Bringing Social Science Into Critical Zone Science: Exploring Smallholder Farmers' Learning Preferences in Chinese Human‐Modified Critical Zones

Author:

Naylor Larissa A.1ORCID,Zheng Ying1ORCID,Munro Neil2ORCID,Stanton Alasdair2ORCID,Wang Weikai3ORCID,Chng Nai R.4ORCID,Oliver David M.5ORCID,Dungait Jennifer A. J.67ORCID,Waldron Susan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Geographical and Earth Sciences University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

2. School of Social and Political Sciences University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

3. The Bartlett School of Planning University College London London UK

4. Institute of Health and Wellbeing University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

5. Biological and Environmental Sciences Faculty of Natural Sciences University of Stirling Stirling UK

6. Geography College of Life and Environmental Science University of Exeter Exeter UK

7. Carbon Management Centre SRUC‐Scotland's Rural College Edinburgh UK

Abstract

AbstractThere is a growing global emphasis on sustainable agriculture to reduce human impacts and improve delivery of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). With increasing investment in critical zone observatories (CZOs), it becomes important to understand how sustainable agricultural knowledge is produced, shared and used between different groups including farmers, scientists and government. To explore these issues, scientists leading the knowledge exchange (KE) component of a China‐UK CZO program studied three farming regions with contrasting geologies and varying economic levels, using a practice‐based research method. We demonstrate how additional funding for social science research allowed us to understand how farmers access and share farming knowledge through bonding, bridging and linking networks, and how this varies spatially, using interviews and survey questionnaires. Knowledge flows, barriers and opportunities for designing locally suited two‐way KE activities were identified. First, we highlight the need for a more locally, socially embedded and reflexive approach to build trust and better address pressing local environmental challenges. Second, we show how social science can usefully inform KE for collaborative, international development science, to draw on local knowledge, promote research impacts and capacity building while avoiding knowledge mismatches. Lastly, a blueprint for the design and funding of future CZOs, social‐ecological and planetary health research agendas that combine science, social science, local knowledge and KE is presented, including the need for substantive social science research to take place in addition to science research in human‐modified landscapes—enabling the CZ science to be better grounded in, informed by and useful to local communities.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science

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