Turning Indonesia Organic: Insights from Transdisciplinary Research on the Challenges of a Societal Transformation

While there is a global consensus that agricultural systems need to be transformed to be more sustainable, possible pathways and challenges to this process are still debated. We analyse the challenges and opportunities involved in transforming smallholder farming to organic agriculture in Indonesia,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2021-12, Vol.13 (23), p.13011
Hauptverfasser: Fritz, Manuela, Grimm, Michael, Keilbart, Patrick, Laksmana, Dimas Dwi, Luck, Nathalie, Padmanabhan, Martina, Subandi, Nurcahyaningtyas, Tamtomo, Kristian
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container_end_page
container_issue 23
container_start_page 13011
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 13
creator Fritz, Manuela
Grimm, Michael
Keilbart, Patrick
Laksmana, Dimas Dwi
Luck, Nathalie
Padmanabhan, Martina
Subandi, Nurcahyaningtyas
Tamtomo, Kristian
description While there is a global consensus that agricultural systems need to be transformed to be more sustainable, possible pathways and challenges to this process are still debated. We analyse the challenges and opportunities involved in transforming smallholder farming to organic agriculture in Indonesia, where the intense application of Green Revolution technologies came at enormous environmental costs. We adopt a transdisciplinary approach to identify possible pathways towards organic agriculture, based on an analysis of farmers’ knowledge and barriers to adoption, value and belief systems, and institutional structures, including policies and regulations. We present our empirical findings as ‘system knowledge’, ‘target knowledge’ and ‘transformation knowledge’ and incorporate insights from both academics and practitioners. We draw on evidence from large-scale surveys, field experiments, in-depth interviews, participant observation and document analysis. A key insight of our research is that Indonesia does not lack initiatives towards organic farming, but that these various initiatives have different motivations, goals and strategies. This misalignment detracts from the transformational potential of organic agriculture and is responsible for the hitherto limited success of the organic transition. Our findings suggest that policy action at multiple levels is required, guided by an inclusive strategy that is drawn up in a participatory manner.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/su132313011
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Agricultural production
Agriculture
Biodiversity
Certification
Civil society
Education
Epidemics
Farmers
Farming
Field tests
Food
Green revolution
Knowledge
Misalignment
Mixed methods research
Natural & organic foods
Organic farming
Pesticides
Politics
Research methodology
Small farms
Sustainability
Sustainable agriculture
Training
title Turning Indonesia Organic: Insights from Transdisciplinary Research on the Challenges of a Societal Transformation
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