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Working Group 1 Turning Possibilities into Reality? Alternatives to Neoliberal Rural Policy Convenors Sophie Wynne-Jones [1], Steven Emery [2], Michael Woods [1], Karl Bruckmeier [3], Imre Kováck [4], Parto Teherani-Kröner [5] 1: Aberystwyth University, UK; 2. Birmingham University, UK; 3. National Research University – Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russian Federation; 4. Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Sociology, Budapest, Hungary; 5. Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany Working Group 1 Organisation and Political Potency: Food and Farming Movements 1 Chair Steven Emery (Birmingham University, UK) Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am 008 1 Working together successfully? Evaluating the co-operative dynamics of the Pontbren project - Sophie Wynne Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK) 015 8 Dairy co-ops: stronghold of productivism or “fertile ground” for change? - Jeremy Forney (Bern University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland) 039 1 Post-Soviet fishing collective farms as idiosyncratic assemblages of personal will, community values and socio-economic circumstance – Maria Nakhshina (Aberdeen University, UK) Working Group 1 Organisation and Political Potency: Food and Farming Movements 2 Chair Sophie Wynne Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK) Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm 010 0 The state constitutionalism of food sovereignty in Latin America: turning possibility into reality? – Mark Tilzey (Coventry University, UK) 007 9 Social land use and the co-production of community food: a socially innovative approach to public sector food provisioning – Alex Franklin, Ria Dunkley (Cardiff University), Imre Kovach, Bernadett Csurgó (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary) 018 5 Dynamics in the political potency of an organic farming movement: the case of the Czech Republic – Heidrun Moschitz, Matthias Stolze (Research Institute of Organic Agriculture, Switzerland), Andrea Hrabalova (Institute of Agricultural economics, Czech Republic) Working Group 1 Organisation and Political Potency: New Rural Movements Chair Mike Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK) Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm 017 9 Rural political mobilization in response to flooding in England – Steven Emery (Birmingham University, UK) 030 By-passing the state: fossil fuel divestment and the Galilee Basin,

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Working Group 1

Turning Possibilities into Reality? Alternatives to Neoliberal Rural Policy

Convenors Sophie Wynne-Jones [1], Steven Emery [2], Michael Woods [1], Karl Bruckmeier [3], Imre Kováck [4], Parto Teherani-Kröner [5]1: Aberystwyth University, UK; 2. Birmingham University, UK; 3. National Research University – Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russian Federation; 4. Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Sociology, Budapest, Hungary; 5. Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany

Working Group 1

Organisation and Political Potency: Food and Farming Movements 1

Chair Steven Emery (Birmingham University, UK)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0081 Working together successfully? Evaluating the co-operative dynamics of the Pontbren project - Sophie Wynne Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK)

0158 Dairy co-ops: stronghold of productivism or “fertile ground” for change? - Jeremy Forney (Bern University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland)

0391 Post-Soviet fishing collective farms as idiosyncratic assemblages of personal will, community values and socio-economic circumstance – Maria Nakhshina (Aberdeen University, UK)

Working Group 1

Organisation and Political Potency: Food and Farming Movements 2

Chair Sophie Wynne Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0100 The state constitutionalism of food sovereignty in Latin America: turning possibility into reality? – Mark Tilzey (Coventry University, UK)

0079 Social land use and the co-production of community food: a socially innovative approach to public sector food provisioning – Alex Franklin, Ria Dunkley (Cardiff University), Imre Kovach, Bernadett Csurgó (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)

0185 Dynamics in the political potency of an organic farming movement: the case of the Czech Republic – Heidrun Moschitz, Matthias Stolze (Research Institute of Organic Agriculture, Switzerland), Andrea Hrabalova (Institute of Agricultural economics, Czech Republic)

Working Group 1

Organisation and Political Potency: New Rural Movements

Chair Mike Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0179 Rural political mobilization in response to flooding in England – Steven Emery (Birmingham University, UK)

0308 By-passing the state: fossil fuel divestment and the Galilee Basin, Australia – Carol Richards, Robin Mayes (Queensland University of Technology), Mike Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)

0407 On the possibility of transnational cooperation between local movements challenged by multinational pulp and paper companies in the neo-liberal world – Sakari Hänninen (National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland)

0465 Rural youth vulnerability to populism as a pro-democratic choice: experiencing inequalities as catalyst or inhibitor of anti-neoliberal civic involvement? – Monika Kwiecinska-Zdrenka (Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland)

Working Group 1

Alternatives of Framing in Food Production and Distribution 1

Chair Imre Kovach (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0907 An alternative rural development is possible: organic hay-milk farmers in Austria – Agnes Strauss, Ika Darnhofer (University of Natural and Life Science, Austria)

0111 Farmers’ cooperation and alternatives to neo-liberal rural policy: young farmers’ initiatives in Italy – Pierluigi Milone, Flaminia Ventura (Perugia University), Paul Swagemakers (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

0392 Bottom-up responses to a post-neo-liberal rural: the case of Ireland, UK – Karen Keaveney (University College Dublin, Ireland)

Working Group 1

Alternatives of Framing in Food Production and Distribution 2

Chair Karl Bruckmeier (National Research University, Russian Federation)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0304 Farming as resistance? Alternative nuclear possibilities in Fukushima and Chernobyl – Tom Davies (Birmingham University, UK)

0140 Are the Transnational Food sovereignty campaigns coordinated? A comparison of the three social movement discourses – Claudio Brenni (University of Lausanne, Switzerland)

0324 The social and political organization in food driven urban-rural dynamics – Hannibal Hoff (University of Southern Denmark)

Working Group 1

Rural Futures and Post Neo-liberal Rurality 1

Chair Imre Kovach (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0396 Building a rural future in Valparaiso, Chile, via “Participatory Innovation”: methodical governance of complexity as a seed of post-neoliberal policy – Alfredo Del Valle (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Chile)

0046 Institutional support and the realization of rural economic potentials in a neoliberal world: the case of rural development initiatives in Central Nigeria – Simon Ejembi (University of Agriculture, Nigeria)

0291 Rural research projects as seeds of alternatives to neoliberalism – Pia Heike (University of Southern Denmark)

Working Group 1

Rural Futures and Post Neo-liberal Rurality 2

Chair Karl Bruckmeier (National Research University, Russian Federation)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0276 When communities must create local development – the neo-endogenous model in practice – Hanne Tanvig (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)

0417 Living utopian community? Ecovillages contesting – Natasa Bokan (University of Zagreb, Croatia)0459 Ways beyond neoliberal rural policies: the alternatives of new rural movements – Karl Bruckmeier

(National Research University, Russian Federation), Parto Teherani-Krönner (Humboldt University, Germany)

Working Group 2

What are the Impacts and Implications of Alternative Food Practices in a Post-Neoliberal Transition?

Convenors Damian Maye [1], Jessica Duncan [2]1. University of Gloucestershire, UK; 2. Wageningen University, The Netherlands

Working Group 2

Global Governance and Sustainability Assessment 1

Chair Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0382 Post-neoliberal food transitions: a Polyanyian perspective – Paul Belesky (University of Queensland, Australia)

0123 Alternative food networks in the postcolonial world: Indigeneity and struggles for food sovereignty – Marisa Wilson (University of Edinburgh, UK)

0225 “She can feed a hungry planet”: Analysing biopolitics and gender in world food security systems? - Uschi Bay (Monash University, Australia)

0037 Acknowledging complexity in 21st century food systems when assessing their performance – James Kirwan, Damian May (University of Gloucestershire, UK), Gianluca Brunori (University of Pisa, Italy)

Working Group 2

Global Governance and Sustainability Assessment 2

Chair Jessica Duncan (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0057 Which are the social issues in sustainable assessments of agriculture?– Elin Slätmo, Klara Fischer, Elin Röös (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)

0071 Chain actors turn sustainability challenges into opportunities for collaboration: a case study of the agro-food chain in Flanders – Marianne Hubeau (Institute for Agricultural and Fisheries Research, Belgium; Ghent University), Fleur Marchand (Institute for Agricultural and Fisheries Research, Belgium)

0312 Ecological embeddedness of box schemes – a cross-national study – Rebecka Milestad (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden), Chris Kjeldsen (Aarhus University, Denmark), Markus Schermer, Christoph Furtschegger (University of Innsbruck, Austria), Marcia Ostrom (Washington State University, USA), Susanne Kummer (University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria)

Working Group 2

Transition and Niche Innovations

Chair James KirwanWed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0074 Niche-innovations between breaks and continuities with the regime? A case study into the dairy sector in Belgium – Marlene Feyereisen, Pierre Stassart, Francois Melard (University of Liege, Belgium)

0084 Transitions towards resilience within the food system: scaling up two organic food chains in Sweden – Jacob von Oelreich, Rebecka Milestad (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)

0190 Where the system is creaking. Transitions and alternatives in the rural context – Silvia Doneddu (Università degli studi di Cagliari, Italy)

0425 A food system in transition – competing futures? – Juliana Lutz, Christian Lauk (Institute of Social Ecology, Austria)

Working Group 2

Transition and Niche Innovations

Chair Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0461 Bricolage for self-sufficiency: an analysis of alternative food initiatives’ structure – Mikelis Grivins, Ilona Kunda, Talis Tisenkopfs (Baltic Studies Centre, Latvia), Dan Keech (Countryside and Community Research Centre, UK)

0395 Farmstart Manchester – the first organic farm business incubator in the UK – Mark Stein (Salford University, UK)

0155 Exploring the adaptive capacity of growing mid-scale organic value chains in Europe – Rebecka Milestad, Jacob von Oelreich (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden), Susanne von Münchhausen (Eberswalde University for Applied Science, Germany)

0070 Countercultural convenience: access to alternative food system quality attributes online – Benjamin Wills (University of Tasmania, Australia)

Working Group 2

Civic Food, Urban Agriculture and Social Media

Chair Jessica Duncan (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0267 Local and global responsibilities in a transforming foodscape – producers’ and consumers’ views on care and ethics – Susanne Stenbacka, Sofie Joosse (Uppsala University, Sweden)

0264 Re-environing Viennese farmers’ markets: explorations of values and visions in Minnesota and Austria – Milena Klimek, Bernhard Freyer (University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria), Jim Bingen (Michigan State University, USA)

0374 The role of home food gardens for alternative food systems – the case of Slovenia – Zana Mehić, Maria Gerster-Bentaya, Andrea Knierim (University of Hohenheim, Germany)

0400 Growing alternative food networks in urban China – Jingsong Li (Zhejiang University, China)0405 Post-socialist sharing economy: home grown food and informal distribution networks – Petr Jehlička

(The Open University, UK; Masaryk University, Czech Republic), Nad’a Johanisova, Eva Fraňková, Petr Daněk (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)

Working Group 2

Civic Food, Urban Agriculture and Social Media

Chair Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0410 Investigating cultural sustainability in urban agriculture: the case of Ghent, Belgium – Joost Dessein, Charlotte Prové, Michiel de Krom (ILVO, Belgium; Ghent University), Katriina Soini (Natural Resources Institute (Luke), Finland; University of Jyväskylä, Finland)

0423 Food and engagement: the case of the network of solidarity economy of the Italian south – Federico de Musso (McGill University, USA)

0436 Short food supply chain, long working days. Addressing “healthy work” and social sustainability in organic market gardening. Lucie Dupré (INRA-SadApt, France), Claire Lamine, Mireille Navarrete (INRA-Ecodéveloppement, France)

0463 Horticulture in urban gardens as a way of promoting food citizenship – Marketa Mikovcová, Michel Lošták (Czech University of Life Sciences, Czech Republic)

0315 Gardening cyberspace – hybrid spaces and social media in the creation of food citizenship in the Bristol City Region, UK – Matthew Reed, Daniel Keech (Countryside & Community Research Institute, UK)

Working Group 3

Public Goods in Agriculture and Rural Areas: Negotiating the Shared Social and Environmental Dimensions

Convenors Catharine Darrot [1, 2], Philippe Boudes [1, 2], Diana Feliciano [3], Diane Giorgis [4], Paul Swagemakers [5]

1. Agrocampus Ouest, France; 2. ESO-UMR6590, Université Rennes 2, CNRS, France; 3. University of Aberdeen, UK; 4. LADYSS-CNRS, France; 5. University of Vigo, Spain

