Towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulation

The sustainable intensification of agriculture involves providing sufficient food and other ecosystem services without going beyond the limits of the earth’s system. Here a project management approach is suggested to help guide agricultural policy to deliver these objectives. The first ste...

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Main Author: Leslie G. FIRBANK
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Higher Education Press 2020-03-01
Series:Frontiers of Agricultural Science and Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://academic.hep.com.cn/fase/fileup/2095-7505/PDF/26001/1573104730892-121981176.pdf
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spelling doaj-08994d70f94e45759220f17928a4ba1c2020-11-25T03:03:33ZengHigher Education PressFrontiers of Agricultural Science and Engineering2095-75052020-03-0171818910.15302/J-FASE-2019291Towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulationLeslie G. FIRBANK0School of Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UKThe sustainable intensification of agriculture involves providing sufficient food and other ecosystem services without going beyond the limits of the earth’s system. Here a project management approach is suggested to help guide agricultural policy to deliver these objectives. The first step is to agree measurable outcomes, integrating formal policy goals with the often much less formal and much more diverse goals of individual farmers. The second step is to assess current performance. Ideally, this will involve the use of farm-scale metrics that can feed into process models that address social and environmental domains as well as production issues that can be benchmarked and upscaled to landscape and country. Some policy goals can be delivered by supporting ad hoc interventions, while others require the redesign of the farming system. A pipeline of research, knowledge and capacity building is needed to ensure the continuous increase in farm performance. System models can help prioritise policy interventions. Formal optimization of land use is only appropriate if the policy goals are clear, and the constraints understood. In practice, the best approach may depend on the scale of action that is required, and on the amount of resource and infrastructure available to generate, implement and manage policy.http://academic.hep.com.cn/fase/fileup/2095-7505/PDF/26001/1573104730892-121981176.pdfagricultural policy|ecosystem services|indicators of sustainable intensification|knowledge exchange|land use optimization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leslie G. FIRBANK
spellingShingle Leslie G. FIRBANK
Towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulation
Frontiers of Agricultural Science and Engineering
agricultural policy|ecosystem services|indicators of sustainable intensification|knowledge exchange|land use optimization
author_facet Leslie G. FIRBANK
author_sort Leslie G. FIRBANK
title Towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulation
title_short Towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulation
title_full Towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulation
title_fullStr Towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulation
title_full_unstemmed Towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulation
title_sort towards the sustainable intensification of agriculture—a systems approach to policy formulation
publisher Higher Education Press
series Frontiers of Agricultural Science and Engineering
issn 2095-7505
publishDate 2020-03-01
description The sustainable intensification of agriculture involves providing sufficient food and other ecosystem services without going beyond the limits of the earth’s system. Here a project management approach is suggested to help guide agricultural policy to deliver these objectives. The first step is to agree measurable outcomes, integrating formal policy goals with the often much less formal and much more diverse goals of individual farmers. The second step is to assess current performance. Ideally, this will involve the use of farm-scale metrics that can feed into process models that address social and environmental domains as well as production issues that can be benchmarked and upscaled to landscape and country. Some policy goals can be delivered by supporting ad hoc interventions, while others require the redesign of the farming system. A pipeline of research, knowledge and capacity building is needed to ensure the continuous increase in farm performance. System models can help prioritise policy interventions. Formal optimization of land use is only appropriate if the policy goals are clear, and the constraints understood. In practice, the best approach may depend on the scale of action that is required, and on the amount of resource and infrastructure available to generate, implement and manage policy.
topic agricultural policy|ecosystem services|indicators of sustainable intensification|knowledge exchange|land use optimization
url http://academic.hep.com.cn/fase/fileup/2095-7505/PDF/26001/1573104730892-121981176.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT lesliegfirbank towardsthesustainableintensificationofagricultureasystemsapproachtopolicyformulation
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