Permaculture Research Digest
Agroecolgy better than input substitution - a 1996 classic (journal)
The central question posed by this essay is whether sustainable
agriculture will be able to rescue modern industrial agriculture from
its present state of crisis. To answer this question this article begins
by outlining the economic, social, and ecological dimensions of the
crisis, each of which must be addressed by an alternative paradigm in
order to pull agriculture out of crisis. It then examines a persistent
contradiction in the alternative agriculture movement: that of input
substitution versus agroecologi‐calty informed transformation of farming
systems. It is argued that the prevalence of input substitution, which
emphasizes alternatives to agrochemical inputs without challenging the
monoculture structure of agricultural systems, greatly diminishes the
potential of sustainable agriculture. By only addressing environmental
concerns, this dominant approach offers little hope of either reversing
the rapid degradation of the resource base for future production or of
resolving the current profit squeeze and debt trap in which the world's
farmers are caught.
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