Monday, July 3, 2023

Time Event (+)
09:00 - 09:20 PhD Workshop: Short introduction of participants and Welcoming by ESRS representative (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Elisabete Figueiredo, Fatma Nil Döner  
09:20 - 10:30 PHD workshop: Publishing Workshop (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Menelaos Gkartzios  
10:30 - 11:00 Coffee break (Batt 24 Corridor)  
11:00 - 12:30 PhD workshop: Small group discussions on Methodologies in Rural Sociology research followed by a roundtable (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Bianka Plüschke-Altof  
12:30 - 14:00 Lunch (Batt 24 Corridor)  
14:00 - 15:30 PhD workshop: Artificial Intelligence use in research - Workshop and Debate (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Pavel Pospech  
18:00 - 19:30 Welcome drink and music at the City Hall (reception room, 1st floor)  

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Time Event (+)
09:00 - 10:15 Registration, coffee - Welcome and registration of the participants  
10:15 - 10:30 Welcome Speech (Amphithéâtre Matagrin)  
10:30 - 12:00 Plenary session- Re-imaging the rural - An agricultural labourer, an artist, an agenda (Amphithéâtre Matagrin) - Joanne Coates  
12:00 - 13:45 Lunch and poster session (Batt 24 Corridor)  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 1: Shifting mobilities in times of crisis: Exploring new rural and island migration flows in a disorderly world (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.) - Jane Atterton, Emil Sandström, Luke Dilley, Menealos Gkartzios, Nora Wahlström, Ruth Wilson (+)  
13:45 - 14:05 › Japanese Responses to Island Depopulation and Revitalisation: Translocating Policy? - Luke T Dilley, Akita International University  
14:05 - 14:25 › Local and regional experiences of remote work and multilocality - Agust Bogason, Linda Randall  
14:25 - 14:45 › The Islands Diaspora: Connection and Return - Kirsten Gow, University of Aberdeen, The James Hutton Institute  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 2: The rural future under negotiation: endogenous sustainability and human diversification in European ethnic minority-based rural regions (Salle formation continue FC1 - 24.0.54.) - Josepha Milazzo, Lutz Laschewski, Fabian Jacobs, Jenny Hagemann (+)  
13:45 - 14:00 › Ethnic Minority-Based Rural regions (EMBR Regions) - Rural Development and Inclusion of Minorities: A research agenda - Lutz Laschewski, Serbski Institut - Institute for the Study of the Language, History and Culture of the Lusatian Sorbs/Wends and Comparative Minority Research  
14:00 - 14:15 › The cultural economy and the built environment of North American and European ethnic minority based rural areas. - Johnnifer Brown, Western Carolina University  
14:15 - 14:30 › Cultural heritage as resource for sustainable development in Szekler communities from Transylvania, Romania - Eniko Veres, Kolozsvár Társaság  
14:30 - 14:45 › Variegated diversities in inebriating landscapes: different migrations in Southern Piedmont vineyards rural areas (Italy) - Magda Bolzoni, Polytechnic University of Turin - Davide Donatiello, University of Turin - Valentina Moiso, University of Turin  
14:45 - 15:00 › INTERNATIONAL IMMIGRATION, SUSTAINABILITY AND GLOCALISATION IN ETHNIC MINORITY-BASED VILLAGES: EXPLORING CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES IN HAMLETS OF THE FRENCH EASTERN PYRENEES - Ricard Moren Alegret, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, UAB / Autonomous University of Barcelona; Department of Geography, Institut de Ciencia i Tecnologia Ambientals, UAB-ICTA, Josepha Milazzo, Aix-Marseille Université TELEMMe  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 5: The Sociology of Rural Entrepreneurship (Salle D2 - 24.0.44.) - Gary Bosworth and Robert Newbery (+)  
13:45 - 14:05 › Neo-endogenous community development and social innovation through collaboration with the church - Egon Bjoernshave Noe Noe, Danish Centre for Rural research, Department of Sociology, Environmental and Business Economics, University of Southern Denmark  
14:05 - 14:25 › Knowledge Commoning and Rural Entrepreneurship: a Social Innovation Perspective to Promote Youth Participation in the Assessment of Rural Territories Resilience - Maria João Horta Parreira, Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences (CICS.NOVA), Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities (NOVA FCSH), The Centre for Natural Resources, Environment and Society (CERNAS), Polytechnic Institute of Coimbra  
14:25 - 14:45 › Rural entrepreneurship in the Organic Fruit Breeding sector through the lens of Social Innovation - Mariagiulia Mariani, Innovation et Développement dans lÁgriculture et lÁlimentation, Università di Pisa - Pisa Agricultural Economics (PAGE) group - Gianluca Brunori, Università di Pisa - Pisa Agricultural Economics (PAGE) group  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 8: Bringing matters to the head. Mental health, wellbeing and resilience in rural settings (Salle d'analyse sensorielle - 24.0.11.) - Caroline Nye, Rebecca Wheeler, David Rose (+)  
13:45 - 14:00 › How online mental health forums contribute to rural resilience: a mixed methods study and logic model - Artur Steiner, Glasgow Caledonian University  
14:00 - 14:15 › Keeping on[line] farming: Examining young farmers, self-curation and (dis)connection through social media - Mark Riley, University of Liverpool  
14:15 - 14:30 › Feelings of connectedness: the success factor(s) behind rural adolescent mental health education - Jorie Knook, Lincoln University, New Zealand  
14:45 - 15:00 › Farm women and well-being: A review of the literature - Rebecca Wheeler, Centre for Rural Policy Research, University of Exeter  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 9: Community action in critical contexts (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Beatriz Izquierdo Ramírez, Alessandra Piccoli, Susanne Elsen, Elena Nogueira Joaquín, Federica Viganó, Francesca Uleri, Jesús Rivera Escribano (+)  
13:45 - 14:00 › Digitalization pathways to support rural communities' actions in critical context - Livia Ortolani, University of Pisa - Università di Pisa  
14:00 - 14:15 › Energy Communities as local responses to rural crisis. - ANDONI ISO, Universidad Pública de Navarra [Espagne] = Public University of Navarra  
14:15 - 14:30 › Governmentality and Community: The Impact of the COVID Lockdowns - Claire Wallace, University of Aberdeen  
14:30 - 14:45 › SOCIAL WEAKENING OR SOCIAL RESILIENCE IN DEPOPULATED CONTEXTS. A CASE STUDY OF SOCIAL PARTICIPATION IN “EMPTY SPAIN”. - BEATRIZ IZQUIERDO RAMIREZ, UNIVERSITY OF BURGOS - María Elena Nogueira, UNIVERSITY OF BURGOS  
14:45 - 15:00 › Religion and Sustainable Agricultural Movements: Missing in Action or Missing the Action? - Patrick Mooney, University of Kentucky  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 11: Social and political consequences of spatial inequalities – the rural gap, peripheralisation and left behind rural areas (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.) - Jerzy Bański, Josef Bernard, Luis Camarero, Renato do Carmo, Andreas Klärner, Jesús Oliva, María J. Rivera (+)  
13:45 - 14:05 › Accessibility, socio-territorial cohesion and peripheralization processes. The rural gap in Spain - Jesús Oliva, Universidad Pública de Navarra [Espagne]  
14:05 - 14:25 › Geographical indications in the periphery: The case of origin foods in Ireland - Katharine Legun, Wageningen University  
14:25 - 14:45 › The challenges of being left behind: messages from a study of small rural towns in England - Martin Phillips, School of Geography, Geology and Environment, University of Leicester  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 13: Agroecological transition towards equitable, sustainable and resilient agri-food systems at multiple levels: from family farm communities to organic districts and agroecological clusters (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Simona Zollet, Erika Quendler, Hillary Cheruiyot, Luca Colombo, Giovanni Dara Guccione, Mabel Ifeoma Onwuka, Ray Kancharla, Florence Reed, Alberto Sturla, Charles L. Tumuhe, Noureddin Driouech (+)  
13:45 - 13:55 › Climate and Disaster Resilience – key to fragmented and vulnerable rural family farmers in the East Coast of India - Kacharla Ray, Family Farming and Agro Ecology Network  
13:55 - 14:05 › Supporting the agroecological transition: for a critical sociological approach of famers'commitment - Marion Diaz, Sol Agro et hydrosystème Spatialisation, INSTITUT AGRO  
14:05 - 14:15 › Agroecology as politics: commonalities and potential of convergences between agroecological and conventional smallholder family farmers – insights from Portugal - Rita Calvario, Center for Social Studies University of Coimbra  
14:15 - 14:25 › Agroecology as reparative and resilient or a trap: perspectives from Malawi - Rachel Bezner Kerr, Cornell University  
14:35 - 14:45 › Agroecological transformation for sustainable development at a territorial scale: insights from the EU funded ATTER project - Noureddin Driouech, International Center for Advanced Mediterreanean Agronomic Studies (CIHEMA Bari), Italy - Danièle Magda, French National Institute for Agriculture, Food, and Environment (INRAE), France - Patrizia Pugliese, International Center for Advanced Mediterreanean Agronomic Studies (CIHEMA Bari), Italy - Claire Lamine, French National Institute for Agriculture, Food, and Environment (INRAE), France  
14:45 - 14:55 › Fostering agroecology transition in North Africa through multi-actor, evaluation, and networking: NATAE project - Generosa Jenny Calabrese, Centre International de Hautes Etudes Agronomiques Méditerranéennes - Institut Agronomique Méditerranéen de Bari - Mélanie REQUIER-DESJARDINS, Centre International de Hautes Etudes Agronomiques Méditerranéennes - Institut Agronomique Méditerranéen de Montpellier - Rita Jalkh, Centre International de Hautes Etudes Agronomiques Méditerranéennes - Institut Agronomique Méditerranéen de Montpellier - Noureddin Driouech, Centre International de Hautes Etudes Agronomiques Méditerranéennes - Institut Agronomique Méditerranéen de Bari - Elen Lemaître-Curri, Centre International de Hautes Etudes Agronomiques Méditerranéennes - Institut Agronomique Méditerranéen de Montpellier  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 14: (Dis)Connections: Linking the bioeconomy to regional food systems (Salle d'apprentissage - 24.0.05.) - Richard Helliwell, Rob Burton (+)  
13:45 - 14:00 › Diversity and typology of circular economy initiatives across agriculture, forestry and aquaculture in the Baltic-Nordic region - Talis Tisenkopfs, Baltic Studies Centre  
14:00 - 14:15 › Future transitions for the Bioeconomy in small and medium farming systems in Norway - Hugo Herrera, System Dynamics Team University of Bergen  
14:15 - 14:30 › How to enable circular business models?: Comparative analysis of evidence from Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and Norway - Grivins Mikelis, Baltic Studies Centre  
14:30 - 14:45 › A comparative study of fertilizers in the context of Circular Bioeconomy (CBE) through a double Social Life Cycle Assessment (S-LCA) approach - Irene Zarauz, University of Zaragoza  
14:45 - 15:00 › Emerging bioeconomy-food system integration: Key insights from the meat value chain in Norway - Maja Farstad, Ruralis - Institute for Rural and Regional Research - Richard Helliwell, Ruralis - Institute for Rural and Regional Research  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 15: Food systems in crisis: intersections between conflict, transformation and the post-political (Salle 4eme année - 24.0.20.) - Damian Maye, Gianluca Brunori, Allison-Marie Loconto, Nadine Arnold, Nadine Arnold, Francesca Galli, Joost Dessein, Ritwick Ghosh (+)  
13:45 - 14:00 › Food crises in history: what did we learn and what remain unresolved? - Sara Chinaglia, University of Bologna/Università di Bologna  
14:00 - 14:15 › Transformative food policies in times of ‘permacrisis' - Gianluca Brunori, Università di Pisa  
14:15 - 14:30 › Multiple and Entwining Food Crises – towards a perspective on “food as value create” - Sergio Schneider, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, University of Montpellier-COHORT Programme, 2023- MAK'IT  
14:30 - 14:45 › What if the crisis never ends? Perspectives for a new approach to the resilience of food systems - Yuna Chiffoleau, Innovation - Yentl Deroche-Leydier, Innovation - Zsófia Benedek, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies - Gusztav Nemes, Hungarian Academy of Sciences - Simona Zollet, Hiroshima University  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 17: Behind the scenes: working conditions, quality of life, and the future of farming (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.) - Florence Becot - Hannah Budge - Majda Černič Istenič - Shoshanah Inwood - Lutz Laschewski - David Meredith - Marie Reusch - Georg Wiesinger (+)  
13:45 - 15:15 › Farming, Food and Social Sustainability: the view from the fields and glasshouses. Panel discussion with Oxfam Spain, EFFAT, GEOPA, CEJA, and DG AGRI. Moderator: Prof Sally Shortall, Newcastle University - David Meredith, Teagasc - The Agriculture and Food Development Authority  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 29: Place making, local identity and rural image: New ways to understand and explore their role in rural restructuring (Salle D1 -24.0.45) - Bernadett Csurgo, HORZSA, Gergely Horzsa, Márta Kiss Boldizsár Megyesi (+)  
13:50 - 14:15 › Imaginaries, stereotypes and identity constructions: how do we see the Hungarian rural areas? - Miklós Gyorgyovich, Századvég Foundation Social Science Research Group - Dávid Kollár, Századvég Foundation Social Science Research Group, University of Pecs - Applied Ontology Research Group, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Budapest Metropolitan University  
14:15 - 14:40 › Perceptions About Rural and Impact of The Rural Idyll - Nur Kardelen Öztürk, Gebze Technical University  
14:40 - 15:05 › Analyzing rural images through textual resources - Bernadett Csurgó, CfSS  
13:45 - 15:15 WG32: Smart rurality: Critically exploring the link between rural smartification and regional inequalities (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Kadri Leetmaa, Pille Metspalu, Bianka Plüschke-Altof (+)  
13:50 - 14:10 › ”Smartness”: tailoring the concept to low populated areas, islands, cross-border and mountain regions - Maria Carla Lostrangio, European Association for Innovation on Local Development  
14:10 - 14:30 › Exploring stakeholder networks for innovation in the periphery: Innovation, prosperity or status quo? - Bradley Loewen, Eurac Research  
