4.6 Article

Mapping Agricultural Lands: From Conventional to Regenerative

Journal

LAND
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land11030437

Keywords

regenerative agriculture; sustainability; sustainability indices; composite indices; regional analysis; regional geography; spatial analysis; United States Midwest

Funding

  1. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Health and Climate Solutions program
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation
  3. WestGrid
  4. Canada Research Chairs Program
  5. Compute Canada

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This study classifies agricultural lands in the Midwest of the United States into regenerative, conventional, or hybrid categories, using an index and clustering method. The results reveal a diverse landscape of agricultural lands within and between states, providing valuable spatial information for peer-to-peer exchanges among farmers, agricultural extension, civil society, and policy formation.
In an era in which conventional agriculture has come under question for its environmental and social costs, regenerative agriculture suggests that land management practices can be organized around farming and grazing practices that regenerate interdependent ecological and community processes for generations to come. However, little is known about the geographies of 'regenerative' and 'conventional' agricultural lands-what defines them, where they are, and the extent to which actual agricultural lands interweave both or are characterizable by neither. In the context of the Midwest of the United States, we develop and map an index quantifying the degrees to which the agricultural lands of counties could be said to be regenerative, conventional, or both. We complement these results by using a clustering method to partition the land into distinct agricultural regions. Both approaches rely on a set of variables characterizing land we developed through an iterative dialogue across difference among our authors, who have a range of relevant backgrounds. We map, analyze, and synthesize our results by considering local contexts beyond our variables, comparing and contrasting the resulting perspectives on the geographies of midwestern agricultural lands. Our results portray agricultural lands of considerable diversity within and between states, as well as ecological and physiographic regions. Understanding the general patterns and detailed empirical geographies that emerge suggests spatial relationships that can inform peer-to-peer exchanges among farmers, agricultural extension, civil society, and policy formation.

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