The urgency of transforming the Midwestern U.S. landscape into more than corn and soybean
Date
2020-05Author
Prokopy, Linda S.
Graming, Benjamin M.
Bower, Alisha
Church, Sarah P.
Ellison, Brenna
Gassman, Philip W.
Genskow, Ken
Gucker, Douglas
Hallett, Steve G.
Hill, Jason
Hunt, Natalie
Johnson, Kris A.
Kaplan, Ian
Kelleher, J. Paul
Kok, Hans
Komp, Michael
Lammers, Peter
LaRose, Sarah
Liebman, Matthew
Margenot, Andrew
Mulla, David
O'Donnell, Michael J.
Peimer, Alex W.
Reaves, Elizabeth
Salazar, Kara
Schelly, Chelsea
Schilling, Keith
Secchi, Silvia
Spaulding, Aslihan D.
Swenson, David
Thompson, Aaron W.
Ulrich-Schad, Jessica D.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The current agri-food system emerged out of a desire to provide an inexpensive and secure food supply. Yet even before COVID-19, the abundant agricultural production of the Midwestern United States was generated amid a backdrop of increasing farm bankruptcies, declining farm employment and rural communities, and climbing farmer suicide rates. The environmental costs of this system were well established and include Gulf of Mexico hypoxia, elevated sediment and nutrient levels in waterways, and impacts to air quality, biodiversity and climate change. The economic, social and environmental consequences of contemporary agriculture already indicated the need for a wholesale revisiting of the dominant agricultural paradigm of highly specialized and subsidized production.
Citation
Prokopy, Linda S., Benjamin M. Gramig, Alisha Bower, Sarah P. Church, Brenna Ellison, Philip W. Gassman, Ken Genskow, et al. “The Urgency of Transforming the Midwestern U.S. Landscape into More Than Corn and Soybean.” Agriculture and Human Values 37, no. 3 (May 23, 2020): 537–539. doi:10.1007/s10460-020-10077-x.