Title: Resilience, Learning and Adaptation among Irish Farm Offspring
1Resilience, Learning and Adaptation among Irish
Farm Offspring
- Dr. Caroline Crowley
- IRCHSS Postdoctoral Fellow
- Department of Geography,
- University College Cork, Ireland
- 18 August 2009
- ESRS Congress
2Alternative Agricultural Pathways
- Development and diffusion of organic farming and
artisanal food production led by back-to-the-land
urbanites, foreigners, 3rd-level educated and
well-capitalised famers - Limited uptake by indigenous farm families in
spite of growth in organic market, premium prices
for organic and artisanal products, and
government incentives - Suggests inhibitory factors operating within
conventional and/or traditional agricultural
sector - Presentation focuses on young people from Irish
farms - youth associated with ability to learn
new skills and adapt to change - Explores farm offspring narratives on living and
working on Irish farms to reveal how agricultural
masculinities and social structures can inhibit
adoption of alternative farm enterprises
3Research Methods
- Conducted interviews using a case study approach
- Responds to Shucksmith and Herrmanns (2002 39)
call for research into farmers own way of
seeing the world and Giddens (1976) call for
methodologies that explore culture, local
understandings and the lived experience
- UCC University College Cork students 11
interviews
- SE Carlow, commercial farming, 27 interviews
- NW Leitrim, marginal farming 26 interviews
4Alternative Agricultural Pathways and Farming
Masculinities
- Peter et al. (2000 216) argue that the
conventional masculinity of most male farmers
hampers the adoption of alternative forms of
agriculture among more industrial farmers - Employ Peter et al.s (2000) Bakhtinian approach
to understanding agricultural masculinities - Monologic and dialogic masculinities represent
Weberian ideal types of farmer positions along
spectrum of masculinities
5Monologic Masculinities
- Monologic farmer characterised by
- farming centred on use of machinery and control
over nature - strong gender-based division of farm labour
- conventional understandings of masculinity
- specific definitions of work and success
- Farming to an Irish person is cows or cattle,
sheep, pigs, cereals and maybe potatoes and
carrots nothing else, thats farming, thats it,
close the gate. Well put all them in that room
and the other lads (the forestry, the salad
growers, the daffodil growers)theyre not
farmers.Here farming is very, you either are or
you arent Jack SE
6Dialogic Masculinities
- Dialogic farmer characterised by
- more openness to change and criticism
- less controlling attitude to machines and
environment - acknowledges environment and needs of others in
society - broader understanding of what it is to be a man
- Dads very open-minded about farming and willing
to take on opinions if he wasnt that sort of a
person, he wouldnt be organic farming now Denis
NW -
7Locating Farming Knowledge
8From Local to Global Knowledge
- Productivist Model of Agriculture - ongoing
adoption of technology facilitates - consolidation
- specialisation
- intensification
- Implications for agricultural masculinities as
alters location of farming knowledge and thus
authority - FROM
- Farmers with intimate knowledge of local natural
and cultivated capital passed down through
generations of family farming and their role as
a teacher and transmitter of a craft (Commins
and Kelleher, 1973 118) - TO
- external scientific, engineering, sales and
extension agents in private and public sector,
with global expertise in farm inputs/practices,
trained in universities and research centres
removed from farm location
9Inhibition of Transition to Alternative
AgriculturalPathways
10Via Farm Family
- Agrarian ideology and farmer identities are
reproduced and restrained in families through - Patriarchy - the fathers direction of the
enterprise coincides with his dominant,
controlling role as parent and adult (Arensberg
1937 56-57) - Patrilineal inheritance - land ownership and thus
power is passed to one usually male successor
(OHara, 1998) - Leads to performance of masculine identities
often grounded in material interests (NĂ Laoire,
2002 17) - Young people wary of embracing alternatives
because change must be agreeable to older
landowner with power to bequest land as he sees
fit ? monologic masculinities - a lot of my friends who are working on
farmsseem to be over the barrel of a gun by
their fathers saying to them oh, you be a good
boy for the next couple of years and Ill give
you the farm Jack SE
11Via Farming Community
- Deference to ancestral ways and tradition
overseen by farming community and organisations - Farmer agency kept in check by keen sense of not
wanting to stand out among peers or be ridiculed - Community social control achieved via formidable
gossip networks that ensure effective spread of
