The ‘Good Farmer’: Farmer Identities and the Control of Exotic Livestock Disease in England

SOCIOLOGIA RURALIS(2018)

Cited 68|Views5
No score
Abstract
Exotic livestock disease outbreaks have the capacity to significantly impact individual livestock keepers, as well as devastate an entire industry sector. However, there has been limited research undertaken to understand how farmers think about and carry out exotic livestock disease control practices within the social sciences. Drawing on aspects of Social Identity Theory and Self-Categorisation Theory, this article explores how the 'good farmer' identity concept influences farmers' exotic livestock disease control practices. Using findings from an in-depth, large-scale qualitative study with animal keepers and veterinarians, the article identifies three context specific and at times conflicting 'good farmer' identities. Additionally, a defensive component is noted whereby farmers suggest an inability to carry out their role as a 'good farmer' due to government failings, poor practice undertaken by 'bad farmers', as well as the uncontrollable nature of exotic disease.
More
Translated text
Key words
exotic livestock disease,farmer identities,‘good farmer
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined