Agroforestry Futures

Lead Research Organisation: Robert Gordon University
Department Name: Gray's School of Art

Abstract

UK nature-based solutions, such as tree planting, must engage with the agricultural sector, given that agriculture uses more than 70 per cent of the land in the UK and is a major emitter of greenhouse gases (GHGs). Meeting the UK's tree planting targets and reducing agricultural GHG emissions may require converting current agricultural land to alternative land-uses. Agroforestry, where trees are deliberately combined with agriculture on the same piece of land, is one alternative land-use that maintains food production, but which can also drive down GHG emissions, deliver key ecosystem services, and create and improve (rural) livelihoods. Agroforestry supports several goals not only relevant to Net Zero, but for the UK government's 25 Year Environment Plan and Clean Growth Strategy. However, the environmental and societal benefits of agroforestry can only be realized through widespread adoption by key stakeholders, including farmers and land managers. The overall objective of the AF Futures project is to co-develop strategies to overcome barriers to, identify facilitators of, and increase opportunities for agroforestry practices in different UK contexts. Research focused on understanding the similarities in preferences and perceived challenges identified by different stakeholder groups, as well as how these might be addressed in local and national contexts will be conducted with AF futures, using a multidisciplinary approach. Integration of the natural, social and economic, sciences and arts and humanities is central to activities within AF Futures. Research addressing how regulatory structures, economic incentives, socio-economic drivers and impacts, and agronomic intervention shape agroforestry practices will be integrated through different disciplinary lenses. The arts and humanities will be used to create visual transitions from past representations of agroforestry to agroforestry futures, which integrate socio- economic outcomes and future biodiversity and ecosystem services, if adoption of different particular agroforestry approaches occurs.

Publications

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Clarke J (2023) Feeling future forests

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Clarke J (2023) Feeling Future Landscapes

 
Title Weathering the Forest 
Description This is a new moving image work that considers the theme of sensory ecology: "Weathering the Forest: Boundaries, atmosphere, breath" (working title) - one outcome from a cross-disciplinary project (Agro-Forestry Futures/Treescapes) that aims to 'co-create' agro-forestry futures. This work explores new materialist ideas around climate imaginaries, specifically transcoroporeality and 'weathering' (Neimanis & Walker, 2013) through movement and breath, in the forest. Taking a feminist approach, employing performative, visual and anthropological practices, this multi-modal work attends to the complexities of forests in terms of weathering and weather-bodies, asking how might we develop sensorial awareness of entangled human-nonhuman relations? 
Type Of Art Artistic/Creative Exhibition 
Year Produced 2023 
Impact The exhibition will be held in May, 2023. I will update this with relevant impacts after the exhibition.