14:30 - 14:50 › Rethinking smartification from the rural margins - Bianka Plüschke-Altof, University of Tartu  
14:50 - 15:10 › Participating in the Smart Countryside? Perspectives and Applications of Digital Participation Procedures in Rural Regional Development - Carla Wember, Institute for Rural Development Research, University of Applied Sciences Fulda, University of Kassel - Sarah Peter, Institute for Rural Development Research - Simone Sterly, Institute for Rural Development Research  
13:45 - 15:15 WG 28: Border Crises: The New Rural Politics of Exile (Salle D3 - 24.0.43.) - (Papers, discutants comments, questions from the audience) (+)  
13:45 - 14:00 › Exploring the Socio-Material Powers of Farm Fencelines. - Hugh Campbell, University of Otago [Dunedin, Nouvelle-Zélande]  
14:00 - 14:15 › Temporal Borders, Calf Care and Anti-Microbial Resistance - Gareth Enticott, Cardiff University - Kieran O'Mahony, Czech Academy of Sciences  
14:15 - 14:30 › The Rural Imperial: Blood, Soil, and Russian Ecofascism - Michael Bell, University of Wisconsin  
15:15 - 15:45 Coffee break (Batt 24 Corridor)  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 1: Shifting mobilities in times of crisis: Exploring new rural and island migration flows in a disorderly world (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.) - Jane Atterton, Emil Sandström, Luke Dilley, Menealos Gkartzios, Nora Wahlström, Ruth Wilson (+)  
15:45 - 16:05 › Rural mobilities, climate disruption and privileged maladaptation - Menelaos Gkartzios, Newcastle University  
16:05 - 16:25 › Supporting victims of domestic violence in rural and island communities during COVID-19: the impact of the pandemic on service providers in North-East Scotland and Orkney - Leia Miller, Robert Gordon University  
16:25 - 16:45 › Remote work: Effects on Nordic people, places and planning 2021-2024 - Agust Bogason, Linda Randall  
16:45 - 17:05 › The future prospect of the Millennials - Kata Szabo, Eotvos Lorand University Faculty of Social Sciences  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 5: The Sociology of Rural Entrepreneurship (Salle D2 - 24.0.44.) - Gary Bosworth, Robert Newbery (+)  
15:45 - 16:05 › Growing from scratch: successful, co-operation-based farm enterprises and their local impact in peripheral rural Hungary - Katalin Kovacs, CERS  
16:05 - 16:25 › Effects of Farmer Entrepreneurialism in Animal Disease Policy: A Scenario Based Analysis of Vaccination Policies for Bovine Tuberculosis - Gareth Enticott, Cardiff University - Damian Maye, Countryside and Community Research Institute [Cheltenham]  
16:25 - 16:45 › Agritourism as a new social movement - entrepreneurship based on values - Grzegorz Foryś, Grzegorz Foryś  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 8: Bringing matters to the head. Mental health, wellbeing and resilience in rural settings (Salle d'analyse sensorielle - 24.0.11.) - Caroline Nye, Rebecca Wheeler, David Rose (+)  
15:45 - 16:00 › Farmers' distress through the medical narratives: The case from Slovenia - Duska Knezevic Hocevar, ZRC SAZU  
16:00 - 16:15 › Farmers' mental health help-seeking strategies in the United States: A multi-state mixed-methods approach - Florence Becot, National Farm Medicine Center  
16:15 - 16:30 › The Relationship between Resilience, Loneliness and Mental Well-being In Members of the Farming Community - Sarah Nyczaj Kyle, University of Northumbria at Newcastle [United Kingdom]  
16:30 - 16:45 › “We don't talk about that kind of bullshit here”: A call to examine the impact of water scarcity on mental health and mental health care in rural agricultural communities - Hannah Whitley, Pennsylvania State University  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 9: Community action in critical contexts (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Beatriz Izquierdo Ramírez, Alessandra Piccoli, Susanne Elsen, Elena Nogueira Joaquín, Federica Viganó, Francesca Uleri, Jesús Rivera Escribano (+)  
15:45 - 16:00 › Relevance of community-based business models for food system transitions - Benjamin Hennchen, Zentrum Technik und Gesellschaft (ZTG), Technische Universität Berlin  
16:00 - 16:15 › Transformative potential of the Alternative Food Network - Konrad Stępnik, Jagiellonian University, Institute of Sociology  
16:15 - 16:30 › Proposal of a phase 0 for transdisicplinary agroecology research - Helga Gruberg Cazon, Universiteit Gent = Ghent University  
16:30 - 16:45 › How to common-pool resources? The example of Corsican chestnut flour production in the face of climate change - Marie Ottavi, LRDE-SELMET  
16:45 - 17:00 › Locally embedded change in food governance. - Ruta Śpiewak, Ruta Spiewak, Wojciech Goszczyński  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 11: Social and political consequences of spatial inequalities – the rural gap, peripheralisation and left behind rural areas (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.) - Jerzy Bański, Josef Bernard, Luis Camarero, Renato do Carmo, Andreas Klärner, Jesús Oliva, María J. Rivera (+)  
15:45 - 16:05 › Left-behind places – source of disadvantage and discontent? - Josef Bernard, Institute of Sociology, Czech Academy of Sciences  
16:05 - 16:25 › Feeling left behind while being developed - Social and political mismatch in the Oder-Spree region (Germany) - Denis Zekovic, University of Amsterdam [Amsterdam]  
16:25 - 16:45 › Young People's Social Integration and Life Evaluation: Comparison of Rural and Urban Youth in Croatia - Bruno Šimac, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences [Zagreb]  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 13: Agroecological transition towards equitable, sustainable and resilient agri-food systems at multiple levels: from family farm communities to organic districts and agroecological clusters (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Simona Zollet, Erika Quendler, Hillary Cheruiyot, Luca Colombo, Giovanni Dara, Noureddin Driouech (+)  
15:45 - 15:55 › A comparative approach to agroecological transformations: cases from Sweden, Italy and Chile - Cristian Alarcon-Ferrai, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences  
15:55 - 16:05 › Food safety, labour, or soil environment? Transitioning practices of vegetable small-scale actors in Hanoi, Vietnam - Quoc Nguyen-Minh, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen] - Peter Oosterveer, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen] - Raffaele Vignola, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen]  
16:15 - 16:25 › From deagrarianisation to repeasantization? Perspectives of agroecology in Poland - Aleksandra Bilewicz, Institute of Rural and Agricultural Development, Polish Academy of Sciences  
16:25 - 16:35 › The role of transmissions in peasant agriculture in the development of agricultural and food transitions: results of a collaborative study in Occitania, France - Elsa Pibou, teacher-researcher in sociology - Alexis Annes, teacher-researcher in sociology - Adeline Bouvard, teacher-researcher in agro-economy  
16:35 - 16:45 › The new generation of farmers, sustainable farming and climate change in Hungary - Imre Kovách, Institute of Sociology, Centre of Social Sceinces  
16:45 - 16:55 › The knowledge economy of sustainable living – leading through personal example - Gusztav Nemes, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 14: (Dis)Connections: Linking the bioeconomy to regional food systems (Salle d'apprentissage - 24.0.05.) - Richard Helliwell, Rob Burton (+)  
15:45 - 16:05 › New shades of blue: Linking the bioeconomy and regional food systems in coastal areas and the role of Fisheries Local Action Groups - Richard Freeman, Newcastle University  
16:05 - 16:25 › Value creation between tradition and innovation: How to govern innovation in regional food systems? Insights from different case studies in Switzerland - David Raemy, Bern University of Applied Sciences - School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences  
16:25 - 16:45 › Using a just transition framework to analyse bioeconomic impacts on local food systems. - Guillaume DUMON, National University of Ireland [Galway]  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 15: Food systems in crisis: intersections between conflict, transformation and the post-political (Salle 4eme année - 24.0.20.) - Damian Maye, Gianluca Brunori, Allison-Marie Loconto, Nadine Arnold, Nadine Arnold, Francesca Galli, Joost Dessein, Ritwick Ghosh (+)  
15:45 - 16:00 › Preventing crises to become problematic situations: the financialization of environmental risks in the Italian agrifood system and the lack of public debate on food security crisis preparedness - Davide Olori, University of Bologna/Università di Bologna - Laura Centemeri, Centre d'étude des mouvements sociaux  
16:15 - 16:30 › Identification of inclusive supply chain in the food system: A case study of Rwamwanja Refugee Settlement in Uganda - Daniel Alpizar Rojas, Department of Agriculture, Food and Environment, University of Pisa  
16:30 - 16:45 › The Rural on the 21st century Turkey: the movement Çiftçi-Sen resisting Extractivism through Food Sovereignty - José Ribeiro, Middle East Technical University [Ankara]  
16:45 - 17:00 › Unpacking farmers' resistance in the Netherlands: Beyond the peasant-entrepreneur dichotomy - Jolien Klok, Wageningen University & Research  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 17: Behind the scenes: working conditions, quality of life, and the future of farming (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.) - Florence Becot - Hannah Budge - Majda Černič Istenič - Shoshanah Inwood - Lutz Laschewski - David Meredith - Marie Reusch - Georg Wiesinger (+)  
15:45 - 16:00 › Cyborg Farmers: An embodied understanding of precision agriculture - Daniel Van der Velden, Research Institute for Agricultural, Fisheries and Food, Department of Agricultural Economics, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Ghent University  
16:00 - 16:15 › Psychological factors influencing the adoptation of digital technologies in agriculture by farm managers - Linda Reissig, ETHZ USYS TdLab  
16:15 - 16:30 › Toward Design Justice in Precision Agriculture - Maaz Gardezi, Virginia Tech [Blacksburg]  
16:30 - 16:45 › Increasing farmers' autonomy in provisioning of public goods: The example of goal-oriented biodiversity promotion in Switzerland - Rebekka Frick, Research Institute of Organic Agriculture - Forschungsinstitut für biologischen Landbau  
16:45 - 17:00 › The agroecology-technology conundrum: lessons learnt from interdisciplinary team visits of agroecological farms in Belgium - Marjolein Visser, Agroecology Lab, Université Libre de Bruxelles  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 27: #RuralGaze (Salle D3 - 24.0.43.) - Menelaos Gkartzios, Thoroddur Bjarnason, Esther Peeren, Lee-Ann Sutherland / “Rural gaze” is an online collective autoethnography project using photo elicitation that the speakers started during the COVID-19 pandemic (...) With the help of the audience, the WG will explore, in broader terms, a collective rural (scholarly) gaze  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 29: Place making, local identity and rural image: New ways to understand and explore their role in rural restructuring (Salle D1 -24.0.45) - CSURGÓ, Bernadett; HORZSA, Gergely; KISS, Márta; MEGYESI Boldizsár (+)  
15:45 - 16:05 › Naming the place: the social construction of rural landscape - Boldizsár Megyesi, CfSS - Bernadett Csurgó, CfSS  
16:05 - 16:25 › Place-making and media tourism: help or hindrance? - Claire Wallace, University of Aberdeen  
16:25 - 16:45 › The rural restructured development in Poland through the activity of social economy entities. Innovative model of socio-economic cluster - Wioletta Knapik, University of Agriculture in Cracow  
15:45 - 17:15 WG 31: Re-Programming of Land Use Patterns? Transformation Pathways of European Societies in Times of Multiple Crises (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - Eleonore Harmel, Jens Jetzkowitz, Leon Jank, Technische (+)  
15:50 - 15:58 › Agrarian transformations and changes in land use: the case of “La Vega de Granada”, a southern Spanish territory (1980-2020) - Adrià Ivorra Cano, Agro-ecosystems History Laboratory. University Pablo de Olavide  
15:58 - 16:06 › Social effects of the agricultural land-use concentration in Latvia - Aija Zobena, University of Latvia  
16:06 - 16:14 › Alternative land tenure models for a sustainable future: lessons for Scotland and beyond - Naomi Beingessner, The James Hutton Institute  
16:14 - 16:22 › Access to land and reterritorialization of agriculture in an urban metropolis: the case of market gardening in the Paris region - Romain Melot, Sciences pour l'Action et le Développement : Activités, Produits, Territoires  
16:22 - 16:30 › Rethinking the role of agricultural parks as a planning and design mechanism for European rural areas - Antonio Jose Salvador, Politecnico di Milano [Milan]  
16:30 - 16:38 › Socio-economic impacts of ‘green' land investment in Scotland: the role of the ‘green lairds' in achieving a just rural transition - McKee Annie, Social, Economic and Geographical Sciences Department, James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen, Scotland  
15:45 - 17:15 WG32: Smart rurality: Critically exploring the link between rural smartification and regional inequalities (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Kadri Leetmaa, Pille Metspalu, Bianka Plüschke-Altof (+)  
15:45 - 16:03 › Smart Farming as a mean of Empowering Farmers? The Case of Geographical Indication Manganji Sweet Green Peppers, Japan - Romain Blancaneaux, Kyoto University, Graduate School of Agriculture  
16:03 - 16:20 › VillageTalk App. Rural Digital Mediatization in German Villages and the Transformation of Community. - Nicole Zerrer, Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Collaborative Research Center  
16:20 - 16:37 › About the limits of technology-centred innovations. Challenges in the implementation of telemedical solutions in rural Germany - Tobias Mettenberger, Thünen Institute of Rural Studies  
16:37 - 16:54 › AGRITECH ENTREPRENEURSHIP, INNOVATION INTERMEDIARIES, AND SUSTAINABILITY TRANSITIONS: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS - Phoebe Stephens, Dalhousie University  
17:30 - 19:00 ESRS general assembly (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - President Joost Dessein  

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Time Event (+)
08:00 - 19:30 FIELD TRIPS - Description: https://esrs2023.institut-agro-rennes-angers.fr/field-trip  

