Abstract

Agrarian communities in different regions develop diverse coping strategies to address the environmental changes they face. In this work, we test how to stimulate farmers’ social learning across diverse regions to promote informed responses to soil degradation. We invited 117 randomly selected members of 16 randomly selected Sumatran communities to three 3-day networking and training events in regions with diverse socio-environmental histories. One event was held in the respondents’ remote rural district (Tanggamus), the second was held in a more densely populated region on Sumatra Island (Kalianda), and the third was held in a heavily populated region on Java Island (Garut and Ciamis). Eighteen months later, we surveyed the information-sharing networks and agricultural practices of 370 members of these communities. The participants had become popular sources of agricultural advice, but the strength of this impact depended on the region in which their networking intervention was conducted. The participants in the event on Java had become the most central members of their communities. Although all the participants received the same formal information, those who interacted with the farmers in a region with the longest history of population pressure and land degradation management were more likely to adopt the recommended practices. The participants in this intervention doubled their odds of adopting organic fertilizers compared with those who networked only with peers in their local environment. Environmental memory of coping with change can be shared between regions through social learning, which can be stimulated by simple interventions.

Highlights

  • IntroductionA combination of external and internal informal networks forms a knowledge foundation for community-based adaptive agricultural management in rural areas (Isaac et al 2007)

  • Informal social networks are crucial for generating and disseminating reflective environmental knowledge (Barnes et al 2016; Berkes 2009; Carlsson and Berkes 2005; Kapoor 2001; Editor: Tony Weir Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.Newig et al 2010; Pahl-Wostl 2009; Plummer 2009; Plummer and Fitzgibbon 2004)

  • Because peoples’ experiences of environmental change and environmental memory vary by region (Barthel et al 2010; Easdale et al 2016; Isaac et al 2014), interregional social contact, in particular, has the potential to access experience with adapting to environmental change that is not locally available

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Summary

Introduction

A combination of external and internal informal networks forms a knowledge foundation for community-based adaptive agricultural management in rural areas (Isaac et al 2007). Because peoples’ experiences of environmental change and environmental memory vary by region (Barthel et al 2010; Easdale et al 2016; Isaac et al 2014), interregional social contact, in particular, has the potential to access experience with adapting to environmental change that is not locally available. The practical question that follows is how to facilitate social networks and social contact across diverse regions to help inhabitants of

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