Working Group 3

Introducing Rural Public Goods

Chair Catherine Darrot, (Agrocampus Ouest, France; CNRS, France)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0065 Farmers’ production of public goods. Sociological approach of an economic construction. Philippe Boudes (Agrocampes Ouest, France)

0439 Technical practices as a negotiation basis for farms’ public goods’ provisions – Catherine Darrot (Agrocampus Ouest, France), Diane Giorgis (CNRS, France)

0361 Common lands: opportunities and threats in a neoliberal world – Ana-Isabel Garcia-Arias, Mar Pérez-Fra, Bernardo Valdês-Pacos, Ana Cabana-Iglesia (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain)

0353 Collective action and biodiversity conservation in dairy farming: innovative forms of organizing the provision of private, public and common goods – Paul Swagemakers, Lola Dominguez Garcia, Xavier Simón Fernandez (Vigo University, Spain), Pierluigi Milone, Flaminia Ventura (Perugia University, Italy)

Working Group 3

Collective Action, Participatory Process and Public Goods

Chair Philippe Boudes (Agrocampus Ouest, France; CNRS, France)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0040 Reinventing the commons. Linking sustainability and revitalization of community – Laura Tolnov Clausen, Lise Byskov Herslund, Tove Enggrob Boon (Copenhagen University, Denmark)

0488 Collective actions and institutions as main drivers to provide public goods: some cases in Italian agriculture – Francesco Mantino (INEA, Italy)

0064 Pastures valorization: tools and effects – Dimitra Gaki, Ioannis Faraslis (University of Thessaly, Greece)

Working Group 3

Land Management and Public Goods

Chair Paul Swagemakers (Vigo University, Spain)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0526 From Sole and Despotic Dominion to Property as a Tie of Belonging - Mathew Hoffman (Cornell University, USA)

0027 Landscape as a common good: the agrarian view - Rike Stotten (University of Innsbruck, Austria)0091 A future for Camargue flamingoes: mapping contesting values – Angela Wardell-Johnson Yoko

Shimizu, (University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia), Lisa Ernoul (Tour du Valet Research Centre, France)

Working Group 3

Renewing Public Good Perspectives

ChairThurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0285 An integrated seed system in Japanese organic farming – Aki Imaizumi (Independent Researcher, The Netherlands)

0484 Understanding the operation of extensive livestock systems: transhumance in Greece – Athanasios Ragkos, Stavroula Kiritsi, Ioannis Mitsopoulos (Alexander Technological Institute of Thessaloniki, Greece), Charalambos Piteris (Gerional Government of Crete, Greece)

0499 Motivations for implementation of ecological compensation areas in Swiss lowland farms – Robert Home, Oliver Balmer, Ingrid Jahrl, Matthias Stolz, Lukas Pfiffner (FiBL, Switzerland)

Working Group 4

Mapping Agri-food

Convenors Gareth Enticott [1], Vaughan Higgins [2]

1. Cardiff University, UK; 2. Charles Sturt University, Australia

Working Group 4

Critical Mapping

Chair Gareth Enticott (Cardiff University, UK)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0128 Mixed methods mapping for agri-environment decision-making – Beth Brockett (Lancaster University, UK)

0083 Maps as a tool of agricultural planning and policy – the case of Poland – Jerzy Banski (Institute of Geography and Spatial Organization, Poland)

0222 Maps, mapping and agri-food production: reinforcing or contesting the bio-economy? Vaughan Higgins (Charles Sturt University, Australia)

0223 The politics of mapping and regional branding: mobilizing new spheres of rural contestation – Adele Millard (University of Western Australia)

0254 The map and the terroir – adapting geographical boundaries for geographical indications in Norway – Atle Hegnes (University of Oslo, Norway)

Working Group 4

Maps, Food and Consumption

Chair Vaughan Higgins (Charles Sturt University, Australia)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0513 Mapping rural landscapes and livelihoods – Susan Machum (St Thomas University, Canada)0147 Mapping consumption groups in the city of Barcelona – Ricard Espelt (Universitat Oberta de

Catalunya, Spain)0178 Obesity, a designed decay of public health? Frederik Heikus (Abo Akademi, Finland)

0230 Mapping local food clusters of small producers in Northern Finland – Toivo Muilu (Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke), Finland), Ossi Kotavaara from the University of Oulu, Finland, and Kirsi Korhonen, Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke)

Working Group 5

Diversity of Ageing in Rural Communities

Convenors David L. Brown [1], Marit S. Haugen [2], Nina Glasgow [1], Thomas Scharf [3]1. Cornell University, USA; 2. Centre for Rural Research (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Norway; 3. National University of Ireland Galway

Working Group 5

Meeting the Needs of an Ageing Population

Chair Nina Glasgow (Cornell University, USA)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0014 Community care of the elderly in rural settings: two case studies from Slovenia – Duska Knezevic Hocevar, Majda Cernic Istenic (Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Slovenia)

0305 The caring countryside: a variety of caregivers – Cecilia Bygdell (Upplandsmuseet, Sweden)0030 Ageing well and the village community – Lotte Vermeij (The Netherlands Institute for Social Research,

The Netherlands)0085 Social priming: creating social arenas by means of cooperative user innovation – Erica Lofstrom

(SINTEF Building and Infrastructure, Norway)

Working Group 5

The Determinants of Rural Ageing

Chair Thomas Scharf (National University of Ireland)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0029 Natural decrease in the countries of Europe and its rural and urban counties in the context of the 2nd demographic transition – Dudley Poston Jr., Kenneth Johnson, Layton Field (Texas A&M University, USA)

0377 The vanishing home on the range: natural decrease in rural Kansas – Laszlo Kulcsar, Nina Glasgow, Brian Thiede, David Brown (Kansas State University, USA)

0489 Migration and ageing processes in non-metropolitan Australia: an analysis of thirty years of change – Neil Argent, Peter Smailes, Trevor Griffin (University of New England, Australia)

0430 Causes and effects of demographic ageing process. Case study: rural settlements of Buzau County (Romania) – Ilinca-Valentina Stoica, Daniela Zamfir (University of Bucharest, Romania)

Working Group 5

The Experiences of Older Persons in Rural Communities

Chair David L. Brown (Cornell University, USA)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0180 Retirement as a biographic life course transition among Swiss farming families: challenges linked to changed social roles – Karin Zbinden Gysin, Sandra Contzen, Cécile Neuenschwander, Michèle Métrailler (Bern University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland)

0244 Old people’s experiences of ageing in rural and urban communities – Marit S. Haugen (Centre for Rural Research (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Norway), Oddveig Storstad (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

0369 “Home is in the green islands”: ageing experiences and local implications of later-life migration in the Azores – Dora Sampaio (University of Sussex, UK)Toward a Multi-Dimensional Model of At-Oneness: Constructing Home Over the Life Course in Rural Ireland – Thomas Scharf, Kieran Walsh (National University of Ireland Galway), Graham D. Rowles (University of Kentucky, USA)

Working Group 5

Community Impacts of Rural Ageing

Chair Marit S. Haugen (Centre for Rural Research, (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Norway)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0218 Old people in rural communities: burden or driving-force? – Liga Paula (Latvia University of Agriculture, Latvia)

0528 Municipality debates around introduction of KLOV (The Law of Free Choice) in elderly care in rural Sweden – Ildikó Asztalos Morell (Uppsala University, Sweden)

0263 Tackling isolation: health-related social exclusion amongst elderly people in rural Poland – Michal Dudek (Institute of Agricultural and Food Economics – National Research Institute, Poland)

Working Group 6

The Future of Rural and environmental Expertise: Transdisciplinary Knowledge(s), Extension and Co-production for Sustainability

Convenors Kirsty Blackstock [7], Jeremy Phillipson [1], Alex Koutsouris [2], Philip Lowe [1], Sally Shortall [3], Gianluca Brunori [4], Artur Cristóvã0 [5], Audrey Verma [6], Anke Fischer [7]1. Newcastle University, UK; 2. Agricultural University of Athens, Greece; 3. Queen’s University Belfast, UK; 4. Università di Pisa, Italy; 5. University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Portugal; 6. University of Aberdeen, UK; 7. James Hutton Institute, UK

Working Group 6

‘Critical’ Extension for Sustainable Development

Chair Alex Koutsouris (Agricultural University of Athens, Greece), Artur Cristóvao (University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Portugal)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0035 Critical extension against the treadmill – Alex Koutsouris (Agricultural University of Athens, Greece)0334 Achieving practice change through facilitated group learning – Katrin Prager, Rachel Creaney (James

Hutton Institute, UK)0345 The competent farmer – a conceptual approach to study farmers’ competence as interaction between

farmer, advisory services and research – Egil Petter Stræte (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)0448 New roles for extension/advisory services: theoretical interpretations of an alternative model in the

Frisian Woodlands, The Netherlands – Paul Swagemakers (Vigo University, Spain)0378 From crisis to possibility: a case study of potato growers in rural Greece - Maria Partalidou, Anastasios

Michailidis, Dimitrios Tselembis (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece)

Working Group 6

The Future of Rural Expertise

Chair Jeremy Phillipson (Newcastle University, UK)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0086 Inclusive innovation, knowledge co-production, and human rights-based triple bottom line for rural development – John Bryden (NILF, Norway; University of Aberdeen, UK), Stig Gezilius (Buskerud and Vestfold University College, Norway)

0429 Knowledge, networks and resilience: exerting power by re-territorialisation and recoding of the rural community assemblage – Marton Lendvay (Aberystwyth University, UK)

0501 Mapping the platform of global digital knowledge in rural businesses – Harri Hakala, Torsti Hyyryläinen, Sari Iivonen (University of Helsinki, Finland)

0504 The future of rural expertise – Philip Lowe, Jeremy Phillipson, Amy Proctor (Newcastle University, UK)

Working Group 6

Knowledge Use in Human-Nature Relationships – Neoliberal or Radical Practice?

Chair Audrey Verma (University of Aberdeen, UK)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0107 Transdisciplinary process design and knowledge integration – challenges for developing sustainable water and land management options – Carsten Mann, Martina Schäfer (Technische Universität Berlin, Germany)

0126 Understanding ecosystems: going beyond maps and models? – Kirsty Blackstock, Anja Byg, Kerry Waylen, Alessandro Gimona (James Hutton Institute, UK)

0168 Data producing NGOs confronted with the demand to professionalise – Agnes Fortier, Pierre Alphandery (INRA, France)

0242 Can co-production of rural and scientific knowledge mitigate human-animal conflicts? Finnish wolf and cormorant cases in comparison – Juha Hiedanpää, Pekka Salmi (Natural Resources Institute (Luke), Finland)

Working Group 6

Knowledge Use in Human-Nature Relationships – Neoliberal or Radical Practice?

Chair Kirsty Blackstock (James Hutton Institute, UK)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0299 Sustainable development of a place-based enterprise through global networks – Anne Jervell (Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway)

0313 Can policy be risk-based? The cultural theory of risk and the case of livestock disease containment – Dominic Duckett (James Hutton Institute, UK), Brian Wynne (Centre for Economic and Social Aspects of Genomics, Lancaster University, UK), Rob Christley, Jonathan Wastling, Sophie Latham (University of Liverpool, UK), Ruth Alcock, Philip Haygarth, Louise Heathwaite (Lancaster Environment Centre, UK), Maggie Mort (Department of Sociology and School of Medicine, Lancaster University, UK), Zoe Austin (University of York, UK)

0339 Talking across scales about scales? Uncertainty, expertise and trust in fisheries governance after the Fukushima nuclear accident – Leslie Mabon (Robert Gordon University, UK) and Midori Kawabe (Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Japan)

0469 New technological interventions and knowledge production in the conservation of maerl in Falmouth, Cornwall – Audrey Verma, René van der Wal (University of Aberdeen, UK), Anke Fischer (James Hutton Institute, UK)

Working Group 6

Co-production of Land Use Knowledge

Chair Sally Shortall (Queens University Belfast, UK)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0258

Implementing locality specific agricultural practices - knowledge exchange and stakeholder involvement - Martin Thorsøe (Aarhus University, Denmark)

0280

The French government's agroecological transition: attempts to transform experimental processes to produce co-constructed knowledge?- Jessica Thomas (INRA, France)

0281

Fostering reflexivity in sustainable agricultural research and practice - Anna Augustyn, Gusztav Nemes (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)

0202 Embracing social network complexity in CEE countries' landscape planning: cases from Latvia and Estonia - Joanna Storie[1], Zane Eglaja[2], Mart Külvik[1], Monika Suskevics[1], Enri Uusna[1] (1 - Estonian University of Life Sciences, Estonia; 2 - University of Latvia, Latvia)

Working Group 7

Visions of the Rural: A New Subordination?

