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Tag: adaptive grazing

New paper on systems thinking substance

While I was in Australia, a first-authored piece from Brooke McWherter’s postdoc came out in Agriculture and Human Values. This new paper Exploring mental systems within regenerative agriculture: systems thinking and rotational grazing adoption among Canadian livestock producers, uses survey responses to explore not only the strength but also the substance of systems thinking. Our previous work showed that systems thinking capabilities are associated with adaptive or regenerative grazing practices–and in this work again a connection can be seen–but what is equally important is looking at what ‘things’ farmers see as included in their farm system. Brooke used exploratory factor analysis and identified four system focus types: livestock, economics, health and environment, and forage (see below). All but economics (which was p<0.05) were uncorrelated to our system thinking strength metric.  Understanding both strength and types of system thinking will improve extension work on regenerative and associated grazing practices.

McWherter and Sherren (2024), Table 7: Exploratory factor analysis of farm components with loadings > 0.5 (N = 102)

A final thanks to Central Queensland University, which seems to have covered our OA costs for this paper, a lovely but puzzling discovery upon publication. Perhaps Springer picked up on our IP addresses during the time of press (in Cairns, for IASNR, or mine in Townsville, Mackay, and Rockhampton during my train trip to Brisbane afterward, all CQU campuses) and triggered this? I won’t quibble, but am appreciative.

What happened to October?

My talk underway online for the Maritime Beef Conference last Friday

My talk underway online for the Maritime Beef Conference last Friday

The last few weeks have been busy , and I see October has come and gone without a post. A few notable things have been happening amidst all the teaching. For instance, I enjoyed my online plenary talk about adaptive grazing to the Maritime Beef Conference last Friday, and earlier that same week, hosting another meeting of the wider ResNet Landscape 1 group: academics, students and partners. Qiqi Zhao arrived to work on ResNet for a year as part of her PhD, funded by the China Scholarship Council, and is awaiting release from quarantine. The commentary chapters are rolling in for peer review as contributions to the Opening Windows decadal review of natural resource social science that I’m lead co-editing, and I’ve been leading the development of a set of awards for IASNR as part of my chairship of its Membership Committee. Long-awaited new colleague Stanley Asah has started work in the School as a CRC 1 in the Social Dimensions of Clean Technology. We proudly congratulated our fall graduates of the MES program (see below), including Gardenio da Silva who I supervised. I’ve been livestreaming COP26 when I can, and gave some independent comment covered in a Weather Network article by Mark Jacquemain about an AI-driven literature review about climate adaptation in Nature that makes the kinds of assessments you might expect about how coherent efforts have been to date: “fragmented, local and incremental, with limited evidence of transformational adaptation and negligible evidence of risk reduction outcomes”.  Back to work now… it’s Tenure & Promotion season and I’m the only full professor in the saddle.

Our informal MES grad mixer this fall; best on-time completion rate in the history of the program!

Our informal MES grad mixer this fall; best on-time completion rate in the history of the program!

 

 

Hiring a PDF in Social Context of Sustainable Grazing Systems

DalUAlogos

John Parkins (UA) and  I are looking for a high quality post-doctoral scholar to do social science research on our ongoing SSHRC-funded project related to adaptive grazing systems like Savory’s Holistic Management. A wide range of fields and methods are possible. The work will be based in Canada (either Halifax or Edmonton). The candidate will ideally have some understanding of the Canadian grazing context, but international candidates who are otherwise qualified and interested should make contact by August 1, 2017. Read the full ad here.

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