The Treacherous Road to Sustainable Agriculture: Lessons from Israeli Farmers and the Need to Upscale the Debate
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Social Space and Lefebvre’s Triad of Spaces
2.2. Scale and Scalar Politics: Towards an Understanding of Multiscalar Politics at Farm Level
2.3. Contemporary Agriculture: A Very Short Guide for the Perplexed and the Political Economy of Israeli Farmers
2.3.1. The Importance of Family and Small-Scale Farms
2.3.2. The Many Faces of Contemporary Agriculture
2.3.3. The Political Economy of Israeli Agriculture
2.4. Research Design
2.4.1. Research Method and Data Collection
- Personal data.
- Knowledge and sources of knowledge concerning farming/agriculture.
- Daily routine and conduct in the field.
- Interaction with scales beyond the farm level (state agencies, global markets, regulations, etc.).
- Approach to sustainability.
- Challenges, obstacles, and future goals in operating the farm.
- Literature Survey of social media: Like other sectors, farmers also engage with social media, within which the groups and pages followed were occupied with sharing information about crops, comparing prices, and at times bringing to the fore problems they were facing, such as the current increase in agricultural terrorism throughout Israel. In the local Israeli context, this term relates to agricultural crime (theft, sabotage, and extortion payments), which farmers consider fundamental threats to their economic and social survival. This was highly beneficial at the early stage of the project, as it enabled me to contact farmers directly and introduce myself and the project and later get access to the farmer and his/her field.
- Ethnographic fieldwork: This study is based in part on intensive ethnographic fieldwork conducted in farms and fields between 2021 and 2023. Over a three-year period, I contacted farmers and got permission to work in their fields. The work, carried out at 35 farms, lasted from a few hours to an entire day. In addition to working in the field, the fieldwork also consisted of participant observation and open-ended semi-structured interviews with farm owners. The three modes of data collection are further explained below:
2.4.2. Data Analysis
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Lessons from the Field: How Farmers Know What They Know (or Do Not) and Why They Do What They Do (or Do Not)
3.2. The Political Economy at Farm Level
3.3. The Illusive Component in Going Sustainable: Sustainability as Ideology and Suspension of Economical Constraints
3.4. The Local Is Multiscalar Every Step of the Way
4. Conclusions and Further Reflections
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Age | Gender | Type of Farming | Location of Farms | Type of Typical Crops at Farms (Not Following Location) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Age range: 28–72 | 7 females | 27 conventional | Golan Heights 12 | Mixed farms 4 |
Average age 55 | 28 males | 8 sustainable/regenerative | Upper Galilee 7 | Olives/avocado/mango 15 |
Lower Galilee 8 | Citrus 4 | |||
Jezreel Valley 5 | Deciduous (apples, almonds, pears, etc.) 8 | |||
Sharon Plain 3 | Cattle ranch 4 |
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Luz, N. The Treacherous Road to Sustainable Agriculture: Lessons from Israeli Farmers and the Need to Upscale the Debate. Sustainability 2023, 15, 12388. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151612388
Luz N. The Treacherous Road to Sustainable Agriculture: Lessons from Israeli Farmers and the Need to Upscale the Debate. Sustainability. 2023; 15(16):12388. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151612388
Chicago/Turabian StyleLuz, Nimrod. 2023. "The Treacherous Road to Sustainable Agriculture: Lessons from Israeli Farmers and the Need to Upscale the Debate" Sustainability 15, no. 16: 12388. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151612388
APA StyleLuz, N. (2023). The Treacherous Road to Sustainable Agriculture: Lessons from Israeli Farmers and the Need to Upscale the Debate. Sustainability, 15(16), 12388. https://doi.org/10.3390/su151612388