The Defining Characteristics of Agroecosystem Living Labs
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Transdisciplinary approaches involving farmers, scientists, and other interested partners in the co-design, monitoring, and evaluation of new and existing agricultural practices and technologies on working landscapes to improve their effectiveness and early adoption.[16] (p. 4)
2. Conceptual Framework
2.1. Defining Living Labs
2.2. Living Lab Typologies
- Sector: The most common way to categorize different types of living labs is by sector, thematic domain, or area of application. For example, ENoLL uses sectors to categorize its membership: Health & Wellbeing, Smart Cities & Regions, Culture & Creativity, Energy, Mobility, Social Inclusion, Social Innovation, Government, Education, and Other. (Within this typology, certain living labs could be described as “agriculture living labs,” although we will show why this label fails to capture key challenges associated with a particular category of living lab in this sector: agroecosystem living labs.)
- Purpose or function: Efforts to distinguish living labs by their purpose or function have been part of an overall effort to clarify the living lab concept and separate out distinct clusters of “living labs” that all use this common label to represent somewhat different applications (e.g., European vs. American approaches or ICT innovations vs. engineering testbeds [23,46,49,50]).
- Driving actor: Actors can play varying roles within a living lab, and various coordination, management, and governance structures are possible within living labs. Leminen, Westerlund, and Nyström [22] propose a typology that differentiates living labs based on who drives the activities, resulting in four types of living labs: utilizer-driven, enabler-driven, provider-driven, and user-driven.
- Processes and approaches: Researchers have also based typologies on their coordination approach and participation approach [51]. This approach has been combined with a platform of dimension to categorize living labs as different types of collaborative innovation networks [52]. Leminen and Westerlund [27] have further proposed a related typology based on the innovation processes and tools used in living labs.
2.3. Efforts to Distinguish ULLs from General Living Labs
The intricate number of variables and relationships influencing the process and outcome of urban living labs compared to “normal” [general] living labs is exactly the learning environment that urban stakeholders tend to look for and appreciate. It helps them to develop real-world solutions to real-world problems while emphasizing the need for these solutions to work.[18] (p. 26)
3. Methodology
4. Case Studies
4.1. Canada: The Living Laboratories Initiative
4.1.1. Aims: Canada
4.1.2. Activities: Canada
4.1.3. Participants: Canada
4.1.4. Context: Canada
4.2. France: Living Labs under the “Territoires d’Innovation” Scheme
4.2.1. Aims: France
4.2.2. Activities: France
4.2.3. Participants: France
4.2.4. Context: France
4.3. Living Lab Cases from the Academic and Grey Literature
- Agro-Lab (Madrid, Spain)
- L’Acadie Lab (Quebec, Canada)
- Laboratoire d’Innovation Territoriale Grandes Cultures (Auvergne, France)
- ILVO Living Lab Agrifood Technology (Belgium)
- AU/LAB Centre de Cocréation et d’Innovation Ouverte pour l’Agriculture Urbaine à Montréal (Canada)
- Ryerson Urban Farm Living Lab (Canada)
- Agrilink’s Dutch Belgian Living Lab (Netherlands and Belgium) (Although Agrilink has a broader network of six agriculture-related living labs, not all fall under all three parameters used to discern case studies for the purpose of this article)
- Agrilink’s Norway Living Lab (Norway)
4.3.1. Aims: Cases from the Literature
4.3.2. Activities: Cases from the Literature
4.3.3. Participants: Cases from the Literature
4.3.4. Context: Cases from the Literature
5. Analysis and Discussion: The Defining Characteristics of Agroecosystem Living Labs
5.1. Aims: Agroecosystem Living Labs
5.2. Activities: Agroecosystem Living Labs
5.3. Participants: Agroecosystem Living Labs
5.4. Context: Agroecosystem Living Labs
5.5. Implications for Researchers and Practitioners in Agroecosystem Living Labs
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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McPhee, C.; Bancerz, M.; Mambrini-Doudet, M.; Chrétien, F.; Huyghe, C.; Gracia-Garza, J. The Defining Characteristics of Agroecosystem Living Labs. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1718. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041718
McPhee C, Bancerz M, Mambrini-Doudet M, Chrétien F, Huyghe C, Gracia-Garza J. The Defining Characteristics of Agroecosystem Living Labs. Sustainability. 2021; 13(4):1718. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041718
Chicago/Turabian StyleMcPhee, Chris, Margaret Bancerz, Muriel Mambrini-Doudet, François Chrétien, Christian Huyghe, and Javier Gracia-Garza. 2021. "The Defining Characteristics of Agroecosystem Living Labs" Sustainability 13, no. 4: 1718. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041718
APA StyleMcPhee, C., Bancerz, M., Mambrini-Doudet, M., Chrétien, F., Huyghe, C., & Gracia-Garza, J. (2021). The Defining Characteristics of Agroecosystem Living Labs. Sustainability, 13(4), 1718. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041718