information (Salazar, 1996) and being judged
through hedgerow farming (Burton, 2004) - Choice between conformity to conventional
agriculture or social isolation from farming
community ? monologic masculinities
12Effects of Opinions of Other Farmers
- Going away to a market sale and you have good
quality livestock with you, its a good
feeling, and then you meet the farmersfrom other
countiesand they talk about your good quality
Sean NW - and they tell me that were not farmers
becausewe grow flowers. What? Flower
farmers? Which disappoints me. Farming is
farming and you should respect somebody whos
doing something well and grows good cropsits
sad that some farmers in the area wouldnt
respect you because of what you do Jack SE
13Via State Agents Agricultural Education
- Adherence to conventional productivist
agriculture overseen by agents of state e.g.,
farm inspectors, agricultural advisers and
educators - Resistance to change and institutional inertia in
conservative farm sector ? monologic
masculinities - The following organic farmer had to do a
conventional farming certificate to be eligible
for farm grants - I had my complete different opinions to some of
the thingsI would challenge agricultural
educatorsbut Id still have to answer the
questions in the fashion they wanted them
answered in. They have right and wrong and thats
it Denis NW
14Via State Agents Farm Inspectors
- This farm family encountered state resistance to
risk associated with change when they tried to
produce their own milk product - unpasteurised milk was a no go area according
to our Department of Agriculture inspector. She
didnt want to hear tell of it and she wouldnt
let us batch-pasteurise, which is what were
doing at the moment.I think she just didnt want
it in her area because its kind of a high risk
product - One year later
- we tried a raw milk hard cheese and that was a
no go area.she was out here every 2 or 3 days,
stuck into it, doing tests, testing every bit.
She didnt like it at all - you cant challenge it. Its like being in
school at 8 years of age you cant challenge the
teacher or the teachers going to be right Denis
NW
15Potential for AlternativeAgriculture
16Seeds of Alternative Masculinities
- Farm offspring interviews reveal interest in a
variety of farm diversification options such as
wind energy, direct farm sales and farm
recreation can be combined with conventional
farming - But they are wary of organic farming because
- Lack of knowledge and acceptance in family and
community - Risk aversion and lack of knowledge among state
agents - Related to monologic masculinities and the
hegemony of global knowlege
17Conclusions
- Strong interest among farm offspring in farm
diversification and partnerships with non-farming
investors - Most Irish farms operating under the productivist
model of agriculture not economically viable - Sustained via off-farm income masks
unsustainability and prevents real change - Inertia in adopting alternative agricultural
pathways underpinned by authority of global
knowledge from state and sectoral experts
powerful architects of agricultural change - Adherence to global productivist model of
agriculture through associated hegemonic
monologic masculinities ? resilience of an
unsustainable model of agriculture - May be undone by economic crisis
- Loss of off-farm jobs
- Loss of farm income supports from government
- ? Challenge sector to undergo real change
18References
- Arensberg, C.M. (1937) The Irish countryman an
anthropological study. Macmillan and Co. - Burton, R., 2004, Seeing through the 'good
farmer's' eyes towards developing an
understanding of the social symbolic value of
'productivist' behaviour. Sociologia Ruralis,
44 195-215. - Commins, P., and Kelleher, C. (1973) Farm
inheritance and succession. Macra na Feirme,
Dublin. - Giddens, A. (1976) The new rules of the
sociological method. Heinemann, London. - Ni Laoire, C., 2002, Young farmers, masculinities
and change in rural Ireland. Irish Geography, 35
16-27. - Ni Laoire, C. (2005) 'You're not a man at all!'
masculinity, responsibility, and staying on the
land in contemporary Ireland. Irish Journal of
Sociology, 14 94-114. - OConnell, P., Clancy, D., McCoy, S. (2006) Who
went to college in 2004? A national survey of new
entrants to higher education. Higher Education
Authority. - O'Hara, P. (1998) Partners in production? Women,
farm and family in Ireland. Berghahn Books,
Oxford. - Peter, G., Mayerfeld Bell, M., Jarnagin, S., and
Bauer, D. (2000) Coming back across the fence
masculinity and the transition to sustainable
agriculture. Rural Sociology, 65 215-233. - Salazar, C. (1996) A Sentimental Economy
Commodity and Community in Rural Ireland.
Berghahn Books, Oxford - Shucksmith, M. and Herrmann, V. (2002) Future
changes in British agriculture projecting
divergent farm household behaviour. Journal of
Agricultural Economics, 53 (1) 37-50.
19caroline.crowley_at_ucc.ie