Increasing the scope and scale of agroecology in the Northern Great Plains

dc.contributor.authorMaxwell, Bruce D.
dc.contributor.authorDuff, Hannah
dc.date.accessioned2024-08-01T18:43:52Z
dc.date.available2024-08-01T18:43:52Z
dc.date.issued2024-04
dc.description.abstractAgroecology is a science, practice, and movement that is gaining momentum worldwide. It aims to provide local, stable, and diverse diets through diversified, resilient, and sustainable agricultural practices (Ewert et al. 2023). However, agroecology seeks to address food systems issues by replacing large-scale commodity-based agriculture with something very different. Agroecology is typically discussed within the scope and scale of smallholder farming while failing to address the issues embed­ded in large-scale commodity-based agriculture. While we do not take issue with an ideal system where food is produced on small farms, it does not need to exclude agroecology applied to current scales of agriculture in regions like the Northern Great Plains (NGP), where agriculture consists of spatially extensive crop and livestock farms. NGP farms have internal sustainability problems and harmful social, racial, and environmental externali­ties that can be addressed with agroecological prin­ciples. Despite the problems, the large scale of NGP agriculture is not likely to change much in coming decades, and so there is an imperative to apply agroecological principles at larger scales to address immediate issues. We emphasize that applying agroecological principles to large-scale farming could increase crop and forage diversity, conserve biodiversity, strengthen cross-boundary and multi-objective ecosystem management, address regional food security, and encourage co-innovation with crop and livestock producers in the NGP (Tittonell, 2020). If agroecologists don’t address the immediate issues of NGP such as cli­mate change adaptation and mitigation, livestock-based protein production, unequal access to nutri­tious food, agriautomation, and pandemic food system disruption, then we may only expect industrialized agriculture to provide short-sited profit-motivated solutions repeating a pattern of the past.
dc.identifier.citationMaxwell, B., & Duff, H. (2024). Increasing the scope and scale of agroecology in the Northern Great Plains. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development, 13(3), 67–72. https://doi.org/10.5304/jafscd.2024.133.005
dc.identifier.doi10.5304/jafscd.2024.133.005
dc.identifier.issn2152-0801
dc.identifier.urihttps://scholarworks.montana.edu/handle/1/18709
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherLyson Center for Civic Agriculture and Food Systems
dc.rightscc-by
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subjectagroecology scale
dc.subjectclimate adaptation
dc.subjectfood sovereignty
dc.subjectbison livestock
dc.subjectU.S. Agroecology Summit 2023
dc.titleIncreasing the scope and scale of agroecology in the Northern Great Plains
dc.typeArticle
mus.citation.extentfirstpage1
mus.citation.extentlastpage6
mus.citation.journaltitleJournal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development
mus.relation.collegeCollege of Agriculture
mus.relation.departmentPlant Sciences & Plant Pathology
mus.relation.universityMontana State University - Bozeman

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