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The Work of Working Landscapes Vermont’s Farmlands and the Production of Place Cheryl Morse, PhD University of Vermont March 14, 2011
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“The renaissance in Vermont agriculture…” Governor Peter Shumlin, Inaugural Address, Jan 6, 2011 “…[VT’s] wonderful marketshed from Montreal to Boston to Providence to Hartford to NY and Philadelphia…” [We need to] “maintain this incredible landscape that makes Vermont such a special place" and “the culture we create by having working landscapes of farmers and foresters in our communities" Chuck Ross, Sec. of Agriculture, Food and Markets, VPR, Jan 24, 2011 “We need to ensure that Vermont is the milk-bowl and breadbasket of New England…” Working Landscape Partnership, VT Council on Rural Development Talk of Hope and Crisis in Vermont’s Food Systems “… Vermont's farmers, right now, are in a constant economic struggle. Every year they have to figure out ways to work and survive so that we can all benefit: these are the folks who maintain a great piece of the landscape, jobs, and culture that is part of the fabric of what makes Vermont, Vermont.” Dan Kirk, “My Turn” BFP
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The Work of Working Landscapes Vermont’s Farmlands and the Production of Place What ‘work’ do we expect Vermont’s landscapes to perform?
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The Work of Working Landscapes Explain how I got to working landscapes, in other words, my theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of rural places
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The Work of Working Landscapes Explain how I got to working landscapes, in other words, my theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of rural places Describe public and media discourses about Vermont’s pastoral countryside, and why they are important objects of study
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The Work of Working Landscapes Explain how I got to working landscapes, in other words, my theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of rural places Describe public and media discourses about Vermont’s pastoral countryside, and why they are important objects of study Point out possible conflicts on the working landscape horizon
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The Work of Working Landscapes Explain how I got to working landscapes, in other words, my theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of rural places Describe public and media discourses about Vermont’s pastoral countryside, and why they are important objects of study Point out possible conflicts on the working landscape horizon Recommend a suite of research projects to address these issues
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The Work of Working Landscapes Explain how I got to working landscapes, in other words, my theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of rural places Describe public and media discourses about Vermont’s pastoral countryside, and why they are important objects of study Point out possible conflicts on the working landscape horizon Recommend a suite of research projects to address these issues Outline the contributions such research will make to rural communities, public policy, food systems and geography
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How do teenagers living in northern Vermont experience their rural landscape as it relates to their social lives? My Starting Point: nature (rural) people experience meaning Master’s Thesis Question: Contributions: Quantitative and qualitative findings Gendered analysis Production of identity in relation to place Power, class, social clique analysis Lacking: Landscape was passive, quiet
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Next Question: How does wilderness civilize anti-social youth?
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Lessons from: Nature Discipline: The Practice of Wilderness Therapy at Camp E-Wen-Akee focus on strategy, practices, interactions among heterogeneous actants (Actor Network Theory) “[a]ny course of action will thread a trajectory through completely foreign modes of existence that have been brought together in spite of their heterogeneity.” Latour 2004, 227 spatial tactics (Foucault) embodiment as object of study and a methodological approach
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taskscape (Cloke and Jones; Ingold) the “entire ensemble of tasks, in their mutual interlocking’” Ingold, 2000) “Therapy both takes and makes place” (Dunkley 2009) place and identity are co-constituted from embodied, material engagements
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Actor-Network Theory Relational Ontology Relational Rural In Food Systems Alternative Agriculture Movements Rural Geography Landscape Studies
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Vermonters’ Concerns about Working Landscapes Imagining Vermont, p.12
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From “Imagining Vermont” Threats to agricultural landscapes: Cost of land Rising cost of doing business Lack of young farmers Loss of dairy farms Loss of arable land to development Dairy’s vulnerability to global and national market shifts Promise of agriculture: Attract tourists Attract new residents Provide revenue from landscape impacts Provide revenue from sales of products outside the state
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“Place in the Country” “ Green pastures, bales of hay, and mountainous backdrop provide a pastoral setting for this landscape photograph.” Orwell, VT photo: John David Geery http://johndavidgeery.com The Endangered Working Landscapes of Vermont
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A Brief Environmental History of Vermont’s Landscape (in Crisis) ‘great swarming time’, chartering of towns sheep craze dairy farming outmigration tourism and agriculture work as leisure (Blake Harrison, 2006)
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Vermont Department of Tourism ad in Spring 2011 Vermont Life What Do These Maple Landscapes Produce, How, and For Whom?
