Are you an enthusiastic and ambitious researcher, passionate about discovering new policy options, regulations, and organizational arrangements for nature-inclusive agriculture? Do you like to do action-oriented research that helps us to reconfigure ‘the rules of the game’ as part of sustainability transitions? If yes, then we encourage you to apply! The
Knowledge, Technology and Innovation group at Wageningen University is seeking an enthusiast and ambitious researcher who wants discover new policy options, regulations and organisational arrangements for nature-inclusive agriculture in collaboration with farmers and other stakeholders.
Cropmix is a large transdisciplinary research program that joins forces with the agricultural sector to achieve a breakthrough in the transition to sustainable arable farming. Agro-ecological research focusses on the potential of strip cropping in fostering responsible pest- and disease management and soil health. Social-scientific research investigates which social and institutional changes in the food system are needed to enable and accelerate the transition to sustainable and biodiversity-positive crop production. This is done by setting up living labs in which stakeholders and researchers collaborate.
The PhD-candidate will contribute to identifying socio-economic constraints, and support the co-design of more conducive regulations, incentive systems, organizational models and policies for nature-inclusive agriculture. Subsequently, the living labs will play a role in testing and validating such social innovations, and in enhancing the support for them among farmers, in value chains and in policy networks.
The goal of this PhD project is to create insight in social and institutional options and leverages that may help to overcome constraints to strip cropping, and to explore novel methods through which the contribution of novel policy options, incentive systems and organizational solutions can be tested in the living labs.
The two more specific aims are:
- to understand how the use of nature-inclusive farming practices are is dependent on changes in the broader (farm, value-chain and policy) environment, and where leverages can be found to induce system-level change.
- to understand and support experimentation with institutional options in living labs and assess their potential to support a shift towards nature-inclusive agriculture.
- to develop and apply creative methodological strategies that make it possible to assess and validate the potential of institutional options, and/or enhance their support in policy networks.
You will work here The successful candidate will become part of the highly dynamic
Knowledge, Technology and Innovation group. You will be supervised by
Prof. Cees Leeuwis and
Dr. Barbara van Mierlo.