What's Driving the Adoption of Regenerative Agriculture? : US Farmers and Ranchers Report Healthy People, Soils, and Ecosystems as Primary Drivers

Abstract

As regenerative agriculture grows in popularity, policy and decision-makers have become interested in its practices. Yet, little is known about the factors driving its adoption among farmers and ranchers. To better understand these drivers, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 31 farmers and ranchers across the United States (US) who self-identified as practitioners of regenerative agriculture. In doing so, we asked about relational values, which reflect one’s perspectives around the links between humans and nature. We also asked about economic and environmental drivers for adoption. In the analysis, we used qualitative coding to identify the range of values and factors driving adoption across our sample. We found that 1) improving the health of people, soils, and ecosystems - through farming practices and related social configurations - was a primary driver for adoption, 2) that relative economic privilege, particularly across two extremes - privileged idealism and less privileged necessity - correlated with most drivers for adoption, 3) that a shift away from industrial agriculture was at once a moral, economic, and environmental imperative for many practitioners, and 4) a systems view of social-ecological relationships was seen as a key to adoption and societal transitions. While our sample represents only a narrow segment of the regenerative agriculture movement in the US, our findings can serve as a useful starting point for understanding the drivers for its adoption. Our findings may also inform conversations on regenerative agriculture’s potential to support food-related sustainability transitions, and discussions of equity in food systems transitions.

Presenters

Lee Frankel Goldwater
Assistant Teaching Professor, Environmental Studies, University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado, United States

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Food, Politics, and Cultures

KEYWORDS

Regenerative Agriculture, Social Movements, Relational Values, Sustainability Transitions, Health

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