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Jordan’s Sugaring Operation, Essex What Do These Maple Landscapes Produce, How, and For Whom?
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The Tension Between the Productive and Aesthetic Functions of Vermont’s Working Landscapes Taskscapes of multiple agricultural products Viewsheds Tourism (in state and out of state) Recreation Place and identity Class Paying attention to aesthetics is crucial to working landscape analysis The division between conventional agricultural and alternative agricultural movements is replicated in academic and public discourse about food systems
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Top 5 Agricultural Commodities Percent of state total farm receipts Dairy Products65.4 Cattle and calves8.0 Maple products6.2 Greenhouse/nursery5.3 Apples2.5 Number of farms (2009): 7,000 Dairy farms (2010): 1,010 Organic dairy farms : 205 Conventional dairy farms: 805 Organic dairy farms make up 20% of the state total; They produce about 5-7% of the state's milk Data: National Agricultural Statistics Service Vermont Farm Data
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6,000-7,000 24,000-62,000 156, 545 ORLEANSFRANKLIN 47,746 ADDISON 36,821 ESSEX 6,306 RUTLAND 61,642 GRAND ISLE 6,970 CHITTENDEN 156,545 LAMOILLE 24,575 CALEDONIA WASHINGTON ORANGE WINDSOR WINDHAM BENNINGTON Vermont County Population, 2010 POPULATION One of every four Vermonters lives in Chittenden County Chitt. County’s population is 2.5 times larger than the next most populated county, Rutland loss of pop since 2000 Two Vermonts?
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PERCENT OF VT’S STATE AGRICULTURAL SALES 23.5-24 12.2 5.2-6.4 Vermont’s Top Five Counties in Agricultural Sales, 2007 ADDISON $161,417,000 1 2 FRANKLIN $160,619,000 3 ORLEANS $82,348,000 ORANGE $43,292,000 4 5 RUTLAND $35,286,000 Together, Addison and Franklin counties constitute nearly half of VT’s agricultural production The county in third place produces half that of the counties in first and second place How Many Agricultural Vermonts?
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Addison County Total number of farms: 773 # farms w/ $500,000 + in sales: 79 Milk is 78% of ag sales Cattle and calves are 8% of sales Franklin County Total number of farms: 740 # farms w/ $500,000 + in sales: 80 Milk is 81% of ag sales Cattle and calves are 11% of sales Orleans County Total number of farms: 635 # of farms w/ $500,000 + in sales: 25 Milk is 85% of ag sales Cattle and calves are 8% of sales
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Map: Jan Albers, 2002, Hands on the Land
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The Freestall Landscape
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Smaller Farm Landscapes
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The Vermont Farmlands Project Vermont Community Agricultural Lands Spatial Analysis
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The Vermont Farmlands Project Vermont Community Agricultural Lands Spatial Analysis ‘Working The Landscape’ Community Narratives Study
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The Vermont Farmlands Project Vermont Community Agricultural Lands Spatial Analysis ‘Working The Landscape’ Community Narratives Study Rural Landscape Perception and Value Study
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The Vermont Farmlands Project Vermont Community Agricultural Lands Spatial Analysis ‘Working The Landscape’ Community Narratives Study Rural Landscape Perception and Value Study Public Policy Debate Analysis
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The Vermont Farmlands Project Anticipated Contributions Community Development Initiatives UVM – Community of Vermonters Collaboration Public Policy and Planning Transdisciplinary Food Systems Work Rural Geography in North America Nature-Culture Theory
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