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Time Event (+)
09:00 - 10:20 Semi-plenary session- Spaces of permanent crisis or the lands of opportunities? The changing geographies of rural spaces in the eastern periphery of Europe (Amphithéâtre Moule) - Erika Nagy  
09:00 - 10:20 Semi-plenary session- Rethinking higher education frameworks in times of crisis: students and professors commitments (Amphithéâtre Matagrin) - Nathaly Joly (Institut Agro), Ph. Boudes, Line Rondard (Institut Agro), Cyprien Tasset (Vetagrosup), Hugh Campbell (Otago University)  
10:20 - 11:00 Coffe break (Batt 24 Corridor)  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 1: Shifting mobilities in times of crisis: Exploring new rural and island migration flows in a disorderly world (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.) - Jane Atterton, Emil Sandström, Luke Dilley, Menealos Gkartzios, Nora Wahlström, Ruth Wilson (+)  
11:00 - 11:20 › Urban and rural migration desires and motivations in Hungary - Miklós Gyorgyovich, Századvég Foundation Social Science Research Group  
11:20 - 11:40 › EXPLORING POPULATION CHANGE AND CHALLENGES FOR SUSTAINABILITY IN SMALL VILLAGES OF IRELAND: RURAL IMMIGRATION AND OTHER MOBILITIES IN SHIFTING HAMLETS - Ricard Moren Alegret, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, UAB / Autonomous University of Barcelona; Dept. of Geography, Institut de Ciencia i Tecnologia Ambientals, UAB-ICTA, Josepha Milazzo, Aix-Marseille Université TELEMMe  
11:40 - 12:00 › Diverse back-to-the-land in contemporary Sweden - Nora Wahlstrom, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences - Emil Sandstrom, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences  
12:00 - 12:20 › Transformative mobilities, hybridization and place attachment: Reflections on the rural-urban relations in Greece - Apostolos G. Papadopoulos, Harokopio University, Department of Geography  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 4: The Role of Arts and Culture for a Sustainable Future in Rural Areas (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - Gesine Tuitjer, Sigrid Kroismayr, Ingrid Machold (+)  
11:00 - 11:15 › The Green Cousin: Ecological Transformation and Rural Development through a “Folk Ballet” - Michael Bell, University of Wisconsin  
11:15 - 11:30 › The arts and culture as contributors to rural development: the role of rural arts festivals. - Marie Mahon, National University of Ireland [Galway], Torsti Hyyrylaïnen, Ruralia Institute, Finland  
11:30 - 11:45 › Neo-endogenous revitalization: Enhancing community resilience through art and creativity-based strategies for rural revitalization - Meng Qu, Hokkaido University [Sapporo, Japan]  
11:45 - 12:00 › Folk culture as a resource for local development and identity reinforcement. Case-study in North-Western Romania - Eniko Veres, Kolozsvár Társaság  
12:00 - 12:15 › Arts as a diverse and dynamic process playing a role in rural development - Shiyu Huang, University of Groningen [Groningen]  
12:15 - 12:30 › Participatory art and the Frisian notion of mienskip: discussing cultural embedment of collective art practices - Carmen Van Bruggen, University of Groningen  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 5: The Sociology of Rural Entrepreneurship (Salle D2 - 24.0.44.) - Gary Bosworth, Robert Newbery (+)  
11:00 - 11:20 › Social media use amongst diversified farm businesses: a netnographic approach - Leanne Townsend, The James Hutton Institute  
11:20 - 11:40 › The role of local entrepreneurs in the process of landscape making - Kiss Márta, Centre for Social Sciences, Corvinus University of Budapest - Csurgó Bernadett, Centre for Social Sciences  
11:40 - 12:00 › “They thought we were just knitting here”: entrepreneurial venture in the rural hinterland. - Nataša Bokan, University of Zagreb Faculty of Agriculture  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 10: Multilocality and centre-periphery relations in the current crises (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - Tarmo Pikner, Marlies Meijer, Pavel Pospěch, Elisabete Figueiredo (+)  
11:00 - 11:15 › The Role of Place in the Expression of Climate Political Discontent in Europe - Théodore Tallent, Centre d'études européennes et de politique comparée (Sciences Po, CNRS)  
11:15 - 11:30 › Anti-urbanism and „real life“ between peripheries and centres - Pavel Pospech, Masaryk University [Brno]  
11:30 - 11:45 › U.S. Exurban Population Growth and Change at the Rural-Urban Fringe, 1990 to 2020 - Daniel Lichter, Cornell University [New York]  
11:45 - 12:00 › Forest fires are coming to town? – Analysis of the media narratives on the impacts of the 2017 Portuguese dramatic rural fires - Elisabete Figueiredo, Department of Social, Political and Territorial Sciences, University of Aveiro, GOVCOPP (Research Unit on Governance, Competitiveness and Public Policies), University of Aveiro, Portugal  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 11: Social and political consequences of spatial inequalities – the rural gap, peripheralisation and left behind rural areas (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.) - Jerzy Bański, Josef Bernard, Luis Camarero, Renato do Carmo, Andreas Klärner, Jesús Oliva, María J. Rivera (+)  
11:00 - 11:15 › On the losing track? How spatial peripheralization matters for the success of right-wing populism in rural areas of Germany - Larissa Deppisch, Thünen Institute of Rural Studies - Andreas Klärner, Thünen Institute of Rural Studies  
11:15 - 11:30 › Unpacking discontent in rural councils in Spain during the Great Recession: from socio-territorial features to social-justice dimensions - Diana Valero, The James Hutton Institute  
11:30 - 11:45 › ‘A rural phenomenon? Left-behind' places in Germany - Jeroen Royer, Leibniz-Institut für Länderkunde  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 12: Rethinking Progress, Rejecting Growth? Agricultural Challenges to Entrenched Trajectories (Salle d'apprentissage - 24.0.05.) - Rob Booth, Steven Emery, Steven McGreevy, Simona Zollet, Mai Kobayashi (+)  
11:00 - 11:15 › Animal traction in France in the 21st century: characteristics and renewal of a peasant practice - Maurice Miara, Espaces et Sociétés, INET, Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Solidarités, Sociétés, Territoires  
11:15 - 11:30 › National food heritage policy and transnational authority: reproducing the hegemony of origin food schemes through expert discourses - Matthew Zinsli, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Universidad San Francisco de Quito  
11:30 - 11:45 › Peasants in the making of a post-growth agriculture: sustainability and livability of alternative farming systems - Elsa Pibou, teacher-researcher in sociology - Alexis Annes, teacher-researcher in sociology  
11:45 - 12:00 › How “Natural wines” redefine the sustainability of the wine sector overcoming the growth paradigm - Stefano Mori, Università della Calabria [Arcavacata di Rende]  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 13: Agroecological transition towards equitable, sustainable and resilient agri-food systems at multiple levels: from family farm communities to organic districts and agroecological clusters (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Simona Zollet, Erika Quendler, Hillary Cheruiyot, Luca Colombo, Giovanni Dara Guccione, Mabel Ifeoma Onwuka, Ray Kancharla, Florence Reed, Alberto Sturla, Charles L. Tumuhe, Noureddin Driouech (+)  
11:10 - 11:20 › Agroecological transformation for socio-economic resilience in indigenous communities: a case study of shifting cultivators in North East India - Ishita Mathur, Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University  
11:30 - 11:40 › Agroecology, Climate Adaptation and Women Economic Empowerment: Case Studies from Bangladesh, Ghana and Rwanda - Aftab Khan, Resilient Future International  
11:40 - 11:50 › THE EFFECT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON AGROECOLOGICAL PRACTICES AND FOOD SECURITY AMONG RURAL, FAMILY AND SMALLHOLDER FARMERS. - Mintoh Nelson, Elvekas Venture and Allied Services, Nelson ICT Services Gembu  
11:50 - 12:00 › Strengthening the resilience of family farmers in the agri-food systems and their nutrition and livelihood in rural communities through Agro ecological approaches: the case of Uganda - Waigolo Joshua, Mt atlas Horticulture Innitiative Organization(MAHIO Horticulture Uganda)  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 15: Food systems in crisis: intersections between conflict, transformation and the post-political (Salle 4eme année - 24.0.20.) - Damian Maye, Gianluca Brunori, Allison-Marie Loconto, Nadine Arnold, Nadine Arnold, Francesca Galli, Joost Dessein, Ritwick Ghosh (+)  
11:00 - 11:20 › From socio-technical transitions to political transition. Food social security: coupling social protection and diet change to achieve the ecological transition - Antoine Bernard De Raymond, Institut National de Recherche pour l'Agriculture, l'Alimentation et l'Environnement  
11:20 - 11:40 › From classical frameworks on transitions to seminal utopia: learnings and inspirations from the 7 French small regions cases in the light of the combination of 3 frameworks - Catherine Darrot, Espaces et Sociétés  
11:40 - 12:00 › A relational approach to transition: identifying the social factors involved in a desirable transition for producers. - Yentl Deroche-Leydier, UMR Innovation  
12:00 - 12:15 › Investigating systemic and social dynamics of food loss and waste: An application of waste regime theory to food production in Aotearoa New Zealand - Trixie Croad, Sociology Association Aotearoa New Zealand  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 16: Transdisciplinary practices to drive transitions to resilient and sustainable food and farming systems to accompany the exit of political crises? (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Jérémie Forney, , Ika Darnhofer, Bertille Thareau, Julie Hermesse, Philipa Nicholas-Davies, Rebekka Frick (+)  
11:00 - 11:10 › Viticultural PDOs facing climate change, a multidisciplinary pedagogical approach for agronomist students. Case of Touraine wine in Loire valley wine region. - Annie SIGWALT, Ecole Supérieure des Agricultures, LARESS - Faustine Ruggieri, UMR SADAPT, INRAE-Campus Agro Paris Saclay - Cécile Coulon-Leroy, Ecole Supérieure des Agricultures, USC 1422 GRAPPE  
11:10 - 11:20 › Transdisciplinarity for agroecological transitions at the scale of territorial food systems: insights from action research experiences in different contexts - Claire Lamine, French National Institute for Agriculture, Food, and Environment (INRAE), France - Fabienne Barataud, French National Institute for Agriculture, Food, and Environment (INRAE), France - Barbara Van Dyck, Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience  
11:20 - 11:30 › A podcast to support the deployment of alternative grain-to-bread chains in Wallonia. An intermediary tool in a transdisciplinary research. - Lou Chaussebourg, Laboratoire d'Économie et Développement Rural, Gembloux Agro Bio-Tech, Université de Liège  
11:30 - 11:40 › Participatory methodologies to promote Agroecology-based Local Agri-food Systems: Assessment of 5 case studies of Local Agroecological Dynamization in Spain - Daniel López-García, Institute of Economy, Geography and Demography. Spanish National Research Council, Entretantos Foundation  
11:50 - 12:00 › Using transdisciplinary approaches for co-creating sustainable transformations of food supply chains - Rebecka Milestad, Royal Institute of Technology [Stockholm]  
12:00 - 12:10 › MIXED: A transdisciplinary collaboration with Swiss high-stem fruit farmers - Robert Home, Research Institute of Organic Agriculture  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 17: Behind the scenes: working conditions, quality of life, and the future of farming (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.) - Florence Becot - Hannah Budge - Majda Černič Istenič - Shoshanah Inwood - Lutz Laschewski - David Meredith - Marie Reusch - Georg Wiesinger (+)  
11:00 - 11:20 › A call to update our understanding of family farm persistence and reproduction through a focus on the farm household-farm operation interface - Florence Becot, National Farm Medicine Center  
11:20 - 11:40 › An examination of women in crofting households in the Scottish Islands - Hannah Budge, Newcastle University [Newcastle]  
11:40 - 12:00 › The conundrum of childcare and safety on the farm - Shoshanah Inwood, Ohio State University [Wooster]  
12:00 - 12:15 › Work-life balance on a farm with young children - Majda Cernic Istenic, Sociomedical institute at the ZRC SAZU  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 21: Responding to present and future crises in rural areas: good practice methodologies and approaches (Salle D3 - 24.0.43.) - Christina Noble, Ruth Wilson, Erika Hayfield, Anita Busljeta Tonkovic, Ivan Brlic, Ema Basic (+)  
11:00 - 11:10 › Agri-Food Value Chains' Sustainability Assessment – A New Guiding Analytical Framework - Tarek ALLALI, University of Pisa - Università di Pisa  
11:10 - 11:20 › A Critique of Mainstreamization of the Agrifood System Perspective's Critical Content via the Agrifood System Discourse Itself - Atakan Büke, Leipzig University, Research Centre Global Dynamics  
11:10 - 11:20 › Contextualizing vulnerability for understanding negative impacts on rural communities - Lukas Zagata, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague  
11:20 - 11:30 › The future of food for actors in the agri-food system: sustainability debates in the case of Asturias (Spain) - Rocío Pérez-Gañán, University of Oviedo  
11:30 - 11:40 › The persistence of memory. Evidence for a new narrative on the problem of rural property in Chile. - Eduardo Villavicencio, University of Kent [Canterbury]  
11:40 - 11:50 › How virtual nature can engage rural communities to visualise nature-based solutions - Claire Hardy, The James Hutton Institute  
11:50 - 12:00 › Facing multiple crisis: remote coastal communities in Iceland - Matthias Kokorsch, University Centre of the Westfjords  
12:00 - 12:10 › Interdisciplinary challenges in future rural research - responding to multiple crises - Imre Kovách, Institute of Sociology, Centre of Social Sceinces - Karl Bruckmeier, South Bohemian University at Ceske Budejoivice  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 24: Rewilding: a transformative solution to rural crises across Europe (Salle d'analyse sensorielle - 24.0.11.) - Virginia Thomas, Anna Gilchrist, Joe Glentworth, Kim Ward (+)  
11:05 - 11:10 › Trajectories of conservation, rewilding and rural land use in Britain - Sophie Wynne Jones, Bangor University  
11:10 - 11:15 › Interdependent trajectories of rewilding: stories from the case study of rural planning policies in the Gauja National Park in Latvia - Renars Felcis, University of Latvia  
11:15 - 11:20 › Exploring knowledge production, integration, and decision-making in UK rewilding initiatives - Emma Cary, School of Geosciences [Aberdeen] - Flurina Wartmann, School of Geosciences [Aberdeen]  
11:20 - 11:25 › What does a transition to a nature-based economy look like to English upland farmers? - Joe Glentworth, Sheffield Hallam University  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 26: Past and future: An intergenerational dialog on the critical analysis of the past agricultural modernization processes (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Véronique Lucas, Terry Marsden, Jan Douwe van der Ploeg, Céline Pessis (+)  
11:00 - 11:30 › Uses of Tractors for Social Change - Derya Nizam, Izmir University of Economics  
11:30 - 12:00 › Scaling Up Pig Farming: Livestock Buildings as Instruments for the Rationalization of Pig Farms in 1970s France - Marc-Olivier Déplaude, Institut de Recherche Interdisciplinaire en Sciences Sociales  
12:00 - 12:30 › Agricultural Modernization, faced with the question of coloniality - Marie-Hélène VERGOTE, Institut Agro Dijon, Centre d'Economie et de Sociologie Rurales Appliquées à l'Agriculture et aux Espaces Ruraux  
11:00 - 12:30 WG 29: Place making, local identity and rural image: New ways to understand and explore their role in rural restructuring (Salle D1 -24.0.45) - CSURGÓ, Bernadett; HORZSA, Gergely; KISS, Márta; MEGYESI Boldizsár (+)  