Convenors Elisabete Figueiredo [1], Lászió Kulcsár [2], Pavel Pospĕch [3], Jen Cleary [4], Jane Atterton, Sarah Skerratt [5]1. University of Aveiro, Portugal; 2. Kansas State University, USA; 3. Masaryk University, Czech Republic; 4. University of South Australia, Australia; 5. Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC), UK

Working Group 7

Visions and Theories of the Rural

Chair Pavel Pospech (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0047 Think locally and act globally: understanding human development in the era of globalization – Krzysztof Gorlach, Piotr Nowak (Jagiellonian University, Poland)

0500 Urban views revisited? “Rural populations” in the era of mobilities – Keith Halfacree (Swansea University, UK)

0505 Re-imagining the countryside: from Rural Idyll to Good Countryside. A provocation – Mark Shucksmith (Newcastle University, UK)

0389 Rurality – “the neverending story” – Elwira Piszczek (Institute of Sociology, Poland)

Working Group 7

Rural Tourism

Chair Elisabete Figueiredo (University of Aveiro, Portugal)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0059 Pedagogical rural tourism promoting the multifunctionality of agriculture: analysis of three experiences developed in Brazil – Marcelino De Souza, Ivo Elesbão (Federal University of Santa Maria, Brazil)

0282 Forest well-being tourism - a new possibility for remote rural areas in Finland – Ismo Björn (University of Eastern Finland)

0176 Collective action for joint agrifood and tourism marketing in Chefchaouen, Morocco – Mechthild Donner, Fatiha Fort (Montpellier SupAgro, France), Sietze Vellema (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

0148 "Urban, be my guest", the Rural said: community agro-tourism, an Andean case study – Giulia Baldinelli (SOAS, UK)

Working Group 7

Visions and Images of Rurality

Chair Sarah Skeratt (SRUC, UK)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0073 "A good village": an analysis of the images from the Czech competition Village of the year – Pavel Pospech (Institute of Agricultural Economics and Information, Czech Republic)

0112 Transformation or subordination? The potential of artistic and creative endeavours for sustainable rural futures – Marie Mahon, Brian McGrath (National University of Ireland Galway)

0239 Challenging the macho forester ideal: change and production of gender equality in Swedish forestry sector – Elias Andersson, Gun Lidestav (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)

0250 Visions of the rural impeding development? Discourses on a 'problematic' region in Estonia – Bianka Plüschke (University of Tartu, Estonia)

0483 Farming selfies, agriphotos and other genres. Picturing farmers' lives in social media as a mean of empowerment and taking control over rural imaginarium- Olga Rodak (Kozminski University, Poland)

Working Group 7

Rural Policies

Sarah Skeratt (SRUC, UK)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0192 Rural development in Portugal: between willfulness and reality – Isabel Rodrigo, Elisabete Figueiredo, Diogo Soares da Silva (University of Aveiro, Portugal)

0460 Public leaders shaping regions? Analyzing practices, relations and discourses of public leaders in rural regions of Estonia and the Czech republic – Martiene Grootens (University of Tartu, Estonia)

0371 Understandings of rural and rural policy in Scotland - Jane Atterton, Sarah Skerratt (SRUC, UK)

0468 The rural municipality as a democratic actor expressing the legitimate common will: How to adjust administrative borders in accordance with the multifaceted life of late modern people? – Reidar Almås, Oddveig Storstad, Mariann Villa (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

Working Group 7

Representations of the Rural

Chair Laszlo Kulcsar (Kansas State University, USA)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0135 Who is consuming countryside's amenities? An overview of Portuguese tourists' motivations and consumptions of the rural – Elisabete Figueiredo, Diogo Soares da Silva, Celeste Eusébio, Maria João Carneiro, Elisabeth Kastenholz (University of Aveiro, Portugal)

0286 Hicks, hi-techs and hippies: how images in public media and pop culture influence the perceptions of farmers – Valentin Fiala, Milena Klimek, Rebecca Paxton (University of Natural Resources and Life Science, Austria)

0137 The countryside is worth a thousand words - Portuguese discourses on rural areas – Diogo Soares da Silva , Celeste Eusébio, Maria Joao Cameiro, Elisabete Figueiredo (University of Aveiro, Portugal)

0033 Rural household entrepreneurship and the image of rural life – David O’Brien (University of Missouri), Valery Patsiorkovsky (Institute for the Socio-Economic Studies of Population, Russia)

0044 Rural Imaginations in an Urban World: Examples from Turkey – Basak Tanulku (Lancaster University, UK)

Working Group 7

Visions and Tourism

Chair Rachel Creaney (James Hutton Institute, UK)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0437 Cultural heritage, traditions and cultural economy in the region of Őrség - László Péter Lipcsei (University of Debrecen, Hungary)

0296 Where and how to eat in rural areas? The impact of cuisine and food production to rural tourism dynamics – Patricia Rêgo (University of Evora, Portugal)

0131 Beyond traditional rural tourism? Analyzing LEADER in Basque rural areas – Guadaloupe Ramos, Beatiz Izquierdo, Patricia Campelo (University of Burgos, Spain)

0195 Significance of rural hinterlands in urban development: three case studies from Serbia – Mina Petrović (University of Belgrade, Serbia)

0092 The structural relationships among tourism motivation, satisfaction, and loyalty for ecotourism in rural communities in Korea – Kyunghee Kim (National Academy of Agricultural Science, Republic of Korea)

Working Group 8

Migration and Rural Social Change

Convenors Ruth McAreavey [1], Thomas Dax [2], Theresia Odel-Wieser [3], Ingrid Machold [3], Neil Argent [4], Daniel T Lichter [5], Leif Jensen [6], Melelaos Gkartzios [7]1. Queen’s University Belfast, UK; 2. Federal Institute of Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria; 3. Federal Institute of Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria; 4. University of New England, Australia; 5. Cornell University, USA; 6. Penn State University, USA; 7. Newcastle University, UK

Working Group 8

Historical Perspectives of Rural Change

Chair Neil Argent (University of New England, Australia)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0109 Migration within the rural: reconfiguration and the preservationist paradox – Emily Strub (Aberystwyth University, UK)

0394 Deurbanization - modern society's back-up? – Georgi Boykov (South-West University, Bulgaria)

Working Group 8

Social and Cultural Change 1

Chair Ingrid Machold (Federal Institute of Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0041 The effects of road infrastructure on migration and migration intentions: The case of North Iceland – Thoroddur Bjarnason (University of Akureyri, Iceland)

0133 Les Néoruraux of then and today in rural Brittany – Liviu Mantescu (Humboldt University, Germany)

0227 International migration flows to Australia and rural cosmopolitism – Branka Krivokapic Skoko (Charles Sturt University, Australia), Jock Collins (University of Technology Sydney, Australia), Carol Reid (University of Western Australia)

0514 Rural local schools - welfare and symbolic in local community development – Mariann Villa (Center for Rural Research, Norway), Agneta Knutas, Ragnhild Olaug Liland (NTNU, Norway)

Working Group 8

Social and Cultural Change 2

Chair Theresia Oedle-Wieser (Federal Institute of Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0153 The rural home as a container of mobile family history – Maarit Sireni (University of Eastern Finland)0375 Empowerment strategies among migrant women in a mountainous border area – Marta Pallarès-

Blanch, Antoni Tulla (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain)0252 Location, migration and the labour market: longitudinal analysis of rural/urban youth earnings in

Britain – Martin Culliney (University of Lincoln, UK)0256 Geographical remote and viability of rural area – Jorde Jakimovski (Institute for Sociological, Political

and Juridical Research, Macedonia)0270 Determining factors behind the population development in small rural communities – Jens Fyhn, Lykke

Sørensen (University of Southern Denmark)0287 Shades of belonging: understanding the nature and impact of attachments to the ‘home place' on

migrated Irish farm offspring – Anne Cassidy (National University of Ireland)

Working Group 8

Integration and International Migration 1

Chair Dan T. Lichter (Cornell University, USA)

Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am0011 Migrants' strategies for and experiences of negotiating rural contexts in Angus and Aberdeenshire –

Rebecca Kay, Moya Flynn (University of Glasgow, UK)0122 "Welcoming communities" as incentives for rural development. Recognizing the potential of

immigrants in two remote regions of Austria – Ingrid Machold, Thomas dax, Theresia Oedl-Wieser (Federal Institute of Less-favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria)

0127 Migrant identities in the workplace – Ruth McAreavey (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)

0175 The role of social engagement in the integration of the newcomers in the rural communities – Michaela Dopitová (Charles University Prague, Czech Republic)

0530 Underemployment among rural immigrants: insights from a family labor utilization framework – Leif Jensen (Penn State University, USA)

Working Group 8

Demography

Chair Leif Jensen (Penn State University, USA)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0049 Population change and industrial composition of employment in U.S. counties – Brian Thiede (Louisiana State University, USA), David Brown, Nina Glasgow (Cornell University, USA), Laszlo Kulcsar (Kansas State University, USA)

0198 Population change, social capital and entrepreneurship: an analysis of Estonian rural municipalities 2005- 2013 – Anne Põder (Estonian University of Life Sciences, Estonia)

0440 Population dynamics and social-economic structure - László Kulcsár, Csilla Obadovics (University of West Hungary)

0446 Employment in rural Czechia – Radim Perlin (Charles University Prague, Czech Republic)

0464 Economic crisis and demographic change in the Spanish rural areas –Dolores Sanchez-Aguilera (University of Barcelona, Spain)

0529 Immigration, natural increase, and population change in new Hispanic destinations in the United States, 1990-2010 – Daniel Lichter, Kenneth Johnston (Cornell University, USA)

Working Group 8

Integration and International Migration 2

Chair Apostolos Papadopolous (Harokopio University of Athens, Greece)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0181 Rural cosmopolitanism then and now? Chinese farmers in colonial Queensland and lessons for understanding contemporary international migration to rural areas – Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)

0200 From migrants to residents. The impact of new residents on a hyper-productivistic rural area in Huelva, Southwest Spain - Beatriz Isquierdo, Jorge Ruiz, Maria Dolores Sesma, Maria Jésus Rivera (University of Burgos, Spain)

0231 ‘I live here: they just work here’: labour migration and the embodiment of rural social change – Robyn Mayes (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)

0234 The unseen rural space: a new migration hot spot into European Union – Rike Stotten (University of Innsbruck, Austria)

Working Group 8

Integration and International Migration 3

Chair Mimmo Parisi (Mississippi State University, USA)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0294 Migration, space and planning in two diversifying rural districts of the UK – Carey Doyle (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)

0352 Agency of migrant workers into a rural area of the periphery of the Europe – Martina lo Cascio (University of Palermo, Italy)

0516 Dissecting the mix of mobilities in rural communities in view of local development goals: A socioeconomic study of two island communities in the Aegean (Greece) – Apostolos Papadopoulos, Loukia-Maria Fratsea, Christos Chalkias (Harokopio University of Athens, Greece)

Working Group 9

The Changing Concept of Territorial Rural Development

Convenors Michael Kull [1], Jeppe Høst [2], Thomas Dax [3], Andrew Copus [4, Philomena de Lima [5]1. Natural resources Institute (Luke) Finland; 2. University of Copenhagen, Denmark; 3. Federal Institute for Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria; James Hutton Institute, UK; 5. Centre for Rural and Remote Studies, University of the Highlands and Islands, UK

Working Group 9

Territorial Development in the Making

Chair Michael Kull (Natural Resources Institute (Luke), Finland)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0164 Changing rural problems – the history of the rural development problem in Denmark – Jeppe Høst (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)

0322 The role of regional policy in reimagining the rural: comparing contexts in Sardinia, Italy and Appalachian Kentucky, USA – Domenica Farinella (University of Cagliari, Italy), Ann Kingsolver (University of Kentucky, USA)

0455 Ne-liberalism, the new rural paradigm, and transformations in northwestern Ontario, Canada – Thomas Dunk (Brock University, Canada)

Working Group 9

Contradictions on the Ground

Chair Thomas Dax (Federal Institute for Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0114 The interdependence between local institutional settings and governance arrangements in LEADER – Petra Raue, Kim Pollermann, Gitta Schnaut (Thünen Institute, Germany)

