A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Making space for community in super-productivist rural settings
Abstract This paper contributes a perspective on an enduring debate in rural studies about the transformation of rural areas in developed market economies into more or less ‘productivist’ landscapes. We focus on the conceptual category of ‘super-productivism’ and its reference to distinct super-charged production zones that are fundamentally shaped by the practices of high input and yielding, highly technical, narrowly profit-orientated agri-businesses operating at regional, national and global scales. Our contribution to this debate is to argue that while super-productivism is a useful category for thinking about transitions in agricultural regions, under particular structural conditions, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that these highly intensive agri-landscapes are also home for their residents and recreational settings for local and neighbouring urban communities. Studying this aspect of super-productivism requires a relational perspective and a naturalistic research method. We illustrate this argument using a study of the Lower Waitaki Water Sports Park in the South Island of New Zealand.
Highlights We focus on the macro-scale conceptual category of rural ‘super-productivism’. Super-productivism is a useful idea for thinking about structural change in agriculture regions. A relational perspective deepens our understanding of super-productivist settings. It enables these settings to be understood as sites of meaningful community interaction.
Making space for community in super-productivist rural settings
Abstract This paper contributes a perspective on an enduring debate in rural studies about the transformation of rural areas in developed market economies into more or less ‘productivist’ landscapes. We focus on the conceptual category of ‘super-productivism’ and its reference to distinct super-charged production zones that are fundamentally shaped by the practices of high input and yielding, highly technical, narrowly profit-orientated agri-businesses operating at regional, national and global scales. Our contribution to this debate is to argue that while super-productivism is a useful category for thinking about transitions in agricultural regions, under particular structural conditions, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that these highly intensive agri-landscapes are also home for their residents and recreational settings for local and neighbouring urban communities. Studying this aspect of super-productivism requires a relational perspective and a naturalistic research method. We illustrate this argument using a study of the Lower Waitaki Water Sports Park in the South Island of New Zealand.
Highlights We focus on the macro-scale conceptual category of rural ‘super-productivism’. Super-productivism is a useful idea for thinking about structural change in agriculture regions. A relational perspective deepens our understanding of super-productivist settings. It enables these settings to be understood as sites of meaningful community interaction.
Making space for community in super-productivist rural settings
Mackay, Michael (author) / Perkins, Harvey C. (author)
Journal of Rural Studies ; 68 ; 1-12
2019-03-11
12 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Capping the post-productivist consensus
British Library Online Contents | 2002
|Responses to the Challenge of Productivist Agriculture
Online Contents | 1997
|The role of EU rural development policy in the neo-productivist agricultural paradigm
Online Contents | 2017
|