11:05 - 11:25 › Entangled rurality: rural places in alternative food networks  - Wojciech Goszczynski, Nicolaus Copernicus University [Toruń]  
11:25 - 11:45 › Collective Action in Localization Movement - Derya Nizam, Izmir University of Economics  
11:45 - 12:05 › Resilience and the quality of life in rural Croatia - Vladimir Ivanović, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Department of Sociology, University of Zagreb  
12:30 - 14:00 Lunch (Batt 24 Corridor)  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 1: Shifting mobilities in times of crisis: Exploring new rural and island migration flows in a disorderly world (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.) - Jane Atterton, Emil Sandström, Luke Dilley, Menealos Gkartzios, Nora Wahlström, Ruth Wilson (+)  
14:00 - 14:20 › A stranger in my village? Rural Poland in the face of Ukrainian migration after the outbreak of war in Ukraine. - Ruta Śpiewak, Ruta Spiewak  
14:20 - 14:40 › Essential but invisible: mobilities and rural crisis in Southern Italy - Alessandra Corrado, University of Calabria  
14:40 - 15:00 › Just a way station to the city? The rural and the urban in the migratory trajectories of international immigrants living in rural areas. - Rosario Sampedro, University of Valladolid  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 4: The Role of Arts and Culture for a Sustainable Future in Rural Areas (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - Gesine Tuitjer, Sigrid Kroismayr, Ingrid Machold (+)  
14:00 - 14:15 › A study on agricultural art initiatives in Austria - Ingrid Machold, Federal Institute of Agricultural Economics, Rural and Mountain Research - Karin Heinschink, Federal Institute of Agricultural Economics, Rural and Mountain Research  
14:15 - 14:30 › Participatory research and cultural co-creation in rural Hungary: A photo-voice experiment with small-scale food producers - Alexandra Czeglédi, Environmental Social Science Research Group (ESSRG)  
14:30 - 14:45 › Participatory art projects in local development: top-down and bottom-up forces at play - Gwenda Van der Vaart, University of Groningen  
14:45 - 15:00 › Designers, dreamers, envisioners, facilitators: the multiple roles of the designer in co-creative projects for rural areas. - Sonia Massari, University of Pisa - Università di Pisa  
15:00 - 15:15 › “Is this healthy lifestyle really enough?” – The Lack of Cultural Offer in Croatia's Rural Region of Lika and Possible Solutions - Ema Bašić, Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 5: The Sociology of Rural Entrepreneurship (Salle D2 - 24.0.44.) - Gary Bosworth, Robert Newbery (+)  
14:00 - 14:20 › "Towards Equitable Rural Development: A Comparative Study of Social Entrepreneurship and Indigenous Economic Practices" - Thein Manimekalai Sowrirajan, Politecnico di Milano  
14:20 - 14:40 › Legitimising ‘local' : a processual conceptualisation of the social embeddedness of rural social entrepreneurship - Arno Lizet, Centre d'études européennes et de politique comparée (Sciences Po, CNRS), Laboratoire interdisciplinaire d'évaluation des politiques publiques (Sciences Po)  
14:40 - 15:00 › Mapping Social Enterprises and their Impact on Sustainable Rural Development in Ireland - Lucas Olmedo, University College Cork  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 10: Multilocality and centre-periphery relations in the current crises (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - Tarmo Pikner, Marlies Meijer, Pavel Pospěch, Elisabete Figueiredo (+)  
14:00 - 14:15 › Virtual Multi-Localities and Staying Connected: Rural Stayers and 'Reverse' Place Elasticity - Tialda Haartsen, University of Groningen  
14:15 - 14:30 › Traditional rural provenance food products as bridges between peripheral rural areas and urban territories - Elisabete Figueiredo, Department of Social, Political and Territorial Sciences, University of Aveiro, GOVCOPP (Research Unit on Governance, Competitiveness and Public Policies), University of Aveiro, Portugal  
14:30 - 14:45 › An investigation of factors influencing the pro-environmental behavior in resource-poor and resource-rich rural areas: A developing country case - Maryam Sharifzadeh, Department of Rural Development Management, Yasouj University, Iran  
14:45 - 15:00 › More-than-urban assemblages entangled to energy transitions - Tarmo Pikner, Tarmo Pikner  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 11: Social and political consequences of spatial inequalities – the rural gap, peripheralisation and left behind rural areas (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.) - Jerzy Bański, Josef Bernard, Luis Camarero, Renato do Carmo, Andreas Klärner, Jesús Oliva, María J. Rivera (+)  
14:00 - 14:20 › Right and left-wing populist desires: Trajectory for rural areas in Greece and Turkey - Fatma Nil Doner, University of the Basque Country/Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea  
14:20 - 14:20 › Looking at the rural-urban relations in Latin American metropolises: the case of São Paulo, Brazil - MARIA LUCIA BELLENZANI, Universidade Federal do ABC = Federal University of ABC = Université Fédérale de l'ABC [Brazil]  
14:40 - 15:00 › Populism and the creeping crisis of neoliberalism in rural Norway - Natalia Mamonova, Institute for Rural and Regional Research - RURALIS - Eirik Magnus Fuglestad, Institute for Rural and Regional Research - RURALIS - Katrina Rønningen, Institute for Rural and Regional Research - RURALIS  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 12: Rethinking Progress, Rejecting Growth? Agricultural Challenges to Entrenched Trajectories (Salle d'apprentissage - 24.0.05.) - Rob Booth, Steven Emery, Steven McGreevy, Simona Zollet, Mai Kobayashi (+)  
14:00 - 14:20 › On the ambiguity of unmaking growth and progress in the Italian Alps: theoretical considerations from ethnography - Marco Immovilli, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen]  
14:20 - 14:40 › The cooperation dilemma: Can agricultural cooperatives sustainably and fairly overcome their entrenched vision and trajectories of progress and growth? The case of Spain. - Raquel Ajates, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia  
14:40 - 15:00 › Growing What's Good: Manifestations of Horticultural Progress in England - Rob Booth, University of Birmingham  
15:00 - 15:20 › Crisis and Progress in Agricultural Transition in the UK - Steven Emery, University of Exeter  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 13: Agroecological transition towards equitable, sustainable and resilient agri-food systems at multiple levels: from family farm communities to organic districts and agroecological clusters (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Simona Zollet, Erika Quendler, Hillary Cheruiyot, Luca Colombo, Giovanni Dara Guccione, Mabel Ifeoma Onwuka, Ray Kancharla, Florence Reed, Alberto Sturla, Charles L. Tumuhe, Noureddin Driouech (+)  
14:10 - 14:20 › Agroecology practices and its knowledge as an enabler for more sustainability among smallholder family farmers, in case of Sub-Saharan Africa - Hillary Cheruiyot, Eastern Africa Farmers Federation  
14:20 - 14:30 › Pesticidal plants can sustain diverse crop production among smallholder Farmers, portraying context specific strategies. Experiences from Tanzania - Angela Mkindi, The Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science and Technology  
14:30 - 14:40 › DEPLOYING DIGITAL TOOL FOR AGRICULTURAL INFORMATION ON FAMILY FARM AND AGROECOLOGY IN NIGERIA - Sunday OGUNJIMI, Federal University Oye-Ekiti  
14:50 - 15:00 › La construction des connaissances technico-scientifiques en agroécologie au Brésil et la prouesse des centres d'études en agroécologie (NEA) - Daniela Aparecida Pacifico, Laboratoire d'Etudes Rurales – LERU | Université Fédérale de Santa Catarina - UFSC - Cristiano Desconsi, Laboratoire d'Etudes Rurales – LERU | Université Fédérale de Santa Catarina - UFSC  
15:00 - 15:10 › Grassland 2.0: Transformative Change through Collaboration in the American Midwest - Michael Bell, University of Wisconsin  
15:10 - 15:20 › Farmers perception, adaptation mechanisms and viability of the implementation of agroecological practices on collective rangelands - Mariem Sghaier, Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Ghent, International Centre for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas [Tunisie]  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 15: Food systems in crisis: intersections between conflict, transformation and the post-political (Salle 4eme année - 24.0.20.) - Damian Maye, Gianluca Brunori, Allison-Marie Loconto, Nadine Arnold, Nadine Arnold, Francesca Galli, Joost Dessein, Ritwick Ghosh (+)  
14:00 - 14:20 › Exploring the symbolic environments of material transitions to sustainability in the farming sector. An experimental approach - Daniel López-García, Institute of Economy, Geography and Demography. Spanish National Research Council, Entretantos Foundation  
14:20 - 14:40 › Combining political ecology and pragmatist sociology to address just ecological food systems' transformations at the territorial scale - Claire Lamine, INRAE ECODEVELOPPEMENT - Claudia SCHMITT, UFRRJ  
14:40 - 15:00 › Food governance in Asturias and Amazonas: a comparative study - Rocío Pérez-Gañán, University of Oviedo  
15:00 - 15:15 › PATHWAYS FOR GREEN TRANSITION! Farm-level analysis of social capital in three multifunctional farms in Denmark (A PhD, monography) - Linddal Jeppesen, University of Roskilde  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 16: Transdisciplinary practices to drive transitions to resilient and sustainable food and farming systems to accompany the exit of political crises? (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Jérémie Forney, , Ika Darnhofer, Bertille Thareau, Julie Hermesse, Philipa Nicholas-Davies, Rebekka Frick (+)  
14:00 - 14:10 › Sound interdisciplinarity for better transdisciplinarity: an autoethnography on the Foodiverse project on diversity for sustainable food systems. - Margherita Brunori, University of Brescia  
14:10 - 14:20 › Operationalisation of Living Labs in agriculture and forestry: A Meta-analysis of H2020 and Horizon Europe projects - Maria Rivera Méndez, MED – Mediterranean Institute for Agriculture, Environment and Development & CHANGE – Global Change and Sustainability Institute - Catarina Esgalhado, MED – Mediterranean Institute for Agriculture, Environment and Development & CHANGE – Global Change and Sustainability Institute - Teresa Pinto-Correia, MED – Mediterranean Institute for Agriculture, Environment and Development & CHANGE – Global Change and Sustainability Institute  
14:20 - 14:30 › A decade of Living Labs: Researchers' reflections on the approach and their own role in shaping TD processes can help accelerate sustainability transitions in rural areas - Marina Knickel, Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research  
14:30 - 14:40 › Living labs as science-policy interfaces: co-design innovative contractual solutions to deliver agri-environmental and climate public goods - Boldizsár Megyesi, Environmental Social Science Research Group Nonprofit Ltd., Centre for Social Sciences  
14:40 - 14:50 › Supporting a just transition from the ground up: living labs and the deliberative wave - Damian Maye, Countryside and Community Research Institute [Cheltenham]  
14:50 - 15:00 › A bottom up approach to living lab recruitment: building agency and trust amongst ‘difficult to reach' participants - Claire Hardy, The James Hutton Institute  
15:00 - 15:10 › Co-design of insect-friendly farming systems in Landscape Labs – Experiences from a transdisciplinary process for a sustainable landscape transformation - Maria Busse, Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF)  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 17: Behind the scenes: working conditions, quality of life, and the future of farming (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.) - Florence Becot - Hannah Budge - Majda Černič Istenič - Shoshanah Inwood, Lutz Laschewski, David Meredith, Marie Reusch, Georg Wiesinger (+)  
14:05 - 14:20 › Young farmers in “The New World of Work”: The contribution of new media to the work engagement and farmer identity - Ilkay Unay-Gailhard, Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Development in Transition Economies, The Pennsylvania State University (PSU)  
14:20 - 14:35 › Building a “Farm” and Building a “Home” in Rural Japan: Challenges of Migration - Keiko Tanaka, University of Kentucky  
14:35 - 14:50 › Investment, performance, and value of farms: the case of farm transfer in France - Philippe Jeanneaux, UMR Territoires  
14:50 - 15:05 › Comparative Study on Women's Farmland Ownership in Japan and Austria - Yukiko Otomo, Jumonji University  
15:05 - 15:20 › (Not) in the blood?: Exploring the role of kinship in women farmers' experiences - Bethany Robertson, University of Leeds  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 21: Responding to present and future crises in rural areas: good practice methodologies and approaches (Salle D3 - 24.0.43.) - Sylvia Snijders, Kin Wing (Ray) Chan, Alison Rieple (Emeritus Professor), Jing Zhang (+)  
14:00 - 14:10 › Sparsely populated and less developed rural areas in Croatia trough a multidisciplinary research group lens - Anita Busljeta Tonkovic, Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar  
14:10 - 14:20 › Understanding change in rural/island places during a crisis: The solicited diary method - Erika Anne Hayfield, University of the Faroe Islands  
14:20 - 14:30 › More than rural entrepreneurship: a multiplier effect of the local food system in rural communities - Liga Paula, Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies  
14:30 - 14:40 › Reliance and Capacity: A proposed typology for framing crisis strategy in Scotland's islands - Kirsten Gow, University of Aberdeen, The James Hutton Institute  
14:40 - 14:50 › Enabling change in times of crisis: a novel Living Lab approach to policy-oriented rural community research - Ruth Wilson, The James Hutton Institute - Christina Noble, The James Hutton Institute  
14:50 - 15:00 › (In)stability of the project's methodological assumptions – a problem or an opportunity? - Elwira Piszczek, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń (NCU)  
15:00 - 15:15 › Mapping of policy options in scenarios for digital future in Europe, using a living lab approach - Sylvain Quiédeville, Research Institute of Organic Agriculture - Forschungsinstitut für biologischen Landbau  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 24: Rewilding: a transformative solution to rural crises across Europe (Salle d'analyse sensorielle - 24.0.11.) - Virginia Thomas, Anna Gilchrist, Joe Glentworth, Kim Ward (+)  
14:05 - 14:10 › (Multi-species) Justice and Rewilding - Kim Ward, University of Plymouth  
14:10 - 14:15 › Other than human animals in rural landscapes and socioecological communities - Virginia Thomas, University of Exeter  
14:15 - 14:20 › Hawks, walks or stalk? The competing priorities of rewilding and recreation in the UK uplands - Anna Gilchrist, Univeristy of Manchester  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 26: Past and future: An intergenerational dialog on the critical analysis of the past agricultural modernization processes (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Véronique Lucas, Terry Marsden, Jan Douwe van der Ploeg, Céline Pessis (+)  
14:00 - 14:30 › 60 years of amnesia - The role of expert systems in the agricultural modernization of Réunion island. - Piccin Luca, CEDD/Université de Neuchâtel  
14:30 - 15:00 › Land consolidation as seen by the social sciences in France, 1950-2023 - Léandre Mandard, Centre d'histoire de Sciences Po (Sciences Po)  
15:00 - 15:30 › Understanding modernization as actively moving frontiers - Jan Douwe VAN DER PLOEG, Rural Sociology Group - Wageningen University, College of Humanities and Development Studies, China Agricultural University, Beijing  
14:00 - 15:30 WG 29: Place making, local identity and rural image: New ways to understand and explore their role in rural restructuring (Salle D1 -24.0.45) - Bernadett Csurgo, HORZSA, Gergely Horzsa, Márta Kiss Boldizsár Megyesi (+)  
14:05 - 14:25 › Social Isolation from the Perspective of Identity in Rural Territories of Latvia - Dina Bite, Riga Stradiņš University  