0145 The role of the Common Agricultural Policy and the Cohesion Policy in strengthening the sectoral standard of governance or rural development in Poland – Malgorzata Michalewska-Pawlek (University of Wroclaw, Poland)

0182 Creating space for rural self-governance – David Qvist Pears, Lone Søderkvist Kristensen, Jørgen Primdahl (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)

0507 Localism and rural development – Mark Shucksmith, Hilary Talbot (Newcastle University, UK)

Working Group 9

Changing Policies, Changing Paradigms

Chair Jeppe Høst (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0134 Rural cohesion policy: the appropriate response to current rural trends – Andrew Copus (James Hutton Institute, UK; Nordregio, Sweden), Thomas Dax (Federal Institute for Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria), Philomena de Lima (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)

0455 Re-shaping the traditional silvo-pastoral systems of Southern Iberia: the urgent need for a new rural development paradigm – Teresa Pinto-Correia (University of Evora, Portugal)

0456 Rural development – empirical nuances and analytical challenges – Cecilia Fonseca (Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

0487 New concepts for territorial rural development in Europe: the case of most remote rural areas in Italy – Francesco Mantino (INEA, Italy), Giovanna De Fano (CNR, Italy)

Working Group 9

Ruralities, Qualities and Partnerships

Chair Andrew Copus (James Hutton Institute, UK)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0095 The transformation of rural areas in providing local welfare in Finland. Case study: new experiments in producing municipal services in cultural sector – Kaisu Kumpulainen, Anita Kangas (University of Jyvӓskylӓ, Finland)

0301 The transition of Nordic agriculture from a rural development perspective: territorial governance, social innovation and the bio-economy – Alexandre Dubois (Nordregio, Sweden)

0365 The upsurge of the ‘new’ duality in rural Sweden – differing preconditions, processes and outcomes – Mats Johansson (Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Sweden)

Working Group 9

Culture and Governance

Chair Philomena de Lima (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0163 Territorial rural development and the role of culture – Lummina Horlings (Wageningen University, The Netherlands), Elena Battaglini (IRES, Italy), Joost Dessein (ILVO, Belgium)

0171 The production of ‘evidence’ for territorial distinctiveness and the effect of reinforcing a binary between nature and culture: the case of Turkey – Derya Nizam (University of Sydney, Australia)

0276 When communities must create local development – the neo-endogenous model in practice – Hanne Tanvig (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)

0404 Rural governance as a development tool – Jose Diaz-Puente, Maria Fernandez, Maria Rivera (Technical University of Madrid, Spain)

Working Group 10

Southern and Eastern Rural Europe under Neoliberal Restructuring: Challenges, Resistances and Emancipations

Convenors Renato Do Carmo [1], Katalin Kovács [2], Maria Jesús Rivera [3] Nigel Swain [4]1. University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal; 2. Centre for Economic and Regional studies, HAS, Hungary; 3. University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Spain; 4. University of Liverpool, UK

Working Group 10

Regional Disparities and Periurban Developments

Chair Nigel Swain (University of Liverpool, UK)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0228 Czech rural peripheries in the process of spatial polarization and the impact of the economic crisis – Josef Bernard (Institute of Sociology CAS, Czech Republic)

0426 Crisis and interstitial rurality: the collapse of urban development? – Elvira Sanz (Public University of Navarra, Spain), Maria Jésus Rivera (University of the Basque Country, Spain)

0503 The rural in the metropolis: between the impact of the crisis and the local practices – Renato Carmo, Daniela Ferreira (ISCTE-IUL, Portugal)

0510 Social diversity and changing mobilities in peri-urban rural areas. the case of Gran Vega region in Sevilla (Spain) – Jesus Oliva (Public University of Navarra, Spain), Manuel Gonzalez, Inmaculada Montero (Pablo Olavide University, Spain)

Working Group 10

Migrations

Chair Maria Jesús Oliva (Public University of Navarre, Spain)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0207 Labour contractors and migrant labour in Italy's Neoliberal Agriculture – Lucilla Salvia (La Sapienza University of Rome, Italy)

0481 The need for and absence of flexible migrant work in the Hungarian fruit and vegetable growing sectors – Katalin Kovács, Anna Hamar, Monika Maria Váradi (Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, HAS, Hungary)

0018 Neorural movements in the post-crisis, neoliberal age: new subjects, new values and new conflicts in natural protected areas – Jose Cortes-Vazquez (University of Manchester, UK)

0385 International immigrants in rural areas: the effect of the crisis in settlement patterns and family strategies – Rosario Sampedro (University of Valladolid, Spain), Luis Camarero (UNED, Spain)

0511 Counterurbanisation, pro-rural migration and rural sustainability. The impact of crisis on Spanish remote rurality - María Jesús Rivero (University of the Basque Country, Spain)

Working Group 10

Survival Strategies

Chair Renato do Carmo (University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0408 The agency of "new peasants" in South of Italy – Martina lo Cascio (University of Palermo, Italy)0045 Agency and development in Second Russia: using opportunities in a local context - Leo Granberg, Ann-

Mari Sätre (Uppsala University, Sweden)0053 Rural communities in the Baltic states: strategies of survival during post-Soviet transformation – Rasa

Zakeviciute (University of Jyväskylä, Finland)0117 Rural poverty and social exclusion: a case of Ukraine – Ganna Gerasymenko (

Institute for Demography and Social Studies, NAS of Ukraine)0220 From vulnerability to resilience. A resource-based model of community learning – Anna Pluskota

(Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland)

Working Group 10

Farm Types and Strategies

Chair Charalambos Kasimis (Agricultural University of Athens)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0414 Local food production - vegetable gardens as resistance strategies? An exploratory study in Montemor-o-Novo (Portugal) – Cecilia Fonseca, Teresa Pinto-Correia (University of Evora, Portugal)

0103 How to create agricultural policy without farmers: development of organic farming policy in Bulgaria – Petya Slavova, Zdravka Georgieva (Sofia University, Bulgaria)

0204 New models to conserve traditional practices: changes of farm-structure and land use in Hungary, a qualitative analysis – Boldizsár Megyesi (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)

0217 Farm succession and the different reasons to overtake farm. A case study from the Czech Republic – Šárka Hádková, Lukáš Zagata (Czech University of Life Sciences, Czech Republic))

0454 Current role of local agriculture on well-being of inhabitants. Case study from Southern Portugal – Diana Surova (University of Evora, Portugal)

0523 Geographies of transition: the political and geographical factors of agrarian change in Tajikistan – Irna Hofman (Leiden University), Oane Visser (ISS The Hague)

Working Group 10

Aspects of Labour in Rural Economies

Chair Piotr Nowak (Jagiellonian University, Poland)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0379 Juggler farmers in Turkey: is there any room for collective action? – Fatmanil Doner (Bogazici University, Turkey)

0467 Small-scale farming under the conditions of the market-economy and the CAP - some examples from Eastern and South-Eastern Poland – Anna Szumelda (Leuphana Universität Lüneburg, Germany)

0482 Workfare schemes as market substitute offers for the rural poor – Katalin Kovács, Judit Keller, Monika Maria Váradi (Hungarian Academy of Science, Hungary), Katalin Rácz (Research Institute of Agricultural economics, Hungary), Nigel Swain (University of Liverpool, UK)

0409 Are they talking about multifunctionality of rural areas or multifunctionality of people living in rural areas? – Fatima Cruz (University of Valladolid, Spain)

Working Group 10

Resources and Agencies

Chair Maria Jesús Rivera (University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Spain)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0169 Government within governance? Polish rural development partnerships through the lens of functional representation – Marek Furmankiewicz (Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences, Poland), Aine Macken-Walsh (Rural Economy and Development Programme, Ireland)

0496 LEADER in the Czech Republic: neoliberal reality of inspiring fiction? – Katerina Boukalova, Michal Lostak (Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Czech Republic)

0427 The impact of the crisis on the accessibility to health services in rural areas – Elvira Sanz (Public University of Navarra, Spain)

0435 Rural governance, austerity and sustainability. Rural-urban hybridizations as resilience strategies in Spanish mountain areas – Jesus Oliva, Andoni Iso, , Elvira Sanz (Public University of Navarra, Spain), Ion Martinez-Lorea (University of La Rioja, Spain)

0401 The limited role of Spanish local governments in addressing social exclusion in rural areas. A qualitative study in Comunidad Valenciana – Diana Valero López, José Vicente Pérez Cosín (University of Valencia, Spain)

Working Group 10

Reviving Movements and Resistance in East and Southern Europe

Chair Katalin Kovács (Hungarian Academy of Science, Hungary)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0048 Rural cooperatives in Poland: old or new social movement? – Piotr Nowak (Jagiellonian University, Poland)

0060 Re-localizing ‘legal’ food: a social psychology perspective on community resilience, individual empowerment and citizen adaptations in food consumption in Southern Italy – Laura Emma Milani Marin (Independent Researcher, Italy), Vincenzo Russo (Iulm University, Italy)

0275 The movement of Sardinian shepherds and the struggle within the economic and political fields – Marco Pitzalis, Filippo Zerilli (University of Cagliari, Italy)

0497 The political economy of alternative agriculture in Italy: reflections on the specificity of resistance and transitions in Southern Europe – Maria Fonte, Ivan Cucco (University of Naples Federico II, Italy)

Working Group 11

Neoliberalism, the “Good Farmer” and Well-being: The Effect of Neoliberal Policy Reforms on the Culture of Family Farming

Convenors Rob Burton [1], Paul Stock [2], Jeremie Forney [3], Christine Jurt [4], Ruth Rosier [5], Theresia Oedl-Wieser [5]Bygdeforskning, Norway; 2. University of Kansas, USA; 3. School of Agricultural, Forest and Food sciences, Switzerland; 4. Agroscope, Switzerland; 5. Federal Institute for Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria

Working Group 11

Policies and the Governance of Good Farming

Chair Theresia Oedl-Wieser (Federal Institute for Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0197 Conceptualising the “good farmer” in the context of exotic disease management: exploring the drivers of good practice – Rhiannon Naylor, Alice Hamilton-Webb (Royal Agricultural University, UK) , Ruth Littke (University of Sheffield, UK), Damian Maye (Countryside and Community Research Institute, UK)

0257 Reshaping the notion of “good farming” in agri-ecological terms. The Flowering Meadows programme in France - Christine de Sainte Marie (INRA, France), Philippe Mestelan (SCOPELA, France)

0160 Looking at the heart of “good farming”: obstacle or corner stone for building food futures? – Jeremie Forney (Bern University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland)

0372 Did post-war productivist policies change the notion of “good farming”? Rob Burton (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

0402 Picturing good farming: performing food utopias with new, sustainable farmers – Paul Stock (University of Kansas, USA)

Working Group 11

Social Changes, Gender Relations and Farm Succession in the Context of Good Farming

Chair Christine Jurt (Agroscope, Switzerland)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0506 Quality of life and well-being on family farms in a neoliberal world – Ruth Rossier, Christine Juch (Agroscope, Switzerland)

0520 Changing forms of capital in Irish family farming: a narrative analysis – Áine Macken-Walsh (Teagasc, Ireland)

0521 Motives and values of young farm successors: evidence from the Czech Republic – Lukas Zagata (Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Czech Republic)

0088 Emerging landscape businesses: towards a new rural discourse – Hanne Bat Finke (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)

0203 Autonomy, tyranny of the markets and CAP regulation: changes of the Polish farmers’ identity – Hanna Podedworna (Warsaw Life Science University, Poland)

Working Group 11

Good Farming Practices 1

Chair Jeremie Forney (School of Agricultural, Forest and Food sciences, Switzerland)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0021 Variation and change in “good farming” practices at Finnish farms – Suvi Huttunen, Juha Peltomaa (Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE), Finland)

0094 Input self-sufficiency in livestock farming: a renegotiation between the farmer and its practices? David Brédart, Pierre Stassart (University of Liege, Belgium)

0146 “Good” farming and the emergence of a New Zealand sheep dairy industry – Carolyn Morris, Craig Pritchard (Massey University, New Zealand)

