Participatory tuning agricultural sustainability assessment tools to Flemish farmer and sector needs

Ine Coteur, Fleur Marchand, Lies Debruyne, Floris Dalemans, Ludwig Lauwers

    Research output: Contribution to journalA1: Web of Science-articlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Many tools to analyse and support sustainable development exist, but their use in the agricultural sector remains obstructed by the sector's complexity and diversity. The objective of this research was to analyse, with a participatory action-research approach, various aspects of the design and use of sustainability assessment tools. The research originated from a Flemish farmers' union request to develop a sector-specific sustainability assessment tool (SAT). This request allowed action research by combining: (i) stakeholder involvement to clarify needs regarding sustainability assessment; (ii) the link between SAT and strategic decision-making and (iii) a supra farm coordination or governance. The research, applied to four Flemish agricultural sub-sectors resulted in a context-specific SAT for each sector. They differed in complexity; procedural differences are described for two sub-sectors, in particular the links of SATs with strategic decision-making and the importance of supra-farm governance. We concluded with key attention points for future SAT development: (i) tuning sustainability assessment to stakeholders' needs, in particular with respect to strategic decision-making, (ii) the development context of a SAT, in particular with respect to governance and continuity in the envisioning process.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalEnvironmental Impact Assessment Review
    Volume69
    Pages (from-to)70-81
    Number of pages12
    ISSN0195-9255
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar-2018

    Keywords

    • B410-agricultural-hydrology
    • INTEGRATED FRUIT PRODUCTION
    • DECISION-MAKING
    • stakeholder participation
    • PRODUCTION SYSTEMS
    • INDICATORS
    • framework
    • management

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Participatory tuning agricultural sustainability assessment tools to Flemish farmer and sector needs'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this