Conducting
science for practical ends implicates scientists, whether they wish it or not,
as agents in social-ecological systems, raising ethical, economic,
environmental, and political issues. Considering these issues helps scientists
to increase the relevance and sustainability of research outcomes. As we rise
to the worthy call to connect basic research with food production, scientists
have the opportunity to evaluate alternative food production paradigms and
consider how our research funds and efforts are best employed. In this
contribution, we review some of the problems produced by science conducted in
service of industrial agriculture and its associated economic growth paradigm.
We discuss whether the new concept of “ecological intensification” can rescue
the industrial agriculture/growth paradigm and present an emerging alternative
paradigm of decentralized, localized, biodiversity-promoting agriculture for a
steady-state economy. This “custom fit” agriculture engages constructively with
complex and highly localized ecosystems, and we draw from examples of published
work to demonstrate how ecologists can contribute by using approaches that
acknowledge local agricultural practices and draw on community participation
Website: https://www.arjonline.org/biosciences/american-research-journal-of-biosciences/
Website: https://www.arjonline.org/biosciences/american-research-journal-of-biosciences/
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