14:25 - 14:45 › Living, not leaving the village: place attachment and rural livelihoods in the Republic of Moldova - Daniela Ana, Leibniz Institute of Agricultural Development in Transition Economies  
15:05 - 15:25 › Rural spaces potentialities in creating sense of place through cultural ecosystem services among female - Ensi Ghorbanzadeh, Sakineh Ghorbanzadeh  
15:30 - 16:00 Coffee break (Batt 24 Corridor)  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 3: Population Change and Rural Societies (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.) - David L. Brown, Neil Argent, Ilona Matysiak, Darren Smith (+)  
16:00 - 16:15 › A changing environment? Amenity-led migration, counterurbanisation and rural change - Neil Argent, University of New England  
16:15 - 16:30 › Impact of COVID-19 Across Vulnerable and Marginalized Groups in the Rural U.S. - David Peters, Iowa State University  
16:30 - 16:45 › What Explains the Rural Disadvantage in COVID-19 Cases and Deaths during the Delta-Omicron Surge? - Shannon Monnat, Syracuse University  
16:45 - 17:00 › The Covid-19 Pandemic in the United States: Who Moved, Why, and Where? - Uzi Rebhun, Hebrew University, Jerusalem  
17:00 - 17:15 › Determinants of food security at indigenous chiquitanos and interculturals households of Chiquitania Province - Bolivia - ZOREL GOMEZ VARGAS, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering [Ghent]  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 5: The Sociology of Rural Entrepreneurship (Salle D2 - 24.0.44.) - Gary Bosworth, Robert Newbery (+)  
16:00 - 16:20 › Entrepreneurial Environment in Rural Society: Reflection on Emerging Entrepreneurial Models for Social Transformation in North East India - Aparajeeta Borkakoty, Gauhati University - Saptadweepa Shandilya, Gauhati University  
16:20 - 16:40 › Rural Entrepreneurs in the Sky: The Niceair micro-airline in Northern Iceland - Thoroddur Bjarnason, University of Iceland, University of Akureyri  
16:40 - 17:00 › Youth entrepreneurship as a driver of sustainable development in rural areas: The case of Geographical Indications - Federica Consentino, University of Catania - Department of Agriculture, Food and Environment  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 10: Multilocality and centre-periphery relations in the current crises (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - armo Pikner, Marlies Meijer, Pavel Pospěch, Elisabete Figueiredo (+)  
16:00 - 16:20 › The rural gap in the words of its protagonists. Advantages and disadvantages of living in a town. - Julio A. Del Pino, UNED  
16:20 - 16:40 › Current Issues Relating to Women in The Forest and Forestry in Japan and Some EU Countries - Hitomi Nakamichi, Kyoto Women's University, Hitomi Nakamichi  
16:40 - 17:00 › Are Grassroot Community Spaces Empowering Rural Communities? A Transformative Social Innovation Perspective from Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany. - Hussels Jonathan, Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 11: Social and political consequences of spatial inequalities – the rural gap, peripheralisation and left behind rural areas (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.) - Jerzy Bański, Josef Bernard, Luis Camarero, Renato do Carmo, Andreas Klärner, Jesús Oliva, María J. Rivera (+)  
16:00 - 16:20 › Portugal, a dualist society composed by multiple forms of vulnerability - Renato Carmo, Iscte - University Institute of Lisbon  
16:20 - 16:40 › Social inequality and the rural gap: What are the long-term socio-economic outcomes for children growing up in rural disadvantaged areas? - Alexander Zahl-Thanem, Ruralis - Institute for rural and regional research  
16:40 - 17:00 › Looking at rural cosmopolitanism from a rural area in Navarre (Spain) - Ion Martínez Lorea, Public University of Navarre  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 12: Rethinking Progress, Rejecting Growth? Agricultural Challenges to Entrenched Trajectories (Salle d'apprentissage - 24.0.05.) - Rob Booth, Steven Emery, Steven McGreevy, Simona Zollet, Mai Kobayashi (+)  
16:00 - 16:15 › Chinese home and guerrilla gardening: The importance of preventing the loss of already existing sustainability - Petr Jehlička, Institute of Sociology, Czech Academy of Sciences  
16:15 - 16:30 › The multiple significances of self-produced food in achieving environmental justice - Huidi Ma, Leisure Studies Centre, Chinese National Academy of Arts  
16:30 - 16:45 › Why don't community landowners farm? Investigating a Land Reform paradox in Scotland - Roz Corbett, The James Hutton Institute  
16:45 - 17:00 › Architecture as a qualitative indicator of agricultural (de)growth - Guillaume NICOLAS, Université de Rouen Normandie, École nationale supérieure d'architecture de Normandie  
17:00 - 17:15 › Reclaiming abandoned land in France: a non-linear story of agricultural modernization - Amelia Veitch, École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Université de Lausanne = University of Lausanne  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 13: Agroecological transition towards equitable, sustainable and resilient agri-food systems at multiple levels: from family farm communities to organic districts and agroecological clusters (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Simona Zollet, Erika Quendler, Hillary Cheruiyot, Luca Colombo, Giovanni Dara Guccione, Mabel Ifeoma Onwuka, Ray Kancharla, Florence Reed, Alberto Sturla, Charles L. Tumuhe, Noureddin Driouech (+)  
16:00 - 16:10 › What are the Values of Alternative Food Systems? - Rike Stotten, Leopold Franzens Universität Innsbruck - University of Innsbruck  
16:10 - 16:20 › The future of family farming in Hungary? Producers of a shopping community in a rural small town - Adrienne Csizmady, Centre for Social Sciences, Hungarian Academy of Sciences Centre of Excellence - Anett Bugyi, University of Szeged [Szeged]  
16:20 - 16:30 › Assessing the agroecological performance and sustainability of Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) in Flanders, Belgium - Ruben Savels, Department of Agricultural Economics, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Ghent University  
16:30 - 16:40 › Market Shares or Risk Sharing? First Results from the Worldwide Census of Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) - Jocelyn Parot, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen = Justus Liebig University  
16:40 - 16:50 › The role of the retail sector in sustaining demand for agro-biodiverse food grown in agro-ecological conditions - Dalia Mattioni, University of Pisa  
16:50 - 17:00 › Agroecological entrepreneurship? Exploring the construction of organic markets in Tanzania - Francisco Garrido Garza, Institut National de Recherche pour l'Agriculture, l'Alimentation et l'Environnement (INRAE)  
17:00 - 17:10 › Building Resilience Capacity of Small-scale Producers in Short Food Supply Chains to External Shocks: The Interplay of Resilience Attributes and Entrepreneurial Orientation - Elvia Merino-Gaibor, Ghent University, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Department of Agricultural Economics  
17:10 - 17:20 › Urban food sovereignty through public procurement? – the role of Food Policy Councils and Organic Cities for sustainable school food - Birgit Hoinle, University of Hohenheim, Institute of Social Sciences in Agriculture, Dep. Societal Transition & Agriculture  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 15: Food systems in crisis: intersections between conflict, transformation and the post-political (Salle 4eme année - 24.0.20.) - Damian Maye, Gianluca Brunori, Allison-Marie Loconto, Nadine Arnold, Nadine Arnold, Francesca Galli, Joost Dessein, Ritwick Ghosh (+)  
16:00 - 16:20 › Building shared food system representations: food system mapping as a tool for policies - Francesca Galli, University of Pisa  
16:20 - 16:40 › Systems mapping processes: How designing complexity fosters or inhibits the collective imagining of sustainable agri-food transformations - Marija Roglic, Montpellier Business School  
16:40 - 17:00 › Proposals for a methodological framework to assess food systems resilience and sustainability : a case study in Nouvelle-Aquitaine (France) - Margaux Alarcon, Environnement, territoires en transition, infrastructures, sociétés  
17:00 - 17:20 › Mobilising the food system concept in times of crisis: unpacking debates and applications - Damian Maye, Countryside and Community Research Institute [Cheltenham]  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 16: Transdisciplinary practices to drive transitions to resilient and sustainable food and farming systems to accompany the exit of political crises? (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Jérémie Forney, , Ika Darnhofer, Bertille Thareau, Julie Hermesse, Philipa Nicholas-Davies, Rebekka Frick (+)  
16:00 - 16:10 › A school-entreprise Chair, a device for co-creation and mobilization across professional antagonsims - Bertille Thareau, Ecole Supérieure des Agricultures  
16:10 - 16:20 › A transdisciplinary approach to support the development of mixed farming and agro-forestry systems. - Phillipa Nicholas-Davies, Aberystwyth University  
16:20 - 16:30 › Citizen Science as a transdisciplinary practice to address the agri-food crisis: Insights from a literature review of citizen science in agriculture and food research - Alexandra Czeglédi, Environmental Social Science Research Group (ESSRG)  
16:30 - 16:40 › Citizen Science as a transdisciplinary practice to address the agri-food crisis: Insights from the European Citizen Science Association's 10 principles of Citizen Science - Petra Benyei, Instituto de Economía, Geografía y Demografía (CSIC), ECSA Agri-Food WG  
16:40 - 16:50 › Fostering provision of socio-ecological benefits of agriculture through transdisciplinary research in Germany - Simone Sterly, Institute for Rural Development Research - IfLS - Ribana Bergmann, Institute for Rural Development Research - IfLS  
16:50 - 17:00 › Challenges and potential of integrative scenario development approaches in agri-food systems transformation - Hannah Bücheler, University of Hohenheim  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 17: Behind the scenes: working conditions, quality of life, and the future of farming (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.) - Florence Becot - Hannah Budge - Majda Černič Istenič - Shoshanah Inwood, Lutz Laschewski, David Meredith, Marie Reusch, Georg Wiesinger (+)  
16:00 - 16:20 › What kind of working conditions are suitable for peer-to-peer cooperation and agroecological transition in dairy farms? The example of Brittany - Anne-Lise Jacquot, UMR PEGASE, L'institut Agro Rennes-Angers  
16:20 - 16:40 › Working together : challenges for farming groups - Helene Brives, Isara  
16:40 - 17:00 › WWOOFing : work organisation and social production relationships of a new form of unpaid work in agriculture - Marie Barisaux, Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3  
17:00 - 17:15 › Disentangling the organization of agricultural labour in two contrasted farming systems: key factors and challenges for sustainability. - Carmen Capdevila Murillo, University of Barcelona  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 19: Multiple Dimensions of Sustainability: Towards New Rural Futures in Europe (Salle d'analyse sensorielle - 24.0.11.) - Ruth McAreavey, Seema Arora-Jonsson / 5 panellists + debate: concept of crisis in rural Europe; tensions between multiple dimensions of sustainability in food production; governance and sustainability (+)  
16:00 - 17:30 › This WG19 is a panel debate comprised of five panellists (two of whom will be early career) who will give short (five minute) presentations before opening up to discussion - Ruth McAreavey, Newcastle University; Seema Arora-Jonsson, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 21: Responding to present and future crises in rural areas: good practice methodologies and approaches (Salle D3 - 24.0.43.) - Christina Noble, Ruth Wilson, Erika Hayfield, Anita Busljeta Tonkovic, Ivan Brlic, Ema Basic (+)  
16:10 - 16:20 › Researching Brexit: the contentious politics of nation and belonging in rural places and why methods matter - Sarah Neal, University of Sheffield  
16:20 - 16:30 › Crisis of the Rural Commons”: The challenges and opportunities in Konkan bio-cultural Landscapes - Saili Palande-Datar, Principal Investigator, Bio-cultural documentation of Konkan Sadas- Imagining Futures & Honarary Research fellow, University of Exeter, UK  
16:30 - 16:40 › Navigating digital ethics for rural research - Christina Noble, The James Hutton Institute  
16:40 - 16:50 › The governance challenges of inclusive green transitions: China's practice of solar PV for poverty alleviation - Kejia Yang, TIK Centre for Technology Innovation and Culture, University of Oslo  
16:50 - 17:00 › Co-creating knowledge during convergence of crises in management of natural resources - Renars Felcis, University of Latvia  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 26: Past and future: An intergenerational dialog on the critical analysis of the past agricultural modernization processes (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Véronique Lucas, Terry Marsden, Jan Douwe van der Ploeg, Céline Pessis (+)  
16:00 - 16:30 › Towards the end of the traditional French Family farm - Philippe Jeanneaux, UMR Territoires  
16:30 - 17:00 › Breaking Up the Past: When Modernizing Agriculture Meant Smaller Scale - Michael Bell, University of Wisconsin  
17:00 - 17:30 › Agrarian changes in China: the Emergence of Alternative Elites? - Jean Tassin, East China Normal University [Shanghaï], Triangle : action, discours, pensée politique et économique  
16:00 - 17:30 WG 30: Participatory local development policies like LEADER and CLLD - what do we see? (Salle D1 -24.0.45) - Annette Aagaard Thuesen, Petra Raue, Kim Pollermann (+)  
16:00 - 16:15 › Gender issues in rural governance: experiences within the LEADER approach - Petra Raue, Thuenen-Institute of Rural studies - Lynn-Livia Finn, Thuenen-Institute of Rural studies  
16:15 - 16:30 › The LEADER programme management class. What are the territorial development implications? Case study of Croatia - Marija Roglic, Montpellier Business School  
16:30 - 16:45 › Evalutaing general societal effects of the LEADER project and the effects of perceived local opportunity structures on local agency and community formation in rural Hungary - Gergely Horzsa, Centre for Social Sciences, Budapest  
16:45 - 17:00 › How Innovative are LEADER projects? Evidence from project-level data - Conor Judge, Department of Sociology, University of Oxford [Oxford], Nuffield College, University of Oxford  
17:00 - 17:15 › The evolution of EU governance models from LEADER to EIP-AGRI & Horizon Programmes: insights to future prospects for the success of interactive innovation - Aine MackenWalsh, Teagasc  
16:00 - 17:30 Farmwell (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.)  
17:30 - 19:00 Sociologia Ruralis Editorial Board Meeting (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.)  
18:00 - 19:30 Book launch: Mark Shucksmith, Jayne Glass, Polly Chapman, Jane Atterton, 2023,"Rural Poverty Today: Experiences of Social Exclusion in Rural Britain", Policy press (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.)  
18:00 - 19:30 Book launch: Pia Heike, Tietjen Anne, Iversen Evald Bundgård, Lolle Henrik Lauridsen, FiskeJens Kaae (eds), 2023, Rural quality of life, Manchester University Press (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Pia Heike Johansen  
18:00 - 19:30 Book launch (Surprise book!), The newly published edited international volume presents a collection of papers on rural society, power relations, and social cohesion. The edited volume presents empirically based studies from different European countries to celebrate the anniversary of a member of the ESRS. (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.)  
18:00 - 19:30 Book launch: Pavel Pospěch, Eirik Magnus Fuglestad, Elisabete Figueiredo (eds.), 2022, Politics and Policies of Rural Authenticity, Routledge (Salle 4eme année - 24.0.20.) - Pavel Pospěch  
18:00 - 19:30 Book launch: Alabrese Mariagrazia, Bessa Adriana, Brunori Margherita, Giuggioli Pier Filippo, 2022, The United Nations' Declaration on Peasants' Rights, Routledge (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Margherita Brunori  

