Request For Demo     Request For FreeTrial     Subscribe     Pay Now

Norway Project Notice - Generative Idleness And Gestures Of Reparation: The Resurgence And Promises Of Intentional Fallowing Practices In European Regenerative Agriculture


Project Notice

PNR 58497
Project Name Generative idleness and gestures of reparation: the resurgence and promises of intentional fallowing practices in European regenerative agriculture
Project Detail Investigating the revival of fallowing in agriculture Before the advent of artificial fertilisers, it was common for farmers to leave the land unsown after ploughing so that the soil could restore its own fertility. Known as fallowing, the recent European resumption of this practice will be investigated from both cultural and biological perspectives by the MSCA-funded FALLOW project. By analysing scientific literature and conducting interviews with those who have turned to fallowing, it will establish the biological and philosophical evolutionary drivers of modern fallowing. It will also take underlying political and historical contexts into account. As we strive for improved sustainability and a possible shift away from intensive farming, the results of the FALLOW project may shape future European policies on agriculture and beyond. This project proposes to investigate the resurgence of intentional fallowing as a practice for soil regeneration and as a tool for sustainability policies in Europe. It will deploy an interdisciplinary approach grounded in philosophy and multispecies ethnography to analyse the contemporary resurgence and mutations of intentional fallowing practices in European agriculture and policies, as well as the cultural, social, and scientific consequences of this shift. It combines qualitative research on European farms conducting experimental intentional fallowing, a genealogical analysis of the historical and political context in which these practices are re-emerging, and an exploration of the adjacent spaces in which fallowing and fallowness are studied, such as microbiology, conservation biology, and bioengineering. By combining these three lines of inquiry, the project demonstrates that fallowing is a marginalised practice currently under re-evaluation and potential re-integration into projects and policies that go beyond agricultural concerns. It will analyse the biopolitical and cosmopolitical dimensions of this renewed interest in alternatives to synthetic fertilisers and intensive agriculture by showing that fallowed soils are a site where a variety of interests and projects converge, and by tracing how these practices take up, replay, and extend questions of productivity and idleness, growth and alternatives to economic expansion. This project will combine qualitative methods, in particular in-depth interviews with practitioners in the field, with an extensive engagement with literature in agricultural science, microbiology, conservation biology, and ecology, producing an analysis of fallowing that cuts across what is usually deemed “cultural” and “biological” domains and studies the role, promises, and implications of fallowing practices in times of mass extinction and soil depletion.
Funded By European Union (EU)
Sector Administration & Marketing
Country Norway , Northern Europe
Project Value NOK 226,751

Contact Information

Company Name UNIVERSITETET I OSLO
Web Site https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101064934

Tell us about your Product / Services,
We will Find Tenders for you