A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Impact of migrant and returning farmer professionalization on food production diversity
Abstract Since the 2000s, there has been an increasing number of returning and migrant farmers across China. In 2012, China initiated a program for fostering professional farmers, which has caused greater changes for farmers and led to an agricultural shift towards commercial production. Migration has been recognized as a crucial factor affecting the diversity of agricultural production. However, scant attention has been paid to how different types of farmers influence agricultural diversification. Therefore, this study examines the influence of migrant farmers, returning farmers, and local non-migrant farmers on food production diversity. This study collected farm-level data on food production and farmers’ characteristics and applied a negative binomial regression model to estimate the impacts of different types of farmers on agricultural development. The results show that farms operated by migrant farmers had a significantly lower level of food production diversity while farms operated by returning farmers had no significant difference in food production diversity, using farms operated by local non-migrant farmers as the reference category. The variation in agricultural production diversity lies in differences in food production purposes, agricultural and market skills, and various risk-related capacities among the different types of farmers. Farm-level production specialization does not necessarily reduce food diversity and agrobiodiversity at the rural community and regional level.
Highlights Program for Cultivating New-type Professional Farmers has been implemented for agriculture commercialisation in China. Migrant farmers tend to prefer specialized farming while returning farmers prefer diversification. Specialized agricultural production has not reduced the diversity of regional food production.
Impact of migrant and returning farmer professionalization on food production diversity
Abstract Since the 2000s, there has been an increasing number of returning and migrant farmers across China. In 2012, China initiated a program for fostering professional farmers, which has caused greater changes for farmers and led to an agricultural shift towards commercial production. Migration has been recognized as a crucial factor affecting the diversity of agricultural production. However, scant attention has been paid to how different types of farmers influence agricultural diversification. Therefore, this study examines the influence of migrant farmers, returning farmers, and local non-migrant farmers on food production diversity. This study collected farm-level data on food production and farmers’ characteristics and applied a negative binomial regression model to estimate the impacts of different types of farmers on agricultural development. The results show that farms operated by migrant farmers had a significantly lower level of food production diversity while farms operated by returning farmers had no significant difference in food production diversity, using farms operated by local non-migrant farmers as the reference category. The variation in agricultural production diversity lies in differences in food production purposes, agricultural and market skills, and various risk-related capacities among the different types of farmers. Farm-level production specialization does not necessarily reduce food diversity and agrobiodiversity at the rural community and regional level.
Highlights Program for Cultivating New-type Professional Farmers has been implemented for agriculture commercialisation in China. Migrant farmers tend to prefer specialized farming while returning farmers prefer diversification. Specialized agricultural production has not reduced the diversity of regional food production.
Impact of migrant and returning farmer professionalization on food production diversity
Liu, Min (author) / Zheng, Wei (author) / Zhong, Taiyang (author)
Journal of Rural Studies ; 94 ; 23-36
2022-05-26
14 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Diversity, Farmer Knowledge and Sustainability
Online Contents | 1993
|The Professionalization of the IT Community
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1998
|Promoting Construction Labor Professionalization: An Evolutionary Game Perspective
DOAJ | 2023
|Advancing a ‘new professionalism’: professionalization, practice and institutionalization
British Library Online Contents | 2013
|