in the mapping exercise include: : Yolo, Merced, Sacramento (at the ANR Joint Strategic Initiatives Conference), Ventura, Plumas, Riverside, San Diego, and Sonoma

Participants first constructed their own mental models electronically by creating mind maps or a web of words linked together. Then the group constructed a larger mental model together and discussed the implications. According to Levy, “the data generated will lead to research that informs UC ANR programs and advances the social science of sustainability and agriculture, and it will help us get a richer picture of how sustainable agriculture knowledge is distributed and moves through the community.”

Conceptualizing each individual's understanding of sustainable agriculture as a network of related concepts allows Levy and Lubell to apply cutting-edge network analysis tools to test hypotheses and find new insights.

UC Davis Center for Environmental Policy & Behavior
You can read about their initial findings in policy briefs on their website about what the community sees as the most important goals and strategies for sustainable agriculture and what the major themes are in the overall mental model of sustainable agriculture.