Highly Optimized Tolerant (HOT) Farms in Rondônia: Productivity and Farm Size, and Implications for Environmental Licensing

This paper operationalizes the concept of highly optimized tolerance (HOT) for the case of smallholder agriculture in Rondônia, Brazil. It seeks to understand how characteristics of family farms shift as a function of property size, arguing that as production intensifies, properties move closer to a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andrew Reid. Bell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2011-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss2/art7/
id doaj-a90a49a8cdcc4d74a4858e78d0bc8f23
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a90a49a8cdcc4d74a4858e78d0bc8f232020-11-24T20:46:44ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872011-06-011627Highly Optimized Tolerant (HOT) Farms in Rondônia: Productivity and Farm Size, and Implications for Environmental LicensingAndrew Reid. BellThis paper operationalizes the concept of highly optimized tolerance (HOT) for the case of smallholder agriculture in Rondônia, Brazil. It seeks to understand how characteristics of family farms shift as a function of property size, arguing that as production intensifies, properties move closer to a HOT state. In this state, resources are committed to maintaining robustness against expected disturbances, such as shifts in yields or crop prices, making property more vulnerable to other unexpected disturbances, such as shifts in input prices or availability. The shifts in production, labor, and costs that occur across scale in the Ji-Paraná River Basin in Rondônia were measured using a survey instrument on a sample of farmers in the basin. Study results show decreasing production intensity with increasing property size in the sample, coupled with decreasing contracted and family labor use intensity, as well as decreased income diversification and off-farm labor. Farms smaller than 60 ha in the sample differed markedly in production and cost structure from those that were larger. For these smaller properties, meeting the requirements of Rondônia's new environmental licensing program (LAPRO) may lead to an increase in the sale of land parcels to cover debts and a speeding up of land consolidation in the region.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss2/art7/Amazonenvironmental licensinghighly optimized toleranceproperty sizeranchingRondônia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Reid. Bell
spellingShingle Andrew Reid. Bell
Highly Optimized Tolerant (HOT) Farms in Rondônia: Productivity and Farm Size, and Implications for Environmental Licensing
Ecology and Society
Amazon
environmental licensing
highly optimized tolerance
property size
ranching
Rondônia
author_facet Andrew Reid. Bell
author_sort Andrew Reid. Bell
title Highly Optimized Tolerant (HOT) Farms in Rondônia: Productivity and Farm Size, and Implications for Environmental Licensing
title_short Highly Optimized Tolerant (HOT) Farms in Rondônia: Productivity and Farm Size, and Implications for Environmental Licensing
title_full Highly Optimized Tolerant (HOT) Farms in Rondônia: Productivity and Farm Size, and Implications for Environmental Licensing
title_fullStr Highly Optimized Tolerant (HOT) Farms in Rondônia: Productivity and Farm Size, and Implications for Environmental Licensing
title_full_unstemmed Highly Optimized Tolerant (HOT) Farms in Rondônia: Productivity and Farm Size, and Implications for Environmental Licensing
title_sort highly optimized tolerant (hot) farms in rondônia: productivity and farm size, and implications for environmental licensing
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2011-06-01
description This paper operationalizes the concept of highly optimized tolerance (HOT) for the case of smallholder agriculture in Rondônia, Brazil. It seeks to understand how characteristics of family farms shift as a function of property size, arguing that as production intensifies, properties move closer to a HOT state. In this state, resources are committed to maintaining robustness against expected disturbances, such as shifts in yields or crop prices, making property more vulnerable to other unexpected disturbances, such as shifts in input prices or availability. The shifts in production, labor, and costs that occur across scale in the Ji-Paraná River Basin in Rondônia were measured using a survey instrument on a sample of farmers in the basin. Study results show decreasing production intensity with increasing property size in the sample, coupled with decreasing contracted and family labor use intensity, as well as decreased income diversification and off-farm labor. Farms smaller than 60 ha in the sample differed markedly in production and cost structure from those that were larger. For these smaller properties, meeting the requirements of Rondônia's new environmental licensing program (LAPRO) may lead to an increase in the sale of land parcels to cover debts and a speeding up of land consolidation in the region.
topic Amazon
environmental licensing
highly optimized tolerance
property size
ranching
Rondônia
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss2/art7/
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewreidbell highlyoptimizedtoleranthotfarmsinrondoniaproductivityandfarmsizeandimplicationsforenvironmentallicensing
_version_ 1716811655336165376