Working Group 11

Good Farming Practices 2

Chair Jeremie Forney (School of Agricultural, Forest and Food sciences, Switzerland)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0509 “Cattle in the blood” – a cultural response to neo-liberalism? – Gavin Parsons (Sabhal Mòr Ostaig, UK)0167 A social psychological view on the ambiguity of farmer identities and values: the good farmer as an

entrepreneur? - Kari Mikko Vesala (University of Helsinki, Finland)0054 Zombies and peasants: the contradictions of empire – Jon Nelson, Paul Stock (Brown University, USA)

Working Group 11

Family Farming, Health and Well-being

Chair Paul Stock (University of Kansas, USA)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0316 Health perceptions of Austrian organic farmers as a way to understand family farming in a new competitive market – Rebecca Paxton, Bernhard Freyer (University of Natural Resources (BOKU), Austria), Jim Bingen (Michigan State University, USA)

0451 Depression in the context of family farming – Linda Reissig, Christine Jurt (Agroscope, Switzerland)0159 Conceptualising and measuring the social impacts of animal disease: the case of bovine tuberculosis –

Gareth Enticott (Cardiff University, UK), Paul Courtney (CCRI, UK)

Working Group 11

Family Farming, Health and Well-being

Chair Paul Stock (University of Kansas, USA)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0141 Changes in farm work and its relation to occupational health among Norwegian farmers 1982-2012 – Brit Logstein, Reidar Almås (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

0373 Job satisfaction of labour – a major driver of success in farming – Maria Näther, Janine Stratmann, Christina Bendfeldt, Ludwig Theuvsen (Georg-August University of Gottingen, Germany)

0262 Rethinking rural prosperity: a discussion of empirical data derived in six countries with the “Working with People” approach – Ignacio de los Rios, Maria Rivera (Technical University of Madrid, Spain), Kees De Roest (CRPA, Italy), Karlheinz Knickel (Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Germany), Boaz Horowitz, Amit Ashkenazy (ARAVA/SACOG, Israel), Romualdas Zemeckis (Aleksandras Stulginskis University, Lithuania), Sandra Šūmane (Nodibinajums Baltic Studies Centre, Latvia)

Working Group 12

Environmental Justice and Social Dynamics: A New Balance on Proximity

Convenors Sam Staddon [1], Giorgio Osti [2], Jelte Harnmeijer [1, 3, 5], Jayne Glass [4], Rosalind Bryce [4]1. University of Edinburgh, UK; 2. University of Trieste, Italy; 3. Scene Consulting, UK; 4. University of the Highlands and Islands, UK; 5. James Hutton Institute, UK

Working Group 12

Communities & Context

Chair Jelte Harnmeijer (James Hutton Institute, UK), Giorgio Osti (University of Triests, Italy)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0297 Partnerships in water management -- how contexting matters? – Minna Kaljonen (Finnish Environment Institute, Finland)

0518 Getting low carbon governance right: learning from actors involved in Community Benefits – Marianna Markantoni (SRUC, UK)

0519 Social finance: radical alternative or civil society bankrupted? Community shares in community energy – Ellie Brodie (SRUC, UK)

0260 Imposition or ‘the will of the people'? Procedural justice in the implementation of community wind energy projects – Neil Simcock (Lancaster University, UK)

Working Group 12

Social Relations & Scale

Chair Jayne Glass, Rosalind Bryce (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0166 Payment for Environmental Services and the Transformation of social system: A case study of water PES scheme in West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia – Akhmad Fauzi, Chaterina Paulus (Bogor Agricultural Institute, Indonesia)

0288 The violence of the written word: the impact of bureaucracy on smallholders' livelihood and environment in the Brazilian Amazon – Örjan Bartholdson (SLU, Sweden)

0351 Justice, scale frames, and the water-energy nexus in the American Southwest – Flurina Schneider (Centre for Development and Environment, Switzerland)

0105 Water justice: is flood prevention only a matter of rural areas? Giorgio Osti (University of Trieste, Italy)

0062 "Conservation is all about having a blether, and getting people on board": Roles and opportunities for embodied social interactions in Scottish conservation – Sam Staddon (University of Edinburgh, UK)

Working Group 13

Visioning Future European Farming: Heritage Protection, Sustainable Intensification and Beyond

Convenors Camilla Eriksson [1], Maja Farstad [2], Rasmus Blædel Larsen [3]

1. Swedish University of Agriculture, Sweden; 2. Centre for Rural Research, Norway; 3. University of Copenhagen, Norway

Working Group 13

Farmer’s (Limited) Agency

Chair Camilla Eriksson (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden), Maja Farstad (Centre for Rural Research, Norway), Rasmus Blædel Larsen (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0172 Governance, policies and the spatial development of agriculture - a comparative study – Magnar Forbord (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

0319 Structural transformation of grain farms: effects on farm management and the need for societal environmental solutions – Kristina Marquardt, Camilla Eriksson (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden), Karin Eksvärd (Inspire Action & Research AB, Sweden)

0449 Why farmers farm the way they farm – Maja Farstad (Centre for Rural research, Norway)0143 Differences in perception of income strategies by dairy farmers in areas with high natural and cultural

heritage value – Ron Methorst, Dirk Roep, Frans Verhees, Jos Verstegen (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

0306 The political economy of sustainable intensification - the role of land, labour and capital – Magnar Forbord, Jostein Vik, Bjørn Egil Flø (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

Working Group 13

Farmers’ Experiences, Perceptions, Identities, Motivations

Chair Camilla Eriksson (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden), Rasmus Blædel Larsen (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0209 Family farm or family matter? Changing practices and rationalities among Swedish farmers – Camilla Eriksson (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)

0243 Adapting new technologies and rationalising everyday worlds: shifting temporalities and relations in Swedish dairy farming – Elias Andersson (Swedish University of Agricultural sciences, Sweden)

0277 Sustainable Intensification in the UK: the view from the farm – Carol Morris(University of Nottingham, UK), Michael Winter, Matt Lobley (University of Exeter, UK)

0386 Sustainable regional agriculture and the 'promise' of the bioeconomy - experiences from two case study regions in Germany – Sarah Peter (Institute for Rural Development Research, Germany)

0255 "Either you have to be very big, or small and carve out a niche". Young future farmers view on how to achieve a successful business – Ann Grubbström, Susanne Stenbacka, Sofia Joosse (Uppsala University, Sweden)

Working Group 13

Possible Solutions for Agricultural Developments

Chair Rasmus Blædel Larsen (University of Copenhagen, Denmark), Maja Farstad (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0413 Changing paradigms in agricultural innovation: Time for a new business model for community action – Amit Ashkenazy (Tel Aviv University, Israel), Tzruya Calvão Chebach (TU Delft, The Netherlands; Sustainability Foresight, The Netherlands) , Boaz Hurwitz (Arava R&D Centre, Israel)

0475 Sustainable value chains for wool - alternative development paths in the bioeconomy – Gunnar Vittersø (National Institute for Consumer Research (SIFO), Norway)

0266 Slow development of a Hungarian wine region – Gabor Kiraly (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)

0367 Revitalization of traditional olive groves in Portugal: methodology and strategy - Inocêncio Coelho, Pedro Reis (INIAV, Portugal)

0098 Future of farming and rural areas in Poland: three scenario and vision – Jerzy Banski (Institute of Geography and Spatial Organisation, Poland)

Working Group 13

Agricultural Policies and Consequences 1

Chair Maja Farstad (Centre for Rural Research, Norway), Camilla Eriksson (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0187 The view from Brussels - an outline of the current agricultural situation - Rasmus Blædel Larsen (Copenhagen University, Denmark)

0248 Neo-productivism and political parties in the European Parliament – Renate Marie Butli Hårstad, Jostein Vik (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

0124 Understanding agricultural production developments: Pluriactivity, motivation and farm level characteristics – Jostein Vik, Magnar Forbord, Bjørn Egil Flø (Centre for Rural research, Norway)

0384 The policy paradox in Europe's high-value agri-cultural landscapes – Rob Burton (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

Working Group 13

Agricultural Policies and Consequences 2

Chair Maja Farstad (Centre for Rural Research, Norway), Camilla Eriksson (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0457 Sinks trails and festivals - stakeholder debates on the nature of the neo-liberal countryside. Eifiona Thomas Lane, Sian Pierce (Prifysgol Bangor University, UK)

0441 The multifunctional models of European agriculture - how do they respond to the increased focus on food security, sustainable intensification and farmland conservation? – Katrina Rønningen (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

0331 Integrating cultural heritage management into the outcomes of farming policy in the European Union – Jonathan Wordsworth (Archaeology Scotland, UK)

0360 Geographical perspectives on the future of European agriculture – Anders Wästfelt (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Working Group 14

The Voluntary Sector and Welfare Policies in Rural Areas

Convenors Diana E. Valero López [1], Jaime escribano Pizarro [1], Annette Aagaard Thuesen [2], Helle Nørgaard [3]1. Local Development Institute, University of Valencia, Spain; 2. Danish Centre for Rural Research, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark; 3. Danish Building Research Institute, Aalborg University, Denmark

Working Group 14

Transformations of Social Inequalities and Welfare Approaches

Chair Annette Aagaard Thuesen (Danish Centre for Rural Research, Denmark), Helle Noergaard (Aalborg University, Denmark)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0300 The renew role of family and other traditional responses to face social vulnerabilities in Spanish rural areas: the case of SACAM (Albacete) – Jaime Escribano Pizarro, Diana Valero López, José Javier Serrano Lara, Javier Esparcia Pérez (University of Valencia, Spain)

0130 Geography matters: the complex drivers of social exclusion and poverty in rural contexts – Philomena de Lima (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK), Andrew Copus (James Hutton Institute, UK), Diana Valero López (University of Valencia, Spain)

0216 Community services and rural development schemes in the Scottish Highlands – Elisabeth Seale (SUNY Oneonta, USA)

0031 Spatial inequality in volunteering and local initiatives – Lotte Vermeij (The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, The Netherlands)

0284 Village caretakers: where, why and how? – Dorthe Salling, Gunnar Lind Haase Svendsen, Jens Kaae Fisker (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)

Working Group 14

Transformations of Participation in Welfare Services 1

Chair Heele Noergaard (Aalborg University, Denmark), Jaime Escribano Pizarro (University of Valencia, Spain)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0125 Local democracy in large municipalities – lessons for rural development from experimentation with sub-municipal local councils in a Danish municipality – Annette Aagard Thuesen (Danish Centre for Rural Research, Denmark)

0310 The role of citizen participation in the place-based development. The case of LAG FAR Maremma and the measure 321 – Romina Zago, Thomas Block, Joost Dessein (University of Ghent, Belgium), Gianluca Brunori (University of Pisa, Italy)

0494 Negotiations of rural stewardship in a Nordic-type welfare state – Patrick Cras (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)

0101 Citizen participation in the context rural local welfare system – Amari Kattilakoski (University of Eastern Finland), Nina Rantamӓki (University of Jyvӓskylӓ, Finland)

0343 Do all communities have the capacity to engage in service co-production? Testing and challenging current policies across communities that ‘do not engage’ – Artur Steiner (SRUC, UK)

Working Group 14

Transformations of Participation in Welfare Services 2

Chair Jaime Escribano Pizarro (University of Valencia, Spain), Annette Aagaard Thuesen (Danish Centre for Rural Research, Denmark)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0383 Welfare services in rural areas – service adjustments and plans for future development – Helle Noergaard (Aalborg University, Denmark)

03620110 User participation and upgrading municipal housing in partnership with secondary schools – Ruth

Woods, Karl Hovin Kjølle (Sintef Building and Infrastructure, Norway)0056 Nature conservation policy making: do voluntary nature conservation groups have a say? Susan

Marango, Gary Bosworth (University of Lincoln, UK)0336 Next generation rural development: community broadband initiatives as a model for neo-endogenous

development – Koen Salemink, Dirk Strijker (University of Groningen, The Netherlands), Gary Bosworth (University of Lincoln, UK)

Working Group 15

Social Capital, Learning Processes and Social Innovation in Rural Areas

Convenors Pawel Starosta [1], Katarzyna Zajda [1], Sandra Šūmane [2], Karlheinz Knickel [3], Talis Tisenkopfs [2]1. University of Lodz, Poland; 2. Baltic Studies Centre, Latvia; 3. Institute for Rural Development Research at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Germany

Working Group 15

Social Capital and Rural Development

Chair Pawel Starosta (University of Lodz, Poland)Wed Aug 18, 9 am – 10.30 am

0418 Overcoming community alienation and fostering of social capital through social engagement in the rural – Michaela Dopitova (Charles University Prague, Czech Republic)

