2022
DOI: 10.1111/soru.12387
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Agents of sustainability: How horses and people co‐create, enact and embed the good life in rural places

Abstract: Notions of the good life are often strongly linked to rurality. Existing conceptualisations tend towards an anthropocentric and individualised approach centred on personal wealth, status and happiness. In contrast, this article reframes the good life as an interspecies endeavur, which embeds people and animals alike by recognising their interdependent relational configurations within the wider natural-social environment. Specifically, we bring insights from the concept of buen vivir to bear on research among p… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…By linking other rural/agricultural properties with natural reserves, equine yards would facilitate interspecies exchange through landscape corridors [ 45 ] in areas where urbanisation or agricultural intensification would make it otherwise more difficult. What is more, since equine yards are not merely a source for horse-human interaction, but also for the interaction between humans and nature [ 39 , 59 ], a more biodiverse-inclusive yard design may also allow visitors to the yard direct access to nature in the course of their interactions with horses.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…By linking other rural/agricultural properties with natural reserves, equine yards would facilitate interspecies exchange through landscape corridors [ 45 ] in areas where urbanisation or agricultural intensification would make it otherwise more difficult. What is more, since equine yards are not merely a source for horse-human interaction, but also for the interaction between humans and nature [ 39 , 59 ], a more biodiverse-inclusive yard design may also allow visitors to the yard direct access to nature in the course of their interactions with horses.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It could be argued, therefore, that much of the diversity observed is likely the result of the constraints and priorities of a yard's primary purpose [38]. In order to integrate ecosystem services and stimulate biodiversity in equine yards, particular attention should be paid to the interaction between land utility and ecological processes [13], as well as how management and husbandry techniques may impact the ecological development of the landscape [39][40][41][42].…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 99%
“…We focus on three generic elements to understanding cultures of sufficiency, namely enactors, enablers and enactments. These three elements often feature prominently -yet separately -in the sustainability transitions and organizational sustainability literature (Sabella/Eid 2016;Wadham et al 2023). In our view, they offer a useful base for building a conceptual frame to approach sufficiency in business.…”
Section: Three Generic Cultural Elements: Enactors Enablers Enactmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Focusing on the promotion of positive well-being, i.e., a context of greater occurrence of positive experiences, some concepts discussed are Quality of Life [16] or "a life worth living" [17]. Specifically in the case of horses, the latter should consider the 3Fs framework (forage, friend and freedom) [18]. For instance, to live a life worth living, horses must be able to forage, socialize, and express themselves freely and subjectively perceive these experiences as positive.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%