Permaculture Research Digest
The permaculture movement in El Salvador (#journal)
In El Salvador a growing permaculture movement attunes small-scale
farming activities to principles of ecological observation. The premise
is twofold: close-grained appreciation of already-interacting
biophysical processes allows for the design of complementary social and
agricultural systems requiring minimum energy inputs. Secondly, the
insistence on campesino smallholders as actors in the design of
sustainable food systems directly addresses decades of “top-down”
developmental interventions.
Permaculture connects food insecurity to the delegitimisation of
smallholder innovation and insists that, through sharing simple
techniques, campesino farmers can contribute towards environmental sustainability. This
repositioning is brought about through the mobilisation of pedagogical
techniques that legitimise the experiences and expertise of small-scale
farmers, while standardising experimental methods for testing,
evaluating and sharing agroecological practices.
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