2015
DOI: 10.5751/es-07816-200337
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Social networks and environmental management at multiple levels: soil conservation in Sumatra

Abstract: ABSTRACT. Many agrarian communities in developing countries suffer from insufficient productivity and use farming practices that deteriorate the environment both locally and globally. Research suggests that social networks play a role in environmental management, different studies emphasize different aspects of network structures, and the implications of the scales at which networks operate are not explicitly discussed. Here, I ask what types of social structures in farmer networks are conducive to environment… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Peers who belong to the same community and live in the same environment may be likely to possess farming knowledge directly applicable with little adaption to plots of their neighbors (Matous 2015). However, without new external inputs, much of this knowledge might have been already known and shared within the community.…”
Section: Theoretical Framework: Social Network and Spatially Distribmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Peers who belong to the same community and live in the same environment may be likely to possess farming knowledge directly applicable with little adaption to plots of their neighbors (Matous 2015). However, without new external inputs, much of this knowledge might have been already known and shared within the community.…”
Section: Theoretical Framework: Social Network and Spatially Distribmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The local farmers do not typically consider the environmental conditions outside of their plot in their decisions to complement or (partially) replace chemical fertilizers with organic fertilizers (Matous 2015). Nevertheless, their adoption of organic fertilizers has the potential to offset environmental degradation beyond their field.…”
Section: Theoretical Framework: Social Network and Spatially Distribmentioning
confidence: 99%
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