0493 Building virtual bridges: rural creative practitioners online – Leanne Townsend, Claire Wallace (University of Aberdeen, UK)

0173 How to define successful citizen initiatives? A professional perspective – Erzsi de Haan, Tialda Haartsen, Dirk Strijker (University of Groningen, The Netherlands), Sabine Meier (Hanze University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands)

0022 Between social collapse, clans and open, solidary communities. Social capital of Northern Poland's rural areas – Wojciech Kniec (Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland)

Working Group 15

Sustainable Agricultural/Rural Development, Network Learning and Community Building 1

Chair Sandra Šūmane (Nodibinajums Baltic Studies Centre, Latvia)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0039 Reciprocity in an agritourism community of practice – Sharon Flanigan, Keith Matthews (James Hutton Institute, UK)

0161 Evaluation of a multi-case participatory action research project: the case of SOLINSA – Robert Home (FIBL, Switzerland), Niels Rump (Agridea, Switzerland)

0364 Governing agriculture and rural development in a rapidly changing world – Elke Rogge (ILVO, Belgium), Evy Mettepenningen, Guido Van Huylenbroeck (Ghent University, Belgium), Karlheinz Knickel (Institute for Rural Development, Germany), Sophie Réviron (Swiss Association for the Development, Switzerland)

Working Group 15

Entrepreneurship in Rural Areas

Chair Katarzyna Zajda (University of Lodz, Poland)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0016 Rural-urban business partnerships – territorial transcendence on equal terms – Anne-Mette Hjalager (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)

0473 Burgundy winemakers and respect for the environment. Occupational networks and the dynamics of change – Claude Compagnone (AgroSup Dijon, France)

Working Group 15

Emerging Rurality, Citizen Initiatives

Chair Talis Tisenkopfs (Nodibinajums Baltic Studies Centre, Latvia)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0265 Local cultures and global discourses in emerging rurality – Montserrat Soronellas-Masdeu (Rovira i Virgili University, Spain)

0165 How to break a vicious circle? The challenge of joining grassroots forces to fight Mafia culture and socioecological exploitation – Monica Caggiano (Independent Researcher, Italy), Salvatore De Rosa (Lund University, Sweden)

0138 Collectors of memorie(s): heritage and resistance in the new rurality – Marta Farré (Sevilla University, Spain)

0229 “For and against CSG” – social representations of CSG in public media – Sidsel Grimstad (University of Newcastle, UK)

0068 The eco-villages’ role in the repopulation of inner areas between innovation and tradition. Valle di campanara as a case study. Elisa Castelli (Università La Sapienza, Italy)

Working Group 15

Community Empowerment

Chair Pawel Starosta (University of Lodz, Poland)Friday Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0471 Model development of remote indigenous community empowerment in Boelemo Regency – Mohamad Bahua (Gorontalo State University, Indonesia)

0032 Danish small town social life – essential for everyday life but how to utilize for wider development – Lise Herslund (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)

0012 The effect of a focus upon local news on community attachment: a social capital perspective – Stephen Sapp, Sela Harcey (Iowa State University, USA)

0283 Passive and active participation in local elections (case study of Czechia) – Hana Bednarova (Charles University Prague, Czech Republic)

0154 The democratic features of projects – Kjell Andersson (Åbo Akademi University, Finland)

Working Group 15

Social Innovation in Rural Areas

Chair Katarzyna Zajda (University of Lodz, Poland)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0337 Social innovation in remote rural places: arts practice as ‘creative disruption’ – Frances Rowe (University of Newcastle, UK)

0072 Identifying social innovations in local rural development initiatives – Gary Bosworth, University of Lincoln, UK)

0219 Collective dynamic and social innovation: a case study of the organic farmers union in the Gers department – Mariana Corrales, Mohamed Gafsi (University of Toulouse, France)

0273 Social innovation in wind turbine projects understood through the lens of social capital theory – Tine Reimer, Tove Enggrob Boon (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)

0238 Social diversity in Austria’s LEADER strategies: prerequisite for and trigger of social innovation – Theresia Oedl-Wieser, Thomas Dax, Ingrid Machold (Federal Institute for Less-Favoured and Mountainous Areas, Austria)

Working Group 15

Sustainable Agricultural/Rural Development, Network Learning and Community Building 2

Chair Talis Tisenkopfs (Nodibinajums Baltic Studies Centre, Latvia)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0393 Informal knowledge and learning for alternative modernization pathways in agriculture – Sandra Šūmane, Ilona Kunda, Talis Tisenkopfs (Nodibinajums Baltic Studies Centre, Latvia), Agnes Strauss (University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, Austria), Karlheinz Knickel (Institute for Rural Development, Germany), Ignacio de los Rios, Maria Rivera Mendez (Technical University of Madrid, Spain)

0215 The Freiburg ‘Regionalwert AG’ – a German role model for financing the transition towards social and ecological regional sustainability? – Simone Schiller (Institute for Rural Development Research, Germany)

0307 Human resources as a factor of rural development – Alzbeta Vazacova (Charles University Prague, Czech Republic)

Working Group 16

Rural Responses to Climate Change: Challenge and Opportunity in Neoliberal Times

Convenors Elizabeth Dinnie [1], Christian Reynolds [2], Jonathan Hopkins [1]1. James Hutton Institute, UK; 2. University of Aberdeen, UK

Working Group 16

Actors, Institutions and Governance Mechanisms in Response to Rural Climate Change

Chair Jonathan Hopkins (James Hutton Institute, UK)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0034 “I don’t believe in climate change!”: farmers’ adaptations to climate change and their management of risk – Guy Robinson (University of South Australia; University of Adelaide, Australia), Christopher Raymond (University of Copenhagen, Denmark; University of South Australia)

0063 Mainstreaming climate change into rural development planning in Nigeria: reflkections on strategies and constraints – Edlyne Anugwom (University of Nigeria)

0221 Conflicting visions of agriculture’s future in a changing climate – farmer organization and peasant movement perspectives on a climate-smart agriculture – Martin Lenihan (World Bank, USA)

0136 Reorientation of the management methods in the flooded areas of southern Poland, illustrated on an example of the Uszwica River basin – socio-economic approach – Wioletta Knapik, Josef Kania (University of Agriculture, Poland)

0368 Farmers’ engagement with the challenge of climate change: a case study of farmers in Gloucestershire – Alice Hamilton-Webb (Royal Agricultural University, UK)

Working Group 16

Concepts and Framings of Ruralities in Transition

Chair Christian Reynolds (University of Aberdeen)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0177 Community in rural responses to climate change: polysemic, polyvalent or phatic? – Gerald Taylor Aiken (Université du Luxembourg)

0236 Framing resilience in relation to territorialisation – Elena Battaglini (ABT-ISF-IRES, Italy), Marija Babovic (University of Belgrade, Serbia), Natalija Bogdanov (University of Belgrade Faculty of Agriculture, Serbia)

0272 Resident experiences of wind farms in rural landscapes: an exploration of attitudes towards three existing sites – Rebecca Wheeler (University of Exeter, UK)

0349 Transition and tradition: how are low-carbon initiatives contributing to continuity and change in rural communities? – Elizabeth Dinnie, Joshua Msika, Annabel Pinker, Kirsty Holstead, Anke Fischer (James Hutton Institute, UK)

Working Group 17

Promoting and Sustaining Rural Well-being in a Neoliberal World: Methods, Case Studies and Critiques

Convenors Karen Scott [1], Margaret Currie [2], Lorna Philip [3]

1: University of Newcastle, UK; 2: The James Hutton Institute, UK; 3: University of Aberdeen, UK

Working Group 17

Case Study and Methods 1

Chair Karen Scott (University of Newcastle, UK), Vice-chair Lorna Philip (University of Aberdeen)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0129 Bringing the outside in: technology for increasing engagement with the outside world among housebound older adults in rural North-east Scotland – Gillian Dowds, Lorna Philip (University of Aberdeen, UK), Mags Currie (James Hutton Institute, UK)

0245 Determinants of rural livability: the importance of participation in subjective liveability – Joost Gieling, Tialda Haartsen, Dirk Strijker (University of Groningen, The Netherlands), Lotte Vermeij (The Netherlands Institute for Social Research, The Netherlands)

0317 Longer-term impacts of community participation in rural health services planning and links to wellbeing – Mags Currie (James Hutton Institute, UK), Jane Farmer, Amanda Kenny (La Trobe University, Australia), Sarah-Anne Munoz (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK), Amy Nimegeer (University of Glasgow, UK)

0261 Liveability from a rural geographical perspective – Tialda Haartsen (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)

Working Group 17

Case Study and Methods 2

Chair Mags Currie (James Hutton Institute, UK), Vice-chair Karen Scott (University of Newcastle, UK)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0211 Using quantitative methods to understand the assets and burdens of older people to society: the well-being implications – Andrew Maclaren (University of Aberdeen, UK)

0144 “It’s revolutionized how we do things”: then and now – a case study of internet behaviours in a remote rural community – Fiona Williams, John Farrington, Lorna Philip (University of Aberdeen, UK)

0183 Interaction between digital policy and community-led broadband organisations in the UK: the creation and loss of rural well-being – Fiona Ashmore (University of Aberdeen, UK)

0186 Architecture promoting well-being and the choice to live in rural areas – Solvår Wågø, Ruth Woods (SINTEF Building and Infrastructure, Norway)

Working Group 17

Theory

Chair Lorna Philip (University of Aberdeen), Vice-chair Mags Currie (James Hutton Institute, UK)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0121 “Scholarly, vernacular, and imaginative practices”: using deep mapping to achieve co-produced policy relevant health and well-being research? – Issie MacPhail (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK), Sarah-Anne Munoz (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK; Representing Communities Project, UK)

0421 A well-being approach to cash transfers in rural Africa – Eleanor Fisher (University of Reading, UK)0350 Cultural value, rural arts, and the good life? – Frances Rowe, Karen Scott, Venda Louise Pollock

(University of Newcastle, UK)0132 Values in place: how values influence intentions and well-being in rural places – Lummina Horlings

(University of Wageningen, The Netherlands)

Working Group 18

Rural Development and the Politics of Fracking in Europe

Convenors Elisabet Rasch [1], Michiel Kohne [1]

1. Wageningen University, The Netherlands

Working Group 18

The Importance of “Knowledge” in Social Organisation Related to Shale Gas

Chair Elisabet Rasch (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0208 Shale gas development and hydraulic fracturing: investigating public perceptions, trust, and community engagement – Gene Theodori (Sam Houston State University, USA), AE Luloff, Fern Willits (Pennsylvania State University, USA).

