For the public good: weaving a multifunctional landscape in the Corn Belt

Critics of modern agriculture decry the dominance of monocultural landscapes and look to multifunctionality as a desirable alternative that facilitates the production of public goods. In this study, we explored opportunities for multifunctional Midwestern agriculture through participatory research led by farmers, landowners, and other local actors. We suggest that agriculture typically fosters some degree of multifunctionality that arises from the divergent intentions of actors. The result is a scattered arrangement of what we term patchwork multifunctionality, a ubiquitous status quo in which individuals provide public goods without coordination. In contrast, interwoven multifunctionality describes deliberate collaboration to provide public goods, especially those cases where landowners work across fence lines to weave a synergistic landscape. Using examples from two case studies, we demonstrate the spectrum of patchwork and interwoven multifunctionality that currently exists in the Corn Belt, and present underutilized opportunities for public good creation.

[1]  Michael M. Bell,et al.  A holon approach to agroecology , 2007 .

[2]  M. Patton Qualitative research and evaluation methods , 1980 .

[3]  Amy R. Poteete,et al.  Working Together: Collective Action, the Commons, and Multiple Methods in Practice , 2010 .

[4]  Ü. Mander,et al.  Multifunctional land use: meeting future demands for landscape goods and services , 2007 .

[5]  Jeremy Franks,et al.  Environmental co-operatives as instruments for delivering across-farm environmental and rural policy objectives: Lessons for the UK , 2007 .

[6]  H. Friedmann The Political Economy of Food: The Rise and Fall of the Postwar International Food Order , 1982, American Journal of Sociology.

[7]  D. Greenwood,et al.  Introduction to Action Research: Social Research for Social Change , 1998 .

[8]  Yuichiro Amekawa Agroecology and Sustainable Livelihoods: Towards an Integrated Approach to Rural Development , 2011 .

[9]  S. Gliessman,et al.  The Conversion to Sustainable Agriculture : Principles, Processes, and Practices , 2009 .

[10]  R. J. Brunstad,et al.  Agriculture as a provider of public goods: a case study for Norway , 1995 .

[11]  D. Abler Multifunctionality in Agriculture: Evaluating the Degree of Jointness, Policy Implications , 2008 .

[12]  W. B. Morris,et al.  Integrating agroecology and landscape multifunctionality in Vermont: An evolving framework to evaluate the design of agroecosystems , 2010 .

[13]  Douglas M. Johnston,et al.  Designing Landscapes for Performance Based on Emerging Principles in Landscape Ecology , 2009 .

[14]  Bruce Nissen,et al.  For the Public Good , 1992 .

[15]  Katharina Helming,et al.  Multifunctional Land Use , 2007 .

[16]  M. Giménez,et al.  Work without wages : comparative studies of domestic labor and self-employment , 1991 .

[17]  T. L. Scheid-Cook,et al.  A Sand County Almanac , 1949 .

[18]  Laura R. Musacchio,et al.  Metropolitan Landscape Ecology , 2008, Landscape Journal.

[19]  E. Ostrom Understanding Institutional Diversity , 2005 .

[20]  C. Badgley The farmer as conservationist , 2003 .

[21]  Laura L. Jackson,et al.  Who “Designs” the Agricultural Landscape? , 2008, Landscape Journal.

[22]  J. Baird Callicott,et al.  The River of the Mother of God: and other Essays by Aldo Leopold , 1992 .

[23]  E. Bulte,et al.  Trust and cooperation: Social capital and community resource management , 2008 .

[24]  Keith Douglass Warner,et al.  Sustainable Development of the Agricultural Bio-Economy , 2007, Science.

[25]  R. Emerson,et al.  Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes , 1995 .

[26]  Geoff A. Wilson,et al.  Multifunctional Agriculture: A Transition Theory Perspective , 2007 .

[27]  J. Reganold,et al.  Future farming: a return to roots. , 2007, Scientific American.

[28]  William Lane Austin,et al.  The Census of Agriculture , 1930 .

[29]  Terry Marsden,et al.  The condition of rural sustainability , 2003 .

[30]  Wendell Berry,et al.  The Unsettling of America: Culture & Agriculture , 1977 .

[31]  S. Batie Green payments and the US Farm Bill: information and policy challenges , 2009 .

[32]  Carol Morris,et al.  Conceptualizing agriculture: a critique of post-productivism as the new orthodoxy , 2002 .

[33]  S. Onzere,et al.  Delineating the Multifunctional Role of Agroecological Practices: Toward Sustainable Livelihoods for Smallholder Farmers in Developing Countries , 2010 .

[34]  D. Andow,et al.  Multifunctional Agriculture in the United States , 2005 .

[35]  L. Jackson Restoring Prairie Processes to Farmlands , 2002, Ecological Restoration.

[36]  Mamen Cuéllar-Padilla,et al.  Can we find solutions with people? Participatory action research with small organic producers in Andalusia , 2011 .

[37]  R. Claassen,et al.  Integrating Commodity and Conservation Programs: Design Options and Outcomes , 2007 .

[38]  D. L. Jackson,et al.  The farm as natural habitat : reconnecting food systems with ecosystems , 2002 .

[39]  C. Potter,et al.  Agricultural policy discourses in the European post-Fordist transition: neoliberalism, neomercantilism and multifunctionality , 2005 .

[40]  Adrian Sherwin Morley,et al.  Agricultural multifunctionality and farmers' entrepreneurial skills: a study of Tuscan and Welsh farmers , 2010 .

[41]  T. Crow,et al.  Agroecosystem restoration through strategic integration of perennials , 2006 .

[42]  R. Sonnino,et al.  Rural development and the regional state: Denying multifunctional agriculture in the UK , 2008 .