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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/31622
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Title: | Participatory monitoring and evaluation to enable social learning, adoption, and out-scaling of regenerative agriculture |
Authors: | Luján Soto, Raquel Cuéllar Padilla, Mamen Rivera Méndez, María Pinto-Correia, Teresa Boix-Fayos, Carolina de Vente, Joris |
Issue Date: | 2021 |
Publisher: | Ecology and Society |
Citation: | Luján Soto, R., M. Cuéllar Padilla, M. Rivera Méndez, T. Pinto-Correia, C. Boix-Fayos, and J. De Vente. 2021. Participatory monitoring and evaluation of regenerative agriculture to enable social learning, adoption, and out-scaling. Ecology and Society 36(4) |
Abstract: | The advanced state of land degradation worldwide urges the large-scale adoption of sustainable land management (SLM).
Social learning is considered an important precondition for the adoption of innovative and contextualized SLM. Involving farmers
and researchers in participatory monitoring and evaluation (PM&E) of innovative SLM such as regenerative agriculture is expected
to enable social learning. Although there is a growing body of literature asserting the achievement of social learning through participatory
processes, social learning has been loosely defined, sparsely assessed, and only partially covered when measured. Here, we assess how
PM&E of regenerative agriculture, involving local farmers and researchers in southeast Spain, enabled social learning, effectively
increasing knowledge exchange and shared understanding of regenerative agriculture effects among participating farmers. We measured
whether social learning occurred by covering its social-cognitive (perceptions) and social-relational (social networks) dimensions, and
discussed the potential of PM&E to foster SLM adoption and out-scaling. We used fuzzy cognitive mapping and social network analysis
as graphical semiquantitative methods to assess changes in farmers’ perceptions and shared fluxes of information on regenerative
agriculture over approximately three years. Our results show that PM&E enabled social learning among participating farmers, who
strengthened and enlarged their social networks for information sharing and presented a more complex and broader shared
understanding of regenerative agriculture effects and benefits than pre PM&E. We argue that PM&E thereby creates crucial
preconditions for SLM adoption and out-scaling. Our findings are relevant for the design of PM&E processes, living labs, and landscape
restoration initiatives that aim to support farmers’ adoption and out-scaling of innovative and contextualized SLM. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/31622 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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