Sustainable Family Farming Futures: Exploring the Challenges of Family Farm Decision Making through an Emotional Lens of ‘Belonging’
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Emotions, the Family Farm and Decision Making
1.2. The Emotion of Belonging
2. Northern Ireland Context
3. Methodology
3.1. Research Sample
3.2. Fieldwork Methodologies
3.2.1. ‘Work and Talk’ Interviews
3.2.2. Online and Telephone Oral Life History Interviews
3.3. Analysis
4. Results
4.1. A ‘Longing for Belonging’ to Keep It in the Family
“Is it true, is it really true that I will not get to live here? Because if that is the truth, then you know I may as well just reconcile and let this five-generation thing go… but it’s very, very hard, because even as I sit here, I have memories of being a child, I get great comfort being here and it has helped me with his [uncle] loss” (Successor 8, aged 30+).
“I think it’s key to any farm that the family is involved in it, you know, … anybody can learn how to farm from nature… but it’s from your family you get most stuff” (Successor 19, aged 18–29).
“Well, my parents did everything they could to stop me farming, I was working with an accountancy firm for four years, and then I realised it was the love of farming that brough me back” (Farmer 17, aged 50+).
“I think in some areas there’s still a big attraction to keep it in the family, or a responsibility to keep it in the family in certain areas, but I think that’s all changing now” (Farmer 7, aged 50+).
“To be completely honest I think it [keeping the family farm] interferes in the family, but my husband would like it” (Spouse 12, aged 50+).
“It’s nice, but as I said, I have said to [son] quite openly, if this place isn’t working for you and you saw a nice block of land ten, fifty or hundred miles away and you know, move; don’t let this history hold you” (Farmer 2, aged 50+).
“You know, the general hearsay around the country today [is] that farms generally only last three generations in any one family …the first generation buy the farm and they live in debt for the rest of their lives. The next member of the family takes it over. The next generation—he finishes up any payments and he develops the farm up to what you know to be a successful business, and then the third generation comes along and, excuse the phrase, he pisses it up against the wall! [laughs].”
“… the family name on the farm is very important… but if it came down the line and you had to move or something… I would like to keep it in the family name, but, you know circumstances with business decisions—you have to make a move… it wouldn’t be the end of the world sort of thing.”
“You just wouldn’t like to think that the whole thing ends with you—that would be my main fear” (Successor 10, aged 18–29).
“Well, I suppose when you have such a long line of it going back, you sort of feel a bit of responsibility. [Interviewer: is that a lot of pressure?] …a lot of pressure, but you don’t really think about it too much, but when you do there is pressure” (Successor 10, aged 18–29).
“He [uncle] was in hospital a few weeks later. He talked to me about this [potential problems with family members regarding inheritance] in depth and he said to me, and his last words were, ‘I don’t think you’re going to have peace to live there’, and he took a heart attack …[sobbing] and I lost him to that … and if that wasn’t enough, the way we buried him and it was like you know, I feel like I was a pariah in the graveyard and I was really low on the wall and the family were all the way up on the hill looking down [silence].”
“In October I was out on the road with a measuring tape getting ready to measure fencing and my [other] uncle swerved the car right at me on the road right for me …I am not kidding you” (Successor 8, female, aged 18–29).
4.2. Family, Communication and Farm Decision Making
“It’s quite simple at home. We all work together: me, Daddy and my sister… We make decisions together. Daddy involves us heavily in the farm as well. Like, he would ask our opinions… we all get to make decisions and things like that … And we all work hard on the farm today. So, at the moment, it’s just all three of us pulling together.”
“[Interviewer:] Have your Dad and you sat down and talked about succession or retirement plans?
[Participant:] Well, no not directly like …he has a will and things created and sorted if things go wrong, but there’s not an actual sort of time-line as to what will take place like” (Successor 4, aged 30+).
“There’s a situation ongoing up the road there; the wife has left the husband after only about three or four years of marriage, and we don’t know what way the whole place is going to end up” (Farmer 20, aged 50+).
“My nephew had a marriage that broke down and it was a really dirty breakup… his father who was a farmer would say that they were very lucky not to have signed over anything or it would all be gone” (Spouse 8, aged 50+).
“[crying] it has broken the family… none of my daughters talk to him anymore. We don’t know what to do now—we thought we could retire. I worry about it all the time” (Spouse and Farmer 7, 8 (joint interview), aged 50+).
“A lot of farmers don’t want to hand over their property to their son because of a particular reason. Down the years when my father was living and when I got married marriage was for life, ye know what I am saying! A lot of the things are going belly up at the minute and a lot of farmers would prefer to keep the next generation in line on the farm” (Farmer 10, aged 50+).
“This is not a judgement comment, but as more and more farmers marry non-farming daughters, that has a big impact as well. Because those ladies don’t understand this 80-hour week, week after week, and they shouldn’t …but, you know, the in-law thing …if my son said ‘I want to work Monday to Friday, you know 50 hours a week, will you do weekends?’ I’d think, no I bloody won’t!” (Farmer 2, aged 50+).