Friday, July 7, 2023

Time Event (+)
09:00 - 10:20 Sociologia Ruralise plenary session- International migration and rural communities: continuity, change and future prospects (Amphithéâtre Matagrin) - Jakub Stachowski  
10:20 - 10:45 Coffee break (Batt 24 Corridor)  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 3: Population Change and Rural Societies (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.) - David L. Brown, Neil Argent, Ilona Matysiak, Darren Smith (+)  
10:45 - 11:00 › A tale of two rural populations? The contrasting fortunes of Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations in rural Northern New South Wales, Australia - Neil Argent, University of New England  
11:00 - 11:15 › Interior regions in Portugal: demographics, problems and (im)possible solutions - Maria Antónia Almeida, Instituto Universitário de Lisboa  
11:15 - 11:30 › Depopulation, Deaths, Diversity, and Deprivation: The 4D's of Rural Population Change - Daniel Lichter, Cornell University [New York]  
11:30 - 11:45 › Population dynamics and new house building in Britain's changing ‘Rural Capital of Food' - Darren Smith, Department of Geography [Loughborough]  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 6: Civil society engagement in rural areas in troubled times (Salle D2 - 24.0.44.) - Anna Sitek, Tuuli-Marja Kleiner, Sylvia Keim-Klärner, Jessica Brensing (+)  
10:45 - 11:00 › The impact of civic engagement on civic engagement. How volunteers promote or hinder each other. - André Knabe, Thünen-Institut für Regionalentwicklung - Anna Eckert, Thünen-Institut für Regionalentwicklung  
11:00 - 11:15 › Processes of patronage in civil society: the reproduction of elites in rural Wales - Jesse Heley, Aberystwyth University  
11:15 - 11:30 › Rural Lives during Covid-19: The Role of Civil Society - Mark Shucksmith, Newcastle University  
11:30 - 11:45 › Rural Civil Society and Political Polarization: Negotiating Black Lives Matter in an English Small Town - Michael Woods, Aberystwyth University  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 7: Rural Quality of Life: Gender and other perspectives (Salle formation continue FC1 - 24.0.54.) - Pia Heike Johansen, Jens Kaae Fisker, Sally Shortall (+)  
10:45 - 11:00 › “Women were taught to stay at home, keep quiet, obey their husbands and raise the kids. Today, things have changed.”: Women's experience of rural life in Croatia - Vladimir Ivanović, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Department of Sociology, University of Zagreb  
11:00 - 11:15 › Stigmatization, differential treatment, and social isolation: Narratives and experiences of female breadwinning couples in Pakistan - Rahat Shah, Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main  
11:15 - 11:30 › RURAL WOMEN ARE NOT PASSIVE RECIPIENTS TO RURAL CHANGE: A focus on resilience to enhance women's quality of life in rural areas - Louise Weir, National University of Ireland [Galway], Martina Roche, Maynooth University  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 11: Social and political consequences of spatial inequalities – the rural gap, peripheralisation and left behind rural areas (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.) - Jerzy Bański, Josef Bernard, Luis Camarero, Renato do Carmo, Andreas Klärner, Jesús Oliva, María J. Rivera (+)  
10:45 - 11:05 › Differentiation by Function, Potential, or Engagement. Logics in Strategic Village Planning and their implication on spatial justice. - Kasper Friis Bavnbæk, University of Southern Denmark  
11:05 - 11:25 › Local resilience in the ultra-rural North – challenges and opportunities in civil protection and preparedness - Sophie Kolmodin, Mid Sweden University, Risk and Crisis Research Centre - Jörgen Sparf, Mid Sweden University, Risk and Crisis Research Centre, NTNU Samfunnsforskning AS / NTNU Social Research  
11:25 - 11:45 › ACCESSIBILITY, DAILY MOBILITY AND RURAL YOUTH. STRATEGIES AND LIFE TRAJECTORIES IN NAVARRA - GONZALO REGUERA-ZARATIEGUI, Universidad Pública de Navarra [Espagne] = Public University of Navarra - ANDONI ISO, Universidad Pública de Navarra [Espagne] = Public University of Navarra  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 13: Agroecological transition towards equitable, sustainable and resilient agri-food systems at multiple levels: from family farm communities to organic districts and agroecological clusters (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Simona Zollet, Erika Quendler, Hillary Cheruiyot, Luca Colombo, Giovanni Dara Guccione, Mabel Ifeoma Onwuka, Ray Kancharla, Florence Reed, Alberto Sturla, Charles L. Tumuhe, Noureddin Driouech (+)  
10:45 - 10:55 › Concrete steps towards sustainable winegrowing. An exploratory analysis of winegrowers' motivations to plant disease resistant grape varieties - Alessandra Piccoli, Free University of Bolzano  
10:55 - 11:05 › Ecological agricultural production and participation in the agri-food sector in the Florianópolis' Metropolitan Region, Southern Brazil, before and during the Covid-19 pandemic - Flavia Ramos, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina  
11:05 - 11:15 › Territorial Capital and resilient agri-food practices. Two examples of heroic viticulture in Italy - Federica Viganó, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano  
11:15 - 11:25 › Emerging food value chains in French rural territories : enabling and limiting factors to participatory forms of development and governance - Tara Dourian, INRAE - Yuna Chiffoleau, INRAE  
11:25 - 11:35 › VALUE CHAINS' CONTRIBUTION TO SUSTAINABILITY OF SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS IN MOUNTAIN AREAS - Michele Moretti, University of Pisa - Università di Pisa  
11:35 - 11:45 › Citizens engagement for agroecological transformations - Margriet Goris, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen]  
11:45 - 11:55 › Enabling farmers to respond to the biodiversity crisis together: the role of Citizen Science in Farmer Clusters - Gerid Hager, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis [Laxenburg]  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 15: Food systems in crisis: intersections between conflict, transformation and the post-political (Salle 4eme année - 24.0.20.) - Damian Maye, Gianluca Brunori, Allison-Marie Loconto, Nadine Arnold, Nadine Arnold, Francesca Galli, Joost Dessein, Ritwick Ghosh (+)  
10:45 - 11:05 › The quest for fair food systems: standards, values, and inconsistencies across domains of interaction - Allison Marie Loconto, Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Sciences, Innovations, Sociétés - Nadine Arnold, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam  
11:05 - 11:25 › When the old refuses to die: the post-political and neo-corporate nature of policy arrangements undergirding the agriculture-nature deadlock in Flanders - Lies Messely, Flanders Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Fisheries  
11:25 - 11:45 › Seed systems: Intersections between environmental and food governance crises in the physical and digital realms - Raquel Ajates, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia  
11:45 - 12:00 › Critical discourse analysis of the Farm to Fork Strategy for approaches to strengthening farmers' position and rebalance power in the EU food system - Aziz Omar, Aarhus University [Aarhus]  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 16: Transdisciplinary practices to drive transitions to resilient and sustainable food and farming systems to accompany the exit of political crises? (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Jérémie Forney, , Ika Darnhofer, Bertille Thareau, Julie Hermesse, Philipa Nicholas-Davies, Rebekka Frick (+)  
10:45 - 10:55 › The promotion of healthy and sustainable food. Proposals from the scientific field - Carmen Lozano-Cabedo, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia  
10:55 - 11:05 › The Stadsacademie: a university-led community of practice for transdisciplinary research on complex food issues - Amber Steyaert, Universiteit Gent = Ghent University  
11:05 - 11:15 › Using Responsible Research and Innovation to Support Sustainable Agricultural Research and Development Practices - Melf-Hinrich Ehlers, Agroscope  
11:15 - 11:25 › Transdisciplinary practices... an invitation to ask ourselves some hard questions - Ika Darnhofer, Dept. of Economics and Social Sciences, University of Natural Resources and Life Science, Vienna, Austria  
11:25 - 11:35 › Contributing to climate resilient agrifood systems through transdisciplinary and reflexive research? - Jérémie Forney, CEDD Agro Eco Clim, Université de Neuchâtel  
11:35 - 11:45 › Using a controversy analysis approach to examine the contribution of science to resilient and sustainable food systems in the contexts of Tanzania, Brazil, Colombia, France, and the United States - Sergio Schneider, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, University of Montpellier-COHORT Programme, 2023- MAK'IT  
11:45 - 11:55 › Science-Policy-Interfaces as a transdisciplinary tool in the quest for more sustainable food systems - Katrin Prager, University of Aberdeen  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 17: Behind the scenes: working conditions, quality of life, and the future of farming (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.) - Florence Becot - Hannah Budge - Majda Černič Istenič - Shoshanah Inwood - Lutz Laschewski - David Meredith - Marie Reusch - Georg Wiesinger (+)  
10:45 - 11:00 › Do socio-economic factors affect rubber production and dependency?: a case study from Tripura, India - Prabhakar Prabhakar, Prabhakar  
11:00 - 11:15 › Hotspots on work in agriculture : the Int. Association on Work in Agriculture (IAWA) experience - Benoît Dedieu, INRAE UMR Selmet (systèmes d'élevage méditerranéens et tropicaux)  
11:15 - 11:30 › How to tackle the shortage of seasonal workers in a period of crisis - Georg Wiesinger, Federal Institute for Agricultural Economics, Rural and Mountain Research  
11:30 - 11:45 › In each other's eyes: The precarity of farmers and their workers through the example of a Hungarian horticulture family enterprise - Krisztina Németh, Centre for Economic and Regional Studies Institute for Regional Studies  
11:45 - 12:00 › La vie et le travail des éleveurs salariés en Argentine : entre le "gaucho" et le XXIe siècle. - Bruno Capdevielle, Centro Interdisciplinario de Estudios Agrarios de la Facultad de Ciencias Económicos de la Universidad de Buenos Aires  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 18: Drivers and Barriers to adaptability in a changing world: the case of livestock farming (Salle d'apprentissage - 24.0.05.) - Sylvia Snijders, Kin Wing (Ray) Chan, Alison Rieple, Jing Zhang (+)  
10:45 - 11:05 › Uncomfortable trade-offs for farmers and vets ? Treating or not ? Economy Vs animal health? - Clementine Comer, Institut de Recherche Interdisciplinaire en Sciences Sociales  
11:05 - 11:25 › How is animal farming responding to antimicrobial resistance? Examples of divergent logics in the UK, Denmark and Sweden - Orla Shortall, James Hutton Institute  
11:25 - 11:45 › Cattle farmers identities in agroecological transitions: environmental subjectivities between work, gender and public policies. - Manoel Auffray, Dynamiques et écologie des paysages agriforestiers  
11:45 - 12:00 › The configuration of the “ideal veterinarian”: Individual and collective embodied skills of veterinarians focusing on French poultry production - Sebastian Moya, Postdoctoral researcher (Institut national de recherche pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement)  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 22: Designing and negotiating the public goods provided by agriculture and rural communities: current debate and crisis ‘impacts. (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - Philippe Boudes, Catherine Darrot (+)  
10:45 - 11:05 › disputed co-production of public goods – a social field perspective on the changing relationship between agriculture and community in East-Germany's rural areas - Lutz Laschewski, Serbski Institut - Institute for the Study of the Language, History and Culture of the Lusatian Sorbs/Wends and Comparative Minority Research  
11:05 - 11:20 › The public good maintenance in the context of ecological threats: the case of the Gauja National Park - Aija Zobena, University of Latvia  
11:20 - 11:40 › Invasive and protected species in rural areas in the light of Sociology of Public Goods - Philippe Boudes, Institut Agro Rennes Angers, UMR CNRS Espaces et Sociétés  
11:40 - 12:00 › The Breton bocage landscape, between deletion and replanting: what dynamics of publicisation? - Catherine Darrot, Espaces et Sociétés  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 23: Crises and Futures of Coastal Communities and Small-Scale Fisheries (Salle D3 - 24.0.43.) - Michael Woods, Bryonny Goodwin-Hawkins, Pekka Salmi, Kristina Svels, Jeremy Phillipson, Sarah Coulthard (+)  
10:45 - 11:05 › Fishing Europe's Troubled Waters: Fifty Years of Fisheries Policy - Jeremy Phillipson, Newcastle University, Centre for Rural Economy  
11:05 - 11:25 › The beginning of struggle: the response of coastal communities to policy transitions. - Harshali Ghule, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay  
11:25 - 11:45 › Can Stakeholders Cope with Fisheries Regulation? A Case Study of Participatory Approach Along the Tyrrhenian Coast of Italy - Lucia Tudini, Centro di ricerca Politiche e Bioeconomia [CREA]  
11:45 - 12:00 › Marine governance: heterogeneity among recreational sea anglers in England and Wales - Adam Fisher, CCRI, University of Gloucestershire  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 25: Rural narratives of water and hydrosocial dynamics in rural areas (Salle d'analyse sensorielle - 24.0.11.) - Diana Valero, Geeske Scholz (+)  
