J. Burgess’s research while affiliated with University College London and other places

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Publications (1)


Discounted knowledges: Farmers' and residents' understandings of nature conservation goals and policies
  • Article

December 1998

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35 Reads

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136 Citations

Journal of Environmental Management

C.M. Harrison

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J. Burgess

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J. Clark

Local Biodiversity Action Plans are the preferred policy mechanism for setting and delivering local biodiversity targets in the UK. This paper reviews the kind of knowledge conservation scientists envisage being used to identify and set local targets, and explores the means of incorporating local knowledge into this process. We use a case study of a Wildlife Enhancement Scheme (WES) on the Pevensey Levels, East Sussex, to reveal the understandings that local farmers and residents have of the nature conservation goals and practices associated with the scheme. Drawing on the findings of in-depth discussion groups, we show how farmers challenge both the monopoly of knowledge conservationists profess about nature, and the enlistment of farmers on the scheme as «technicians», motivated solely by financial rewards, rather than as knowledgeable experts who also have emotional attachments and ethical values for nature. Local people use their knowledge of both local farmers, and the industry in general, to challenge the assumption that farmers can be trusted with delivering nature conservation goals. In the absence of a commitment by central government to agree widely-held environmental standards, and a more democratic process of making judgements about what local nature is worth conserving, local residents challenge existing processes designed to conserve nature that are driven by the knowledge and practices of official experts alone. The findings of the study suggest that a widening of the knowledge base on which the goals and practices of nature conservation are founded, and a more deliberative process of making decisions about what nature is important locally, will secure and strengthen public support for local biodiversity action plans.1998 Academic Press

Citations (1)


... While many farmers desire to form positive ecological connections between their farms and the surrounding environment, the formation of such symbiotic relationships can be limited by farmer knowledge that is situated within a preexisting, well-established production system (Ellis, 2013;Shattuck, 2019). Identifying locally adapted sustainability practices that create a variety of agronomic and ecological benefits can improve grower support (Harrison et al., 1998;Durant and Ponisio, 2021); coupling such practices with explicit economic improvements will further improve implementation. ...

Reference:

Agricultural sustainability requires multidimensional solutions that address environmental and financial benefits in the Oregon hazelnut industry
Discounted knowledges: Farmers' and residents' understandings of nature conservation goals and policies
  • Citing Article
  • December 1998

Journal of Environmental Management