“My biggest worry is my brother getting married, and, you know, I want to see it, but I don’t really have that relationship with his future wife. And I am kind of worried that, you know, you hear of all these farms being sold because of divorces and everything, you know. That’s kind of my biggest fear at the minute… If my brother marries, I am dreading it; my sister-in-law is a driving force” (Spouse 18, aged 18–49 (farm is split three ways with brothers)).
“If they split up in a marriage that’s when…that’s when suicides and things come up.”
“I really am in no rush for them to sign over the whole farm because there have just been so many incidences with farmers in around my age where the wife has up and left, and it’s been a lot of hassle…so I am not given them any pressure on my mother and father to do it, ‘cause in two years’ time I could be happily married but you never know.”
“I think it’s wrong, that a wife is able to claim half of the farm… I could see it happening here…But anyway, I think that’s awful, I think it’s dreadful that a man who has built up a farm all his life, his father before has built up the farm, he has handed it over to his son, something has happened, and the wife walks off with half of it. It’s not right!” (Spouse 9, aged 50+).
“[Interviewer:] Are you attached to your livestock?
[Participant:] [cried] I sold two cows recently, and it knocked me for six that they were going to be culled …they were my friends; I work with my friends I didn’t want to sell my friends… it makes me really sad” (Farmer 7, aged 50+).
“My cows, my children, they all have names… ahh, yep, the fact the contract fella bought the herd, and they are staying here ‘cause I rented the old buildings too… I didn’t have to go through the pain of getting rid of cows; we lost 40 cows almost six years ago to TB, and it was like a death in the family for me and my wife” (Farmer 9 aged 50+).
“No attachment at all. Sure, you can’t—you’re not a retirement home for cows you know! You’re a business!” (Farmer 10, aged 50+).
4.3. The Emotional Impacts of Policy
“I really want to find a young farmer to take over the farm as my girls don’t want it. Someone so I don’t have to sell on the herd, and they can just take over, but I can’t, and there is no help—I am really stuck.”
“I think a sense of hope, you know, with policy the way that it is at the present time. Yeah, there’s a policy of no hope … people feel very vulnerable at the present time; we are being told so many mixed messages” (Farmer 4, aged 18–49).
“We have a department, and we have people now who are making decisions, who are looking at a screen and they have a little block graph and things as to what’s best for people. They don’t consider the emotional side of things—how things should be done. They just say what’s possible legally, and we can do that because as an EU Directive we have to implement this particular law or system: you know, like it or lump it” (Farmer 4, aged 18–49).
“…DAERA now want you to do everything on the computer online … before, the farm advisor would come out and sit and talk to you. There is no personal contact at all” (Spouse, aged 50+).
“When I started being a farmer in 1982, I can still remember a great Department of Agriculture personnel who helped my farm develop, and if there was a grant application, a bit of guidance to help me, lots of things, they really helped. That person does not exist anymore within the Department” (Farmer 15, aged 50+).
“DAERA needs to go back to its roots and have a more emotional connection with the family farm like it did in the 1980’s” (Farmer 9, aged 50+).
“Farming is such a different occupation, and a different business, and it’s something you have to visually see and understand, and then you have to be from it as well, I think… ‘You would [in the past] have an advisor and they would walk the farm with you, and they had come up with ideas and seeing things through their eyes. But now you just have to apply it all online and there’s something seriously missing there” (Farmer 3, aged 50+).
“I’ve been at a few of these seminars, these retirement successions, and these farmers come along and they’re lovely—the best of the world—and they have fear, and you could see them ‘cause I’m looking from the outside looking in, and you can see they’re scared, but when they leave the room, they don’t take anything with them.”
