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Participatory research approaches to integrating scientific and farmer knowledge of soil to meet multiple objectives in the English East Midlands
Authors:Chris Stoate  Stephen Jones  Felicity Crotty  Carol Morris  Susanne Seymour
Affiliation:1.

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8021-7888;2. Allerton Project, Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust, Loddington, UK;3. Chris Stoate, Allerton Project, Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust, Loddington, UK.;4. University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK

Abstract:
Soil management influences food production, economic performance of farm businesses, and a range of public benefits such as water quality, flood control and aquatic and terrestrial biodiversity. The aim of this paper is to explore the role of participatory research in combining scientific and farmer knowledge of soils to meet these multiple objectives. We use five separate research studies involving communication, consultation and co‐production, carried out in the English East Midlands between 2014 and 2018. We compare the participatory processes for knowledge exchange and their material outcomes and assess them retrospectively against specified criteria for successful application of participatory research. We conclude that, depending on context and scalar fit, multiple approaches to participatory research can be complementary, strengthen engagement and build trust within a farming community, resulting in a greater shared understanding of how to address the soil management objectives of farmers and wider society.
Keywords:knowledge exchange  participatory research  soil management  soil quality
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