Farmer Autonomy and the Farming Self
Author(s)
Date issued
August 19, 2014
In
Journal of Rural Studies
Vol
October 2014
No
36
From page
160
To page
171
Reviewed by peer
1
Subjects
Farmers
Agriculture
Autonomy
New Zealand
Switzerland
Farming self
Abstract
Drawing on interviews in Switzerland and New Zealand, we explore the concept of autonomy as part of a farming self. The farming self encompasses the dialectical relationship of autonomy as both value and tool that help us understand farmers within a wider set of economic, environmental and interpersonal relations. Farmers describe autonomy as a value in three related but slightly different ways. First, autonomy invokes a particular lifestyle connected to farming. Second, autonomy is understood as the equivalent of being one's own boss. Third, farmers describe autonomy negatively by enumerating the constraints that limit the first two iterations of autonomy in their farming operations. Beyond the value of autonomy for farmer identity, the farming self captures autonomy as a tool: a tool of identification, a tool to mitigate, navigate and translate the experiences of being a farmer in a wider network of agricultural relations
Publication type
journal article
File(s)
