“The Meadow is the Mother of the Field.” Comparing Transformations in Hay Production in Three European Agroecosystems Cover Image

“The Meadow is the Mother of the Field.” Comparing Transformations in Hay Production in Three European Agroecosystems
“The Meadow is the Mother of the Field.” Comparing Transformations in Hay Production in Three European Agroecosystems

Author(s): Tommy Lennartsson, Anna Westin, Anamaria Iuga, Elizabeth Jones, Scott Madry, Seth Murray, Eva Gustavsson
Contributor(s): Tommy Lennartsson (Photographer), Elizabeth Jones (Photographer), Kathleen Laraia Mclaughlin (Photographer)
Subject(s): Anthropology, Micro-Economics, Agriculture, Energy and Environmental Studies, Environmental Geography, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Muzeul Ţăranului Român, Editura Martor
Keywords: agroecology; comparative landscape studies; historical ecology; hay production; social-ecological systems (SES);

Summary/Abstract: This research compares the production of hay in three historical European agroecological systems: in northern Romania, central Sweden and eastern central France. We analyse hay production in relation to the entire production system, the local natural conditions, and the variety of ways by which hay production was transformed over time. We found broad commonalities, but also discovered significant differences in each of three historical trajectories. Introduction of fodder crops, crop rotations and mechanization are important drivers of changes in all three areas, although the timing, sequence and causation vary from place to place. There are significant differences in the organization of farm labour, in the role of beef and dairy production, the role of political reforms and the climatic constraints of outdoor grazing which affected the transformation of fodder production. This paper highlights the potential of an integrated, interdisciplinary approach for better understanding the complex interaction of people, their social and economic contexts, and their environment.

  • Issue Year: 2016
  • Issue No: 21
  • Page Range: 102-127
  • Page Count: 26
  • Language: English