10:45 - 11:05 › Beautiful ponds, ugly ponds, and their functions - Michal Lostak, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague  
11:05 - 11:25 › Vulnerability of remote coastal communities to water challenges: Perception, valuation and coping mechanisms - Hannah Grist, Scotland's Rural College - Alexa Green, Scotland's Rural College  
11:25 - 11:45 › Unfolding Sense of Water: care across boundaries - Kristina Svels, Natural Resources Institute Finland  
11:45 - 12:05 › How to go from “our water is wonderful” to addressing water security issues in rural supplies? Insights from emerging narratives in Scotland. - Diana Valero, The James Hutton Institute  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 26: Past and future: An intergenerational dialog on the critical analysis of the past agricultural modernization processes (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Véronique Lucas, Terry Marsden, Jan Douwe van der Ploeg, Céline Pessis (+)  
10:45 - 11:15 › Farm machinery cooperative: A lever for mechanization and for agroecological transition - Véronique LUCAS, Biodiversité agroécologie et aménagement du paysage  
11:15 - 11:45 › Finding Common Ground: The past, present, and futures of hill farming and its place in British Agriculture. - Jennifer Dodsworth, University of Sheffield  
11:45 - 12:15 › Knowing and knowledge in agriculture. Agroecology facing the modernity paradigm. - Julien Blanc, UMR 7206 Eco-anthropologie  
10:45 - 12:15 WG 30: Participatory local development policies like LEADER and CLLD - what do we see? (Salle D1 -24.0.45) - Annette Aagaard Thuesen, Petra Raue, Kim Pollermann (+)  
10:45 - 11:00 › The Social Value Engine: A new tool for community-led local development - Ruth McAreavey, Newcastle University [Newcastle]  
11:00 - 11:15 › LEADER : quelle configuration politico-institutionnelle pour quelle politique de développement local ? - RESSAD Rabie, Université d'Angers  
11:15 - 11:30 › The Romanian LEADER – from a policy tool that lags behind to an efficient LAGs network. - TEODORA CAPOTA, Babes-Bolyai University [Cluj-Napoca]  
11:45 - 12:00 › Territorial development in coastal areas: Cross-cultural differences between Europe and South Korea - Richard Freeman, Newcastle University  
12:15 - 13:30 Lunch (Batt 24 Corridor)  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 3: Population Change and Rural Societies (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.) - David L. Brown, Neil Argent, Ilona Matysiak, Darren Smith (+)  
13:30 - 13:45 › Age-Structure and Generation Change in Post-Socialist Hungarian Farming - Nigel Swain, University of Liverpool  
13:45 - 14:00 › Conditions facilitating aging in place in rural communities: the case of smart senior towns in Iowa - Ilona Matysiak, Maria Grzegorzewska University  
14:00 - 14:15 › Life course transitions and rural gentrification: intersectional dynamics of change within English villages - Martin Phillips, School of Geography, Geology and Environment, University of Leicester  
14:15 - 14:30 › ‘Aging in place' in experiences of older adults living in rural Iowa - Ilona Matysiak, Maria Grzegorzewska University  
14:30 - 14:45 › What is Keeping Them in Rural Areas? Social Determinants of Youth's Intent to Stay in Rural Croatia - Bruno Šimac, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences [Zagreb]  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 6: Civil society engagement in rural areas in troubled times (Salle D2 - 24.0.44.) - Anna Sitek, Tuuli-Marja Kleiner, Sylvia Keim-Klärner, Jessica Brensing (+)  
13:30 - 13:50 › Consequences of Covid-Pandemic on Volunteer Organisations supporting old People in rural Germany - Monika Alisch, University of Applied Sciences [Fulda] - Martina Ritter, University of Applied Sciences [Fulda]  
13:50 - 14:10 › Quantitative dimension of the development of rural civil society in rural areas in Poland during and shortly after the Covid pandemic - Anna Sitek, The Maria Grzegorzewska University  
14:10 - 14:30 › Obstacles for Young People Volunteering in Rural Areas - Jessica Brensing, Thünen Institute of Rural Studies, Tuuli-Marja Kleiner, Thünen Institute of Rural Studies, Andreas Klärner, Thünen Institute of Rural Studies  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 7: Rural Quality of Life: Gender and other perspectives (Salle formation continue FC1 - 24.0.54.) - Pia Heike Johansen, Jens Kaae Fisker, Sally Shortall (+)  
13:30 - 13:45 › Pathways to participation – a multi-dimensional investigation of quality of life and disabilities - Susanne Stenbacka, Department of Human Geography, Uppsala University  
13:45 - 14:00 › Outdoor activities facilitating rural disability life - Cecilia Bygdell, Upplandsmuseet  
14:00 - 14:15 › Choosing to stay in the village. The emancipation family strategies of the rural working class women in Poland. - Sylwia Urbańska, Faculty of Sociology, University of Warsaw  
14:15 - 14:30 › Emancipatory Rurality: Making Room for non-normative subjectivities in rural areas through alternative agricultural practices in Germany - Carla Wember, Institute for Rural Development Research, University of Applied Sciences Fulda, University of Kassel  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 11: Social and political consequences of spatial inequalities – the rural gap, peripheralisation and left behind rural areas (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.) - Jerzy Bański, Josef Bernard, Luis Camarero, Renato do Carmo, Andreas Klärner, Jesús Oliva, María J. Rivera (+)  
13:30 - 13:50 › ANALYSING GENDER VIOLENCE IN RURAL NAVARRA (SPAIN) - Fatima Cruz, Department of Psychology, University of Valladolid, Grupo de Investigación Análisis e Investigación Psicosocial  
13:50 - 14:10 › ‘Affordification': Conceptualising in-migration and spatial inequalities beyond the gentrification debate - Rhys Dafydd Jones, Aberystwyth University  
14:10 - 14:30 › Young blood for the city? Expectancies and resources for the life strategies of rural youth. - Manuel-Tomas Gonzalez-Fernandez, Departamento de Sociologia, Universidad Pablo de Olavide - Javier Águila-Díaz, Departamento de Sociologia, Universidad Pablo de Olavide  
14:30 - 14:50 › Socio-Political Dimension of Spatial Inequality in Rural Areas of Ukraine: Post-Covid Trends and Problems of Post-Military Reconstruction - Andrii Kuzyshyn, Ternopil Volodymyr Hnatiuk National Pedagogical University  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 13: Agroecological transition towards equitable, sustainable and resilient agri-food systems at multiple levels: from family farm communities to organic districts and agroecological clusters (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Simona Zollet, Erika Quendler, Hillary Cheruiyot, Luca Colombo, Giovanni Dara Guccione, Mabel Ifeoma Onwuka, Ray Kancharla, Florence Reed, Alberto Sturla, Charles L. Tumuhe, Noureddin Driouech (+)  
13:30 - 13:40 › Pathways and schemes for Agroecology Territories across Europe - Perrine Vandenbroucke, Laboratoire d'Études Rurales, Isara  
13:40 - 13:50 › Bio-districts: agroecological systems for territorial development - Alberto Sturla, Consiglio per la ricerca in agricoltura e l'analisi dell'economia agraria - Centro di ricerca Politiche e Bioeconomia  
13:50 - 14:00 › Pathways for development for selected Italian organic districts - Luca Colombo, Italian Foundation for Research in Organic and Biodynamic Agriculture (Fondazione Italiana per la Ricerca in Agricoltura Biologica e Biodinamica–FIRAB  
14:00 - 14:10 › Towards Organic Districts: the complex and contested dynamics of creating democratic and sustainable agri-food futures at the territorial level - Simona Zollet, Hiroshima University, Department of Academia-Government-Industry Collaboration  
14:10 - 14:20 › Territorial rural development strategies based on organic farming – The example of Val Poschiavo, Switzerland - Rike Stotten, Leopold Franzens Universität Innsbruck - University of Innsbruck - Paul Froning, Leopold Franzens Universität Innsbruck - University of Innsbruck  
14:20 - 14:30 › Exploring the impacts of a European network of agroecology living labs and research infrastructures on multi-actor territorial governance in transitions to agroecology - Gerald Schwarz, Thuenen Institute of Farm Economics  
14:30 - 14:40 › Complex crises in agroforestry systems of Western Uganda: Implications for resilience, biodiversity, and agroecological clusters - Emily Baker, Department of Global Development, Cornell University  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 15: Food systems in crisis: intersections between conflict, transformation and the post-political (Salle 4eme année - 24.0.20.) - Damian Maye, Gianluca Brunori, Allison-Marie Loconto, Nadine Arnold, Nadine Arnold, Francesca Galli, Joost Dessein, Ritwick Ghosh (+)  
13:30 - 13:50 › Just governance of big data and artificial intelligence in precision agriculture - Maaz Gardezi, Virginia Tech [Blacksburg]  
13:50 - 14:10 › A Framework for Responsible Digital Agriculture Innovation for Smallholder Farmers - Emily Duncan, University of Guelph  
14:10 - 14:30 › Forces of resilience and the Sami indigenous food system - Ildikó Asztalos Morell, Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 17: Behind the scenes: working conditions, quality of life, and the future of farming (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.) - Florence Becot - Hannah Budge - Majda Černič Istenič - Shoshanah Inwood - Lutz Laschewski - David Meredith - Marie Reusch - Georg Wiesinger (+)  
13:30 - 13:45 › Considered approaches of farmers to mitigate against spring workload challenges on pasture-based dairy farms - Conor Hogan, Teagasc - The Agriculture and Food Development Authority  
13:45 - 14:00 › Farmers' Perceptions and Context-dependence of Social Sustainability - Rita Saleh, Agroscope  
14:00 - 14:15 › Human well-being at the farm level: Participatory development and use of indicators - Melf-Hinrich Ehlers, Agroscope  
14:15 - 14:30 › What does shredding of harvested / unharvested vegetables do to producers' quality of life? - Anna Kroeplin, Bern University of Applied Sciences  
14:30 - 14:45 › Work hardship: consequences of the abandonment and development of agroecology by smallholder farmers in Senegal - Gora Mbaye, Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 18: Drivers and Barriers to adaptability in a changing world: the case of livestock farming (Salle d'apprentissage - 24.0.05.) - Sylvia Snijders, Kin Wing (Ray) Chan, Alison Rieple, Jing Zhang (+)  
13:30 - 13:50 › An interdisciplinary study on the production and breeding of beef from the dairy herd. - Jillian Gordon, Scottish Rural Collage  
13:50 - 14:10 › Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Sustainable Livestock Farming in Rural India - Saptadweepa Shandilya, Gauhati University  
14:10 - 14:30 › Exploring Ecological Regulation in English Agriculture - Amy Gibbons, The University of Nottingham  
14:30 - 14:45 › Uncovering the emotional factors that hinder the adoption of new cow welfare practices in the dairy industry - Sylvia Snijders, University of Westminster  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 20: How to foster a socially sustainable Green Transition? (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Eirik Magnus Fuglestad, Richard Helliwell, Aimee Morse (+)  
13:30 - 13:45 › Forgotten People: Examining Community Involvement in the Search for a Sustainable Bioeconomy - Jonathan Rahn, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences  
13:45 - 14:00 › Funding versus Financing for Sustainable Agriculture - Phoebe Stephens, Dalhousie University  
14:00 - 14:15 › Rural embeddedness of the green transition: cases of local ownership of renewable energy parks in Denmark - Tobias Gandrup, University of Southern Denmark  
14:15 - 14:30 › The future Nordic farmers: Who are they? Exploring the roles, responsibilities, and values of farmers in the transition towards sustainable food systems - Strøm-Andersen Nhat, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research  
14:30 - 14:45 › Urban protected areas and their effect on socially sustainable Green Transition? Exploring strengths and weaknesses through three German case studies - Nora Mehnen, Leibniz University Hannover Institute of Environmental Planning  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 22: Designing and negotiating the public goods provided by agriculture and rural communities: current debate and crisis ‘impacts. (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - Philippe Boudes, Catherine Darrot (+)  
13:30 - 14:00 › Critical and normative discourses. Confrontation and analysis of arguments for moving towards healthy, sustainable and fair food. - Kattya Cascante, Kattya Cascante, Universidad Complutense de Madrid = Complutense University of Madrid [Madrid]  
14:00 - 14:30 › A roadmap for the increased contribution of small food businesses to regional food and nutrition security. Rural Entrepreneurship in Oeste, Portugal - Paola Hernández, Mediterranean Institute for Agriculture, Environment and Development, Universidade de Évora  
14:30 - 15:00 › Appropriation and implementation of the concepts of resilience and sustainability in food policies : a case study in Nouvelle-Aquitaine (France) - Margaux Alarcon, Environnement, territoires en transition, infrastructures, sociétés  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 23: Crises and Futures of Coastal Communities and Small-Scale Fisheries (Salle D3 - 24.0.43.) - Michael Woods, Bryonny Goodwin-Hawkins, Pekka Salmi, Kristina Svels, Jeremy Phillipson, Sarah Coulthard (+)  
13:30 - 13:50 › Current and future challenges for fishing communities in Iceland - Matthias Kokorsch, University Centre of the Westfjords  