5. Conclusions and Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Sample Interview Question Guide
Farming Background: | ||
How long have you been in your role as farmer/successor/spouse? | ||
Are you satisfied with your role? | ||
Did you grow up on a farm? | ||
If yes, level of involvement on farm? | ||
If no, what were your previous experiences of farming? | ||
How did you acquire the farm/role? (bought/inherit/marriage/succession) | ||
Were you involved in this decision? | ||
If inherited, how many generations of your family has farmed this land? | ||
Did you want the role? | ||
If no, what did you want to do? | ||
What influenced your decision to then farm? | ||
Is farming your only job? (FT/PT/Hobby) | ||
If no, what is your other job? | ||
What influenced(s) this decision? | ||
Do you think farming as a ‘way of life’ has changed over your life-course? | How? | |
Do you think it is important to keep the farm in the family? (patrilineal) | Why? | Has this opinion changed? |
Family Farm Decision Making: | ||
How are farm decisions made and communicated on the family farm? | ||
Who do you think is the principal decision-maker on the farm? | ||
How involved are you in the farm decision-making process? | ||
Do you discuss farm issues as a family? | ||
Would you like more say in the decision-making process? | ||
Has the farm decision-making process changed over the years? | ||
Succession Decision Making: | ||
What have been the main influences on succession decision-making in your farm household to date? | ||
Are there any (other) external/internal influences? | ||
Is there anything you would like to change about how succession decision-making is communicated/decided in your farm household? | ||
Who do you think is the lead farmer—older farmer or successor? | ||
If not you, do you want to be? And what do you think the challenges are to accomplish tthis? | ||
What are your challenges and fears for the family farm? | ||
Retirement Decision Making: | ||
They say farmers don’t retire—do you agree with this statement? | ||
What have been the main influences on retirement decision-making in your farm household to date? | ||
Have there been any (other) external/internal influences? | ||
How has this changed over your life-course? | ||
What is your role in the retirement decision-making process? | ||
How are these retirement decisions communicated within the family? | ||
As successor, do you have any say in the retirement decision-making process? e.g., when you take over the farm officially. If not, would you/how? | ||
Do you think farm retirement decision-making is more emotional for farm families than any other occupation? | ||
Farming Identity & Sense of Belonging in Place: | ||
How do you see yourself as a ‘farmer’/spouse? (i.e., caretaker of the land). Has this changed in your lifetime? | ||
Do you think the farming identity has changed? (any change in roles, values?) | ||
What do you think are the main values of a farmer? Has this changed? | ||
How attached are you as farmer to the farm today? Has/how has this changed in your lifetime? | ||
How attached are you to the livestock/nature on the farm? Does this attachment affect your decision to retire/succeed? | ||
Is your home a form of attachment to your role as farmer/successor/spouse? | ||
If you do stay in the family home, is it important to still have a role on the family farm? | ||
If you can’t stay in the family home, what will you do? | ||
Do you think to remain living on the farm in retirement is a good way to ease the transition out of farming? Does it help with the stress of retiring? | ||
A Sense of Belonging in Rural Communities: | ||
Do you agree with the statement that the family farm is the heart of rural communities today? Why and has this changed in your life-course/how? | ||
Do you feel part of your local community? Has this changed over the years/why? | ||
Do you think the farm reflects who you are in your rural community, networks, relationships? Is this important and has this changed over your life-course? | ||
Do you socialise in your community/how? | ||
What other clubs/networks/unions ave you been part of, if any? How often did you meet and is this important to you? Has this changed over your life-course? | ||
If you do not socialise, what do you do? Has this changed? How does this make you feel? | ||
How do you feel about rural communities today? | ||
Do you think rural communities have changed? Do you think this affects your decision to retire or stay on the farm? | ||
Do you think traditional family farms have kept up with modern rural communities? | ||
Is there anything you think that would help farmers integrate better into changing rural communities? | ||
Retirement/Succession Policies: | ||
How do current rural development policies help/encourage you as a farmer in the retirement/succession process? How has this changed in your life-course? | ||
Are you aware of all current policies to support retirement/succession? How are they communicated to you (if any)? Your views on the success of these policies? | ||
Have there been any policies in your lifetime that you think helped the retirement/succession process? | ||
How do you think the government might help farmers through retirement/succession planning and encourage younger farmers back into the farming industry? | ||
What support do you think is needed for a smoother retirement/succession on the farm? | ||
Are there any other issues with rural development policies or the retirement and succession decision making process that you would like to discuss? |
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Farmer, aged 18–49 | Spouse, aged 18–49 | Successor, aged 18–29 Successor, aged 30+ (Non-)Successor, aged 18–29 |
Farmer, aged 50+ | Spouse, aged 50+ |
Unresolved or unrecognised emotions | To signal any habits or policies that require attention through changing rural communities or a changing family farm structure and have been excluded to date. |
Farmers’ Planned Behaviour | The traditional patriarchal structure, what is considered ‘normal’ by farmers and peers, their attitudes, intentions, beliefs and/or how easy it is to implement or take control over their decision making. |
Emotional Sense of Belonging | Participants’ emotions towards social bonds and the desire to connect, attachment to groups or people (including through childhood experiences), perceived quality of those social bonds. |
Emotional Place Belonging | A sense of security that is built through a feeling of ‘home’ through participants’ oral life history, social connections, cultural, economic and environmental factors. |
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Holloway, L.A.; Catney, G.; Stockdale, A.; Nelson, R. Sustainable Family Farming Futures: Exploring the Challenges of Family Farm Decision Making through an Emotional Lens of ‘Belonging’. Sustainability 2021, 13, 12271. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112271
Holloway LA, Catney G, Stockdale A, Nelson R. Sustainable Family Farming Futures: Exploring the Challenges of Family Farm Decision Making through an Emotional Lens of ‘Belonging’. Sustainability. 2021; 13(21):12271. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112271
Chicago/Turabian StyleHolloway, Lorraine A., Gemma Catney, Aileen Stockdale, and Roy Nelson. 2021. "Sustainable Family Farming Futures: Exploring the Challenges of Family Farm Decision Making through an Emotional Lens of ‘Belonging’" Sustainability 13, no. 21: 12271. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112271
APA StyleHolloway, L. A., Catney, G., Stockdale, A., & Nelson, R. (2021). Sustainable Family Farming Futures: Exploring the Challenges of Family Farm Decision Making through an Emotional Lens of ‘Belonging’. Sustainability, 13(21), 12271. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132112271