0237 Politics of the (un)known: an anthropological perspective on the impacts of Australia’s unconventional gas developments – Martin Espig (University of Queensland, Australia)

0292 Citizen representation and the construction of knowledge: investigating the role of institutions, science and citizens in unconventional gas development in Australia – what insights for Europe? – Naomi Smith Devetak (University of Queensland, Australia)

0330 Views on hydraulic fracturing: using national level survey data to compare UK and US residents – Richard Stedman (Cornell University, USA), Sarah O’Hara, Matthew Humphreys, William Knight (Nottingham University, UK), Darrick Evensen, (Cardiff University, UK)

Working Group 18

Shale Gas extraction and Place (Attachment)

Chair Elisabet Rasch (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0191 Social action, home rule and the fight against natural gas development in rural New York – Jeanne Simonelli (Wake Forest University, USA)

0355 Resisting fracking – citizenship and belonging in the Noordoostpolder, The Netherlands – Michiel Kohne, Elisabet Rasch (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

0229 For and against CSG – Social representations of CSG in public media –Sidsel Grimstad, Po-Hsin Lai (University of Newcastle, Australia)

Working Group 18

The Political economy and Policy of Shale Gas Development

Chair Michiel Kohne (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0149 Unconventional gas development and deliberative democracy: why a regional community said no. A report of findings from the 2012 Lismore election poll and exit-poll survey (New South Wales, Australia) – Hanabeth Luke, David Lloyd, Kristin den Exter, Bill Boyd (Southern Cross University, Australia)

0170 The political economy and political ecology of shale gas extraction in England – Jonathan Cooper (Harper Adams University, UK),

0415 The effect of anti-fracking movements on European shale gas policies: Poland and France – Barnabas Aron Kadar (Leiden University, The Netherlands)

Working Group 18

Social Movements Against Shale Gas

Chair Michiel Kohne (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0162 Europe’s energy at a crossroad: Poland, France, and anti-fracking movements – Roberto Cantoni (Ecole des Ponts ParisTech, France)

0328 The energetics of citizenship at the intersection of hydraulic fracturing, energy transition and rural development in the Noordoostpolder, The Netherlands – Elisabet Rasch, Michiel Kohne (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

0527 Social responses to industrialization of rural landscapes, with a case study of unconventional gas developments in eastern Australia – Hanabeth Luke (Southern Cross University, Australia)

Working Group 18

Views on Fracking and Development

Chair Elisabet Rasch (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0381 Community development implications of shale energy: the US experience and prospects for Europe – Jeffrey Jacquet (South Dakota State University, USA)

0428 ‘Fracking’: promoter and destroyer of ‘the good life’ – Darrick Evensen (Cardiff University, UK), Richard Stedman (Cornell University, USA)

0438 Attitudes of rural communities to the exploration and extraction of shale gas in Poland – Justyna Wasil, Monika Sidor (University of Maria Curie-Sklodowska, Poland)

Working Group 19

Contested Models of Land and Property Use and Social Relations: Qualitative Explorations

Convenors Ildikó Asztalos [1]

1. Uppsala University, Sweden

Working Group 19

WG19 Session 1

Chair Sam HillyardFri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0076 “If you owned the land you could do things – and things couldn’t be done to you”: what could you do, and for who? Power, change and meanings of land at local level in Scottish community land ownership – Tim Braunholtz-Speight (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)

0279 Exploring past, present and future relations with the land at Bennachie, north east Scotland – Jo Vergunst (University of Aberdeen)

0009 Land policies in India and nature of capital formation – Hari Charan Behera, Ashish Aman Sinha (Indian Statistical Institute, India)

0491 Keeping the Huerta alive: social landscape creation through the alternative economic space established by agro-entrepreneurial initiatives – Gerda Jonasz (Central European University, Hungary)

0524 Land assembly in China: legal and social processes and implications – Tony Fuller (University of Guelph, Canada), Chao Zhou (China Agricultural University, China)

Working Group 19

WG19 Session 2

Chair Jayne Glass (University of the Highlands and Islands, UK)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0452 Scottish land reform in progress: qualitative explorations – Annie McKee (James Hutton Institute, UK)0013 Shore displacement and second homes: implications of land elevation for planning and development –

Kristina Svels (Åbo Akademi University, Finland), Ulrika Akerlund (Umeå University, Sweden)0055 Resource, experience and sense – representations of the peripheral wilderness – Maija Halonen

(University of Eastern Finland, Finland)0302 Community development and nature conservation policy in Scotland: environmental democracy on

the Isle of Rum National Nature Reserve – Andrew Samuel (University of Abertay, UK)0490 Rural spaces as expressive infrastructures: the prospect of Thrift’s untoward land – Sam Hillyard

(Durham University, UK)

Working Group 20

Neoliberalism, Financialization and Rural Change

Convenors Hilde Bjørkhaug [1], Hugh Campbell [2], Geoffrey Lawrence [3], Bruce Muirhead [4], Sarah Ruth Sippel [5]1. Centre for Rural Research, Norway; 2. University of Otago, New Zealand; 3. University of Queensland, Australia; 4. University of Waterloo, Canada; 5. University of Leipzig, Germany

Working Group 20

Financialization and rural responses

Chair Bruce Muirhead, University of Waterloo, CanadaWed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0470 More of the same or different? Perceptions of financialization ‘from below’ – Sarah Ruth Sippel (University of Leipzig, Germany)

0061 The commodification of societies and rural development policies – Ilknur Ekiz, Atique Ur Rahman (University of Selçuk, Turkey)

0188 The spatial dimensions of a neoliberalised countryside: Perspectives from Ireland – Jon-Paul Faulkner (University College Dublin; Teagasc, Ireland), Enda Murphy, Mark Scott (University College Dublin, Ireland)

Working Group 20

Financialization of agri-food industries

Chair Sarah Ruth Sippel (University of Leipzig, Germany)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 am

0069 Neoliberalism’s role in promoting the financialization of agri-food industries: Evidence from Australasia – Geoffrey Lawrence (University of Queensland, Australia), Chul-Kyoo Kim (Korea University, Republic of Korea), Nikki Larder (University of Queensland), Sarah Ruth Sippel (University of Leipzig, Germany)

0067 The Canadian province of Saskatchewan and change in land ownership patterns – Jostein Brobakk (Centre for Rural Research, Canada), Bruce Muirhead (Norway University of Waterloo, Canada)

0156 “This is a risky investment” Norwegian agriculture attracting private equity capital – Bjørn Klimek (Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute, Norway)

0433 New farm/land investments and local dis/content: the forms and strategies of encounter – Jana Lindbloom (Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia)

Working Group 20

Financialization and neoliberalism

Chair Hugh Campell (University of Otago, New Zealand)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0359 Neoliberal agro-food transition, financialization and rural resistances. Some evidence from Italy in the transnational context – Alessandro Corrado (University of Calabria, Italy)

0363 The (micro)financialization of agriculture. Accumulation and indebtedness processes in rural communities – Marco Fama (University of Calabria, Italy)

0466 Food or finance? Cultural and economic valuation in the Norwegian debate on agricultural land protection – Hilde Bjørkhaug, Heidi Vinge (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

0015 Construction of multifunctional landscapes: property rights, institutional investors, and limits to institutional innovation– Steven Wolf (Cornell University, USA)

Working Group 20

Financialization of the food system

Chair Geoffrey Lawrence (University of Queensland, Australia)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0397 The emergent role of state capitalism in the financialization of the global food system – Paul Belesky (University of Queensland, Australia; The Global Change Institute, Australia)

0017 Assessing the impact of financialization in international development agency land dealings – Philip McMichael (Cornell University, USA)

0498 New Zealand’s free trade deal with China: re-evaluating the rhetoric and reality of free-trade deals in agriculture – Hugh Campbell (University of Otago, New Zealand), David Reynolds (University of Otago, New Zealand) and Cinzia Piatti (University of Hohenheim, Germany)

Working Group 21

Global and Local Processes Generating and Reproducing Rural Poverty

Convenors Ildikó Asztalos Morell [1], Kinga Kerekes [1]

1. Uppsala University, Sweden

Working Group 21

Rural Poverty and Empowerment

Chair Ildikó Asztalos Morell (Uppsala University, Sweden)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0099 Rural transformation, women’s paid work and their sense of empowerment: a case study of seafood processing factory workers in the Middle Black Sea region of Turkey – Ayse Gunduz Hosgor (Middle Eastern Technical University, Turkey), Miki Suzuki Him (Ondokuz Mayis University, Turkey)

0201 Rural poverty and empowerment processes. How global neoliberalism is restructuring local economies – Marco Fama (University of Calabria, Italy)

0318 Exploring the potential of cash transfers for supporting rural livelihoods – the effects of the child support grant in South Africa – Flora Hajdu (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden)

0342 Communal work as precarious labour: Hungarian local community strategies meeting long-term unemployment - Ildikó Asztalos Morell (Uppsala University, Sweden)

Working Group 21

Rural Poverty and Economic Crises

Chair Kinga Kerekes (Babes-Bolyai University, Romania)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0290 Choice and reality – longitudinal study of Romanian rural young people’s occupational choices – Kinga Kerekes (Babes-Bolyai University, Romania)

0325 Rural poverty and regional identity in the process of global economic crisis in chosen localities – Jiri Salus, Tomas Pilar (CULS, Czech Republic)

0412 Czech Republic – rise or fall in living standards of the rural population? – Vera Majerova (Czech University of Life Sciences, Czech Republic)

0406 The characteristics of rural poverty in Hungary – Ibolya Czibere (University of Debrecen, Hungary)

0089 Changing Rural Markets in India: A Place of Possibilities and Opportunities for Rural Development (Mohammad Mugeet Khan, Aligarh Muslim University, India)

Working Group 22

Rural Gentrification: Cross-national Comparisons

Convenors Martin Phillips [1], Darren Smith [2]

1. Leicester University, UK; 2. Loughborough University, UK

Working Group 22

Rural Gentrification in Diverse National Contexts 1

Chair Martin Phillips (University of Leicester, UK)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0139 Rural gentrification in Russia: land rush, gated communities and post-productivist farming – Natalia Mamonova (International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University, The Netherlands), Lee-Ann Sutherland (James Hutton Institute, UK)

0232 Rural gentrification and tourism development: a case of villages in the Fuji-Submontane area, Japan – Ryo Iizuka (Shumei University, Japan), Toshio Kikuchi (Tokyo Metropolitan University, Japan), Yasuko Takatori (Agricultural Policy Committee, Inc., Japan)

0340 Rural gentrification and Khao Yai National Park: hyperreal rurality in Thailand – Craig Wheway (Rajabhat Maha Sarakham University, Thailand)

Working Group 22

Rural Gentrification in Diverse National Contexts 2

Chair Frédéric Richard (University of Limoges, France)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0399 Rural gentrification in the 2010s: the middle class countryside? – Darren Smith, Chloe Kinton (Loughborough University, UK), Martin Phillips, Helene Ducros (Leicester University, UK)

0444 Pahl revisited? Looking at Hertfordshire villages through the conceptual lenses of rural gentrification – Helene Ducros, Martin Phillips (Leicester University, UK), Darren Smith, Chloe Kinton (Loughborough University, UK)

0019 A natural life: gentrification and subtle power relations in natural protected areas in Spain – Jose Cortes-Vasquez (University of Manchester, UK)

Working Group 22

Theories, Practices and Dilemmas of Comparison

Chair Darren Smith (Loughborough University, UK)Fri Aug 21, 11am – 12:30 pm

0442 Comparative studies in rural gentrification: steps in exploring rural gentrification in France, the UK and the USA – Martin Phillips, Helene Ducros (Leicester University, UK), Darren Smith, Chloe Kinton (Loughborough University, UK)

0354 In the kingdom of the blind, the one-eye man is king: let's start talking about rural gentrification in France! – Frédéric Richard, Greta Tommasi, Gabrielle Saumon (University of Limoges, France)

0398 There is no rural gentrification in France? But do we look for it correctly and at the right place? – Julien Dellier, Frédéric Richard (University of Limoges, France), Pierre Pistre, (IFSTTAR, France)

0403 'Class-ifying' rural gentrification using different area-level classifications – Chloe Kinton, Darren Smith (Loughborough University, UK), Martin Phillips, Helene Ducros (Leicester University, UK)

Working Group 23

Pluralistic Rural Gender Relations: International Perspectives on Gender and Rural Development

Convenors Sally Shortall [1], Bettina Bock [2]

1. Queen’s University Belfast, UK; 2. Wageningen University, The Netherlands

Working Group 23

Agriculture and Rural Development

Chair Sally Shortall (Queens University Belfast, UK), Bettina Bock (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0253 Agricultural changes leading to economic precarity – how do Swiss farm women and men react? – Sandra Contzen (Bern University)

0214 The LEADER approach and new relationships of women and men in rural communities – Katarzyna Zajda (University of Lodz, Poland), Sylwia Michalska (Institute of Rural and Agricultural Development, Poland)

0052 Do women rule the Polish countryside? Gender and rural self-government in Poland – Ilona Matysiak (The M. Grzegorzewska Academy of Special Education, Poland)

0213 Are rural gender relations really so different? Evidence from Northern Ireland – Lori McVay (Spring Arbor University, USA)

Working Group 23

The rural ‘others’: migrants, queers and farming girls

Chair Bettina Bock (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12:30 pm

0020 Male in-migrants in Finnmark, northernmost Norway and constructions of masculinities: Experiencing a rural space of opportunities – Marit Aure (Northern Research Institute, Norway), Mai Camilla Munkejord (Uni Rokkan Centre, Norway; University of Tromsø, Norway)

0241 Rural queers: exploring the lives of LGBT persons in rural areas in Norway – Helga Eggebø, Maria Almli, Marte Taylor Bye (KUN Center for Gender Equality, Norway)

0120 ‘It's different now; girls can be farmers': social change and the impact on successor identification on British family farms – Hannah Chiswell (University of Exeter, UK)

0118 The Agency Paradox: the impact of gender(ed) frameworks on Irish farm youth – Anne Cassidy, National University of Ireland, Ireland)

