2019
DOI: 10.18174/501693
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Verkenning kennisbehoeftes van agrariërs t.a.v. natuurinclusieve landbouw en het reeds bestaande aanbod van deze kennis : waar is de match, de mismatch en hoe die te overbruggen

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Cited by 4 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…It is an enormous struggle to get rid of this knowledge, and this is blocking innovation". These findings are confirmed by recent studies (Cuperus et al, 2019;van Loosdrecht, 2019). This dependency on commercial actors reinforces innovation that matches the status quo and the vested interests of current regime actors, who often lack knowledge on alternative ways of farming.…”
Section: Functions 2 and 3: Knowledge Development And Exchangesupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…It is an enormous struggle to get rid of this knowledge, and this is blocking innovation". These findings are confirmed by recent studies (Cuperus et al, 2019;van Loosdrecht, 2019). This dependency on commercial actors reinforces innovation that matches the status quo and the vested interests of current regime actors, who often lack knowledge on alternative ways of farming.…”
Section: Functions 2 and 3: Knowledge Development And Exchangesupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Second, organized monitoring and knowledge dissemination to others outside the current knowledge networks is limited, and knowledge that is documented and published was perceived as too scattered by our expert consultation. This notion is supported by Cuperus et al (2019), who identified in total 117 different offline and online information sources about nature inclusive dairy farming. This is in sharp contrast to knowledge available for conventional dairy farming, which enjoys strong support from agricultural universities as well as the value chain, including institutionalized data collection, yearly updated information reports supported by the main agricultural university and online feedback and support tools (Blanken et al, 2019;Tittonell, 2013).…”
Section: Functions 2 and 3: Knowledge Development And Exchangementioning
confidence: 88%
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“…Biodiversity for example is impacted by non-agricultural activities like traffic and highly variable between different types of landscapes (Concepción et al 2008;Heer et al 2017). This is compounded by a lack of knowledge on suitable management practices and possible technological solutions, as well as doubts about the cost and feasibility of such practices and solutions (Cuperus et al 2019;Westerink et al 2019). This underscores the need to invest in innovation and experimentation, though bearing in mind the need to innovate and scale responsibly (Wigboldus et al 2016).…”
Section: Quadrant Two: Problems In Search Of Solutions (Convergence O...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, organized monitoring and knowledge dissemination to others outside the current knowledge networks is limited, and knowledge that is documented and published was perceived as too scattered by our expert consultation. This notion is supported by Cuperus et al (2019), who identified 117 different offline and online information sources about nature inclusive dairy farming. This is in sharp contrast to knowledge available for conventional dairy farming, which enjoys strong support from agricultural universities as well as the value chain, including institutionalized data collection, yearly updated information reports supported by the main agricultural university and online feedback and support tools (Tittonell, 2013;Wageningen University and Research, 2019).…”
Section: Functions 2 and 3: Knowledge Development And Exchangementioning
confidence: 92%