13:50 - 14:10 › Åland fishers at a crossroad: Unknown ways of seeing the archipelago progress in local assets - Kristina Svels, Natural Resources Institute Finland  
14:10 - 14:30 › Turbulent times in small-scale fisheries – reinventing the benefits of local fish production? - Pekka Salmi, Natural Resources Institute Finland  
14:30 - 15:00 › Sustainable Development and Fisheries Management in Coastal Communities in the Aegean Sea: Exposing the Political Dimension of Marine Conservation Tools - Loukia-Maria Fratsea, Harokopio University, Department of Geography  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 25: Rural narratives of water and hydrosocial dynamics in rural areas (Salle d'analyse sensorielle - 24.0.11.) - Diana Valero, Geeske Scholz (+)  
13:30 - 13:45 › Exploring climate change and drought adaptation intentions of smallholder farmers in a South Indian region - Hermine Mitter, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna; Department of Economics and Social Sciences  
13:45 - 14:00 › Building community water resilience in Scotland: Using place-based approaches for engagement and action on the determinants of water resilience - Fiona Henderson, Glasgow Caledonian University - Karin Helwig, Glasgow Caledonian University  
14:00 - 14:15 › How to plant water: a case study at brazilian sertão - Janice Trajano, Universidade Federal de Pelotas = Federal University of Pelotas, Universidade de Lisboa = University of Lisbon  
14:15 - 14:30 › WATER SECURITY IN HAITI: DO NATIONAL STAKEHOLDERS CONSIDER WATER AND SANITATION AS A PRIORITY IN DEVELOPMENT? - Jean Fritz Saint Preux, Purdue University - Joseph Molnar, Auburn University  
14:30 - 14:45 › Building dams in Portugal: a solution for marginalized territories? - Maria Antónia Almeida, Instituto Universitário de Lisboa  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 26: Past and future: An intergenerational dialog on the critical analysis of the past agricultural modernization processes (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Véronique Lucas, Terry Marsden, Jan Douwe van der Ploeg, Céline Pessis (+)  
13:30 - 14:00 › The industrialization of Mediterranean agriculture from a metabolic point of view. A first approach to the output side (1880-2020) - Adrià Ivorra Cano, Agro-ecosystems History Laboratory. University Pablo de Olavide  
14:00 - 14:30 › The Examination of Indonesia's Millennial Farmer Project and the Hopes of Digital Agriculture by Incorporating Jacques Ellul and Neil Postman into Agri-Food - Paul Stock, University of Kansas  
14:30 - 15:00 › From the Rural Sociology of Modernization and Green Revolution Towards a Critical Approach to Food Studies in the 21st Century - Sergio Schneider, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, University of Montpellier-COHORT Programme, 2023- MAK'IT  
13:30 - 15:00 WG 30: Participatory local development policies like LEADER and CLLD - what do we see? (Salle D1 -24.0.45) - Annette Aagaard Thuesen, Petra Raue, Kim Pollermann (+)  
13:35 - 13:55 › Effects of the LEADER program on local governance - Catherine LAIDIN, Espaces et Sociétés  
13:55 - 14:15 › National level distribution of LEADER funding: Analysis of micro-level data and relationship to socioeconomic characteristics - Conor Judge, Department of Sociology, University of Oxford [Oxford], Nuffield College, University of Oxford  
14:15 - 14:35 › Partnership governance for social change through externally induced methodological development approaches - the role of magic concepts - Annette Aagaard Thuesen, Danish Centre for Rural research, Department of Sociology, Environmental and Business Economics, University of Southern Denmark  
15:00 - 15:30 Coffee break (Batt 24 Corridor)  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 3: Population Change and Rural Societies (Salle 1ere année - 24.0.17.) - David L. Brown, Neil Argent, Ilona Matysiak, Darren Smith (+)  
15:30 - 15:45 › Newcomers in rural societies – the perspective of local municipalities in Latvia - Dina Bite, Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies (former Latvia University of Agriculture)  
15:45 - 16:00 › Place attachment, (im)mobility decisions and rural well-being in Southeast Europe: a multi-sited ethnographic approach - Arjola Arapi-Gjini, Leibniz Institute of Agriculture Development in Transition Economies (IAMO)  
16:00 - 16:15 › Mapping development in nature: merging rural and integration interests in Sweden - Emma Sahlström, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences - Seema Arora-Jonsson, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences  
16:15 - 16:30 › Ukrainian refugees - a burden or a possibility to rural communities (in Estonia)? - Raili Nugin, Tallinn University  
16:30 - 16:45 › Staying in rural areas: the role of the dynamic rural stayer - Kenneth Nordberg, Abo Akademi University  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 6: Civil society engagement in rural areas in troubled times (Salle D2 - 24.0.44.) - Anna Sitek, Tuuli-Marja Kleiner, Sylvia Keim-Klärner, Jessica Brensing (+)  
15:30 - 15:50 › Inside and outside views of participation opportunities for civil society - Kim Pollermann, Thuenen-Institute of Rural Studies - Lynn-Livia Fynn, Thuenen-Institute of Rural studies  
15:50 - 16:10 › The impact of COVID-19 on partnerships between police and GBV service providers in remote, rural and island communities in Scotland. - Leia Miller, Robert Gordon University  
16:10 - 16:30 › Polish rural NGO's during the COVID-19 pandemic - Wojciech Knieć, Nicolaus Copernicus University [Toruń]  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 7: Rural Quality of Life: Gender and other perspectives (Salle formation continue FC1 - 24.0.54.) - Pia Heike Johansen, Jens Kaae Fisker, Sally Shortall / Women and ecological transitions across Europe. The European Commission has funded three projects to look at how to enable rural and farm women to lead on Ecological transitions across Europe. The projects are GRASS CEILING (coord. Sally Shortall; FLIARA – coord. Maura Farrell; SWIFT – coord. Marta Guadalupe Rivera Ferre. Each project has living labs/ communities of practice with women; benchmarks relevant policy documents; and proposes future solutions. This session brings the three projects together. In panel debates, they will compare and debate theoretical assumptions, methodological approaches and preliminary findings.  
15:30 - 17:00 Farmwell (Salle 3eme année - 24.0.19.)  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 13: Agroecological transition towards equitable, sustainable and resilient agri-food systems at multiple levels: from family farm communities to organic districts and agroecological clusters (Salle Sainclivier - 24.0.62.) - Simona Zollet, Erika Quendler, Hillary Cheruiyot, Luca Colombo, Giovanni Dara Guccione, Mabel Ifeoma Onwuka, Ray Kancharla, Florence Reed, Alberto Sturla, Charles L. Tumuhe, Noureddin Driouech  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 17: Behind the scenes: working conditions, quality of life, and the future of farming (Building 25 - Salle de cours Eco1 - 25.0.03.) - Florence Becot - Hannah Budge - Majda Černič Istenič - Shoshanah Inwood - Lutz Laschewski - David Meredith - Marie Reusch - Georg Wiesinger (+)  
15:50 - 16:05 › Setting up in short food supply chains : what work organizations for livestock farmers who do not come from the agricultural world ? - Philippine Dupé, Innovation, Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, INRAE, Institut Agro, Montpellier, France, Selmet, Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, INRAE, Institut Agro, Montpellier, France  
16:05 - 16:20 › Vulnerable and unjust: Did Covid-19 reveal the true nature of the Norwegian agricultural model? - Jostein Brobakk, Jostein Brobakk  
16:20 - 16:35 › Short food supply chains and the digital way forward: Anticipating the impacts of digitalization on farms and farmers' lives - Chrysanthi Charatsari, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, School of Agriculture, Department of Agricultural Economics  
16:35 - 16:50 › Agrarian transformation across space and time: a case study of two villages in South India - Yadu C R, RV University  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 18: Drivers and Barriers to adaptability in a changing world: the case of livestock farming (Salle d'apprentissage - 24.0.05.) - Sylvia Snijders, Kin Wing (Ray) Chan, Alison Rieple, Jing Zhang (+)  
15:30 - 15:50 › Good Animal Welfare in Norwegian Farmers' Context. Can both industrial and natural conventions be achieved in the social license to farm? - Brit Logstein, Ruralis. Institute for Rural and Regional Research  
15:50 - 16:10 › Staying industrialised production or returning to backyard farming: rethinking the risk and resilience of pork production in China - Kin Wing Chan, Wellcome Research Fellow, The Geography Department, University of Exeter - Jing Zhang, Doctoral Student, Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University  
16:10 - 16:30 › Assessing and fostering the adaptive capacity to climate change of local agricultural communities in mountainous areas -Comparing case studies in Austria, Switzerland and California - Christine Altenbuchner, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna  
16:30 - 16:45 › FUTURE FOOD TECHNOLOGIES AND RESILIENCE OF RURAL REGIONS Livestock farmers' perspectives on cellular agriculture - Niko Räty, Helsingin yliopisto = Helsingfors universitet = University of Helsinki - Toni Ryynänen, Helsingin yliopisto = Helsingfors universitet = University of Helsinki  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 20: How to foster a socially sustainable Green Transition? (Salle 2eme année - 24.0.18.) - Short four presentations followed by a world cafe: o Theme 1: Working with communities for change; o Theme 2: Resilience and change across scale; o Theme 3: Rural exceptionalism; o Theme 4: Imagining alternative futures  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 22: Designing and negotiating the public goods provided by agriculture and rural communities: current debate and crisis ‘impacts. (Salle formation continue 2 startup ) - Philippe Boudes, Catherine Darrot (+)  
15:30 - 15:50 › Sustainable Farming and Policy Participation: Evaluating the Capacity of Co-Design to Enable a Just Transition for England's Agriculture. - Jennifer Dodsworth, University of Sheffield - Rachel Lasko, University of Sheffield - Jose Luis Fajardo-Escoffie, University of Sheffield - Ruth Little, University of Sheffield  
15:50 - 16:10 › Tracing the Corporate Food Regime in post-socialist Croatia: A critical discourse analysis of agricultural strategies from 1995 to 2023 - Alex Gavranich, The University of Queensland  
16:10 - 16:30 › Coutançais Pays' Farmers, Rural inhabitants, Urban dwellers: experiencing a way to rebuilt a local social link around the role of food and relation to nature to reinforce the process of sustainability - Nicole Mathieu, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne - UFR Géographie  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 23: Crises and Futures of Coastal Communities and Small-Scale Fisheries (Salle D3 - 24.0.43.) - Michael Woods, Bryonny Goodwin-Hawkins, Pekka Salmi, Kristina Svels, Jeremy Phillipson, Sarah Coulthard (+)  
15:30 - 15:50 › Resilience factors of small-scale fisheries in Croatia: livelihood diversification, family, and modes of association - Dražen Cepić, University of Zadar  
15:50 - 16:10 › The role of local resilience strategies in achieving a Just Transition for fishers: insights from Ireland - Aine MackenWalsh, Teagasc - Brendan Flynn, University of Galway  
16:10 - 16:30 › Troubled Waters: The Impacts of Brexit for Rural Fishing Communities in Brittany and Wales - Michael Woods, Aberystwyth University  
16:30 - 16:50 › Brexit a national and European issue, invisible within local political activity - Catherine LAIDIN, Espaces et Sociétés  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 25: Rural narratives of water and hydrosocial dynamics in rural areas (Salle d'analyse sensorielle - 24.0.11.) - Diana Valero, Geeske Scholz (+)  
15:30 - 15:40 › Tales of rural water conflicts in former Soviet Central Asia: the Ferghana Valley - Max Spoor, International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University Rotterdam  
15:40 - 15:50 › New conflicts and divergent discourses related to water use in a Romanian rural community - Dénes Kiss, Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai [Cluj-Napoca]  
15:50 - 16:00 › Traditional water governance in the Andes face to modern infrastructure projects - Jean Paul Benavides, Universidad Católica Boliviana San Pablo - Instituto de Investigaciones Socio-Económicas  
15:30 - 17:00 WG 26: Past and future: An intergenerational dialog on the critical analysis of the past agricultural modernization processes (Salle 5eme année - 25.0.21.) - Véronique Lucas, Terry Marsden, Jan Douwe van der Ploeg, Céline Pessis  
18:30 - 23:55 Closing Gala  

Saturday, July 8, 2023

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Sunday, July 9, 2023

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Monday, July 10, 2023

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Tuesday, July 11, 2023

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Wednesday, July 12, 2023

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Thursday, July 13, 2023

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Friday, July 14, 2023

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Saturday, July 15, 2023

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Sunday, July 16, 2023

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Monday, July 17, 2023

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