Working Group 23

Changing gender relations

Chair Sally Shortall (Queen’s University Belfast, UK)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0078 Gender and farm divorce in Norway – Berit Brandth (Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway), Marit S. Haugen (Centre for Rural Research (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Norway)

0087 Transnational currents and women’s land rights – Susie Jacobs (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)

0106 Tradition and transformation in the construction of rural femininities – female farming – Susanne Stenbacka (Uppsala University, Sweden)

0271 Female farm management and male/part-time farming: a sign of changing gender roles in agriculture or of the crisis of small-sized family farms? – Eva-Maria Griesbacher (University of Graz, Austria)

Working Group 23

The gendered rural labour market

Chair Bettina Bock (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am

0512 Layering geography, occupation and gender: constructing rural farm women’s identities – Susan Machum (St Thomas University, Canada)

0210 Regional disparities in women’s access in the labor market after maternity leave – Hana Fröhlichová (Czech University of Life Sciences; Institute of Sociology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic)

0080 Seasonal agricultural labour of girls in rural Turkey – Ayse Gunduz Hosgor (Middle Eastern Technical University (METU), Turkey)

Working Group 24

Animalising Rural Societies: Human-Animal Entanglements in a Neoliberal World

Convenors Katrina Brown [1], Dominic Duckett [1], Rhoda Wilkie [2], John Bone [2]

1. James Hutton Institute, UK; 2. University of Aberdeen, UK

Working Group 24

WG24 Session 1

ChairFri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0196 Re-connecting farmers and their animals through technology? Representations of animal-human relations in ‘Precision Livestock Farming' research and developments – Michiel de Krom (Ghent University, Belgium)

0278 Envisioning interspecies encounters: Dilemmas of how animals are made visible in the marketing and management of protected areas – Katrina Brown (James Hutton Institute, UK)

0320 Neoliberalising nature: a longitudinal study of badger vaccination – Damian Maye (University of Gloucestershire, UK), Gareth Enticott (Cardiff University, UK), Rhiannon Naylor (Royal Agricultural University, UK)

0462 Commodification of genetic information in livestock breeding – Annika Lonkila (University of Eastern Finland, Finland)

Working Group 24

WG24 Session 2

ChairWed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0411 Becoming a region, becoming global, becoming imperceptible: territorialising salmon in Chilean Patagonia – Alberto Arce (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

0108 Unravelling the global wool assemblage – Laura Jones, Jesse Heley, Michael Woods (Aberystwyth University, UK)

0082 Pollinator policies and the more-than-human entanglements of bee-keeping – Siobhan Maderson, Sophie Wynne-Jones (Aberystwyth University, UK)

0366 Changing biopower through EID in Aberdeenshire and Orkney – Dominic Duckett, (James Hutton Institute, UK), Katharina Kinder-Kurlander (GESIS Leibnitz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany)

Working Group 24

WG24 Session 3

ChairFri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0293 Valuing 'meadow meat'. Reconstituting producer--consumer and human--animal relations – Minna Kaljonen (Finnish Environment Institute, Finland)

0096 Horse retirement yards as spaces for animal death – Nora Schuurman (University of Eastern Finland, Finland), Alex Franklin (Cardiff University, UK)

0116 Nurturing nature: the intersection of society and nature in the production of Nordic native breed horses – Rhys Evans (Hogskulen for Landbruk og Bygdeutvikling, Norway)

Working Group 25

Education and Rural Development

Convenors Anna Dipace [1], Alessia Scarinci [1], Francesco Contó [1]

1. University of Foggia, Italy

Working Group 25

WG25 Session 1

ChairWed Aug 19, 9.00 am – 10.30 am

0024 Linking graduate student survey research training with locality-based economic development: The University of Missouri Program – David O’Brien, Sharon Gulick (University of Missouri, USA)

0093 An examination of the relationship between preferred farm activities and educational effects for visitors: Canonical Correlation Analysis – Duk-Byeong Park (Kongju National University, Republic of Korea)

0152 Emerging educational subjectivities in the global periphery: new worker identities for new times – Michael Corbett (University of Tasmania, Australia), Unn-Doris Baeck (University of Trømso, Norway)

0189 Training for supporting multifunctional rural systems – Ivana Bassi, Nadia Carestiato, Lucia Piani (University of Udine,Italy)

Working Group 25

WG25 Session 2

ChairWed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0251 Effect of vocational education and qualification on change in gender-oriented family farm management: A case study of female farm managers in Austria and Switzerland – Yukiko Otomo (Jumonji University, Japan)

0298 The role of social and experiential learning in agricultural innovation networks: a case study of the Scottish Monitor Farm programme – Annie McKee, Katrin Prager, Rachel Creaney (James Hutton Institute, UK)

0357 The role of the advisory system and public organizations in the blueberry production sector in Central/North, Portugal: A case study of new small-scale farmers – Timothy Koehnen, Miguel Pires (UTAD, Portugal)

0376 Development in rural areas through capacity building and education for business – Miriam López (Technical University of Madrid, Spain)

Working Group 25

WG25 Session 3

ChairWed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0432 Learning by doing - the implementation of school businesses as a model of experiential learning – Christine Moser (University of Aberdeen, UK)

0458 Responsible and sustainable development of heritage interpretation for community goods - Eifiona Thomas Lane, Sian Pierce, Nerys Mullally (Prifysgol Bangor University, UK)

0486 Education for innovative and sustainable rural futures – Pam Bartholomaeus (Flinders University, Australia)

0508 EcoPreneurship A role model for sustainable revitalisation of rural areas – Claudia Brites, Ana Firmino (Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal), Dorit Haubenhofer (HAUP, Austria), Pedro Mendez-Moreira (ESAC, Portugal)

Working Group 26

How can New Forms of Food Governance Contribute to Creating Alternative Economic Spaces for the Revitalisation of Rural areas?

Convenors Egon Noe [1], Markus Schermer [2]

1. Aarhus University, Denmark; 2. University of Innsbruck, Austria

Working Group 26

Local Governance and Institutional Innovations 1

Chair Egon Noe (Aarhus University, Denmark)Wed Aug 19, 9 am – 10.30 am

0268 Neo-liberal appropriation of local food by the State: Korean case and implications – Chul-Kyoo Kim (Korea University, Republic of Korea), Haejin Lee (Konkuk University, Republic of Korea)

0333 Capitalizing on local food pride. Traditional products movement across Romania’s food market – Teodora Capota (Babes-Bolyai University, Romania)

0416 Re-embedding food practices: agro-biodiversity preservation, heritage policies and the Andean potato – Alberto Arce, Olivia Angie (Wageningen University, The Netherlands), Eleanor Fisher (University of Reading, UK)

0419 The possibilities and constraints of a peripherical state to re-regulate and re-articulate the new social relations brought by neoliberal soybean expansion – the case of the Uruguayan government 2005-2015 – Matilda Baraibar (Stockholm University, Sweden)

Working Group 26

Local Governance and Institutional Innovations 2

Chair Markus Schermer (University of Innsbruck, Austria)Wed Aug 19, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0420 Juggling along the collaboration spectrum – balancing collaboration and competitiveness in a changing agricultural community – Tzruya Calvão Chebach (Tel Aviv University, Israel; Sustainability Foresight, The Netherlands), Amit Ashkenazy (TU Delft, The Netherlands; Sustainability Foresight, The Netherlands), Boaz Hurwitz (Arava R&D Center, Israel)

0424 The formation of new local public-privatre food systems partnerships – the case of lejre Municipality – Niels Heine Kristensen, Mette Weinreich Hansen (AAU Copenhagen, Denmark)

0431 Building local food governance: an analysis of some critical points – Adanella Rossi, Laura Fastelli (University of Pisa, Italy)

0066 Canada’s system of supply management as post-neoliberal – Bruce Muirhead (University of Waterloo, Canada)

Working Group 26

Local Governance and Institutional Innovations 3

Chair Egon Noe (Aarhus University, Denmark)Wed Aug 19, 4.30 pm – 6 pm

0157 Agrobiodiversity fairs target urban elites: when the “food of the poor” gets trendy – Giulia Baldinelli (SOAS, UK)

0212 “They are not going to be able to copy this” – Fighting the cooperative corner and creating third spaces of cooperation in food and farming – Raquel Ajates Gonzalez (City University London, UK)

0075 Does AFNs adopt a “political process”? A methodological proposition – Marlene Feyereisen, Pierre Stassart (University of Liège, Belgium)

Working Group 26

Supply Chain Organisation 1

Chair Markus Schermer (University of Innsbruck, Austria)

Thurs Aug 20, 9 am – 10.30 am0206 New forms of partnerships in food chains – Klaus Laursen (Aarhus University, Denmark)0233 Governance and coordination within and around growing mid-scale organic chains: how shared values

are maintained over time? – Claire Lamine (INRA, France), Henk Renting (RUAF, The Netherlands)0249 The collective power of the Lilliputans: enhancing understanding of how organizational elements of

Alternative Food Networks can support a post-neoliberal transition – Jessica Duncan, Stefano Pascucci (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

0289 Values-based food chains – recoupling man and soil? Egon Bjørnshave Noe, Chris Kjeldsen (Aarhus University, Denmark), Hilde Bjørkhaug, Gunn-Turid Kvam (Centre for Rural Research, Norway)

Working Group 26

Supply Chain Organisation 2

Chair Egon Noe (Aarhus University, Denmark)Fri Aug 21, 9 am – 10.30 am

0303 Contesting and inspiring the conventional food chains. What is the transformation potential of local contract farming initiatives? – Julien Vuilleumier (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland)

0478 The food-hub concept: a territorial agri-food initiative to go beyond the divide alternative/conventional networks – Michela Felicetti (University E-Campus, Italy)

0295 The role of the business logic for growing value chains of organic food – first results of an international case study analysis – Susanne v. Muenchhausen, Anna Maria Haering (Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development, Germany), Gunn-Turid Kvam (Centre for Rural Research, Norway), Rebecka Milestadt (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)

0008 Wine terroir and cultural heritage protection in rural areas: the case of Nemea and Basto wine regions – Jose Ribeiro (University of Aveiro, Portugal)

0155 Exploring the adaptive capacity of growing mid-scale organic value chains in Europe Rebecka Milestad (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden), Jacob von Oelreich (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden), Susanne von Münchhausen (Eberswalde University for Applied Sciences, Germany)

Working Group 26

Rural Development 1

Chair Egon Noe (Aarhus University, Denmark)Fri Aug 21, 11 am – 12.30 pm

0390 Food and territory: local strategies of the Sardinian family farms in the dairy and wine sectors Status: Benedetto Meloni, Domenica Farinella and Ester Cois (University of Cagliari, Italy)

0113 Coping strategies with food insecurity in two Egyptian villages – Ashraf Solyman (Agricultural Research Center, Egypt), Shuji Hisano (Kyoto University, Japan)

0174 Organic farming as a factor for territorial development: a comparative perspective – Markus Schemer, Christoph Furtschegger (University of Innsbruck), Claire Lamine, Sibylle Bui (INRA, France), Patrizia Pugliese (Mediterranean Agronomic Institute of Bari, Italy)

0205 Local food production and local identity: inter-dependency of development tools and resulst – Boldizsár Megyesi, Bernadett Csurgo (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)

0247 Fusing pluri-sector activities with public and private initiatives: cases of Rokuji-sangyo-ka in Japan – Kiyohiko Sakamoto, Noriaki Kawasaki (Kyoto University, Japan)

Working Group 26

Rural Development 2

Chair Markus Schermer (University of Innsbruck, Austria)Fri Aug 21, 3.45 pm – 5.15 pm

0492 Heading down to the local: craft beer and local economic development in rural Australia – Neil Argent (University of New England, Australia)

0502 When food aid supports local farming: case study in south west France – Isabelle Techoueyres (Anthropology of Food Webjournal, France)

0050 Agricultural development in Northern Haiti: mechanisms and means for moving five crops forward in a changing climate – Joseph Molnar, Senakpon Kokoye, Curtis Jolly, Dennis Shannon (Auburn University, USA)

0477 Resilient wine routes amidst a maelstrom of change? Outlining threats and vulnerabilities. Maria Alebaki (Hellenic Agricultural Organization "Demeter", Greece) Maria Partalidou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece), Alex Koutsouris (Agricultural University of Athens, Greece)