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Why has farming in Europe changed? A farmers’ perspective on the development since the 1960s

  • Franziska Mohr*
  • , Vasco Diogo
  • , Julian Helfenstein
  • , Niels Debonne
  • , Thymios Dimopoulos
  • , Wenche Dramstad
  • , Maria García-Martín
  • , Józef Hernik
  • , Felix Herzog
  • , Thanasis Kizos
  • , Angela Lausch
  • , Livia Lehmann
  • , Christian Levers
  • , Robert Pazur
  • , Virginia Ruiz-Aragón
  • , Rebecca Swart
  • , Claudine Thenail
  • , Hege Ulfeng
  • , Peter H. Verburg
  • , Tim Williams
  • Anita Zariņa, Matthias Bürgi
*Corresponding author for this work
    • Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research
    • University of Bern
    • Agroscope
    • Wageningen University & Research
    • Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
    • MedINA
    • Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research
    • University of Agriculture in Krakow
    • University of the Aegean
    • Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research
    • Humboldt University of Berlin
    • Johann Heinrich von Thunen Institute
    • Slovak Academy of Sciences
    • National Research Institute for Agriculture (INRAe)

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    23 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Farming in Europe has been the scene of several important socio-economic and environmental developments and crises throughout the last century. Therefore, an understanding of the historical driving forces of farm change helps identifying potentials for navigating future pathways of agricultural development. However, long-term driving forces have so far been studied, e.g. in anecdotal local case studies or in systematic literature reviews, which often lack context dependency. In this study, we bridged local and continental scales by conducting 123 oral history interviews (OHIs) with elderly farmers across 13 study sites in 10 European countries. We applied a driving forces framework to systematically analyse the OHIs. We find that the most prevalent driving forces were the introduction of new technologies, developments in agricultural markets that pushed farmers for farm size enlargement and technological optimisation, agricultural policies, but also cultural aspects such as cooperation and intergenerational arrangements. However, we find considerable heterogeneity in the specific influence of individual driving forces across the study sites, implying that generic assumptions about the dynamics and impacts of European agricultural change drivers hold limited explanatory power on the local scale. Our results suggest that site-specific factors and their historical development will need to be considered when addressing the future of agriculture in Europe in a scientific or policy context.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number156
    Pages (from-to)1-17
    JournalRegional Environmental Change
    Volume23
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023

    OECD Field of Science

    • 5.7 Social and Economic Geography

    Keywords

    • Agricultural change
    • Driving forces
    • Green revolution
    • Land management history
    • Oral history interview

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