Advances in farming systems analysis and intervention

Advances in farming systems analysis and intervention

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Article ID: iaor20023616
Country: Netherlands
Volume: 70
Issue: 2/3
Start Page Number: 555
End Page Number: 579
Publication Date: Nov 2001
Journal: Agricultural Systems
Authors: ,
Keywords: simulation: applications, artificial intelligence: decision support
Abstract:

In this paper, we recognize two key components of farming systems, namely the biophysical ‘Production System’ of crops, pastures, animals, soil and climate, together with certain physical inputs and outputs, and the ‘Management System’, made up of people, values, goals, knowledge, resources, monitoring opportunities, and decision making. Utilising upon these constructs, we review six types of farming systems analysis and intervention that have evolved over the last 40 years, namely: (1) economic decision analysis based on production functions, (2) dynamic simulation of production processes, (3) economic decision analysis linked to biophysical simulation, (4) decision support systems, (5) expert systems, and (6) simulation-aided discussions about management in an action research paradigm. Biophysical simulation modelling features prominently in this list of approaches and considerable progress has been made in both the scope and predictive power of the modelling tools. We illustrate some more recent advances in increasing model comprehensiveness in simulating farm production systems via reference to our own group's work with the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (AP-SIM). Two case studies are discussed, one with broad-scale commercial agriculture in north-eastern Australia and the other with resource-poor smallholder farmers in Africa. We conclude by considering future directions for systems analysis efforts directed at farming systems. We see the major challenges and opportunities lying at the interface of ‘hard’ scientific approaches to the analysis of biophysical systems and ‘soft’ approaches to intervention in social management systems.

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