Abstract
Innovation is necessary to deal with challenges that climate change brings for agriculture, such as droughts, floods, pests and pathogens that enter new climatic regions, and challenges relating to the labour force. There is a dominant narrative that science and technology are the locus of innovation, and that the solutions developed can change systems. Indeed, history shows how the Green Revolution started a massive change in practices worldwide and gave science and technology the main role. Innovation, however, also happens outside universities or industry research. Particularly in agriculture, it happens in the field through farmers’ experimentation (Hansson, 2019). This opens up the idea of who is an innovator, and it is crucial to tackling climate challenges to agriculture. In this paper, we investigate the role of curiosity as a virtue of innovators. Instead of looking at systems of innovation, or at innovations themselves, we add to the growing scholarship on virtues of innovators. Among those virtues, curiosity is prominent. We argue that different contexts require different forms of the innovator virtues, and we conceptually investigate how such virtues ought to be cultivated in order to contribute to solving 21st century challenges for agriculture.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Justice and food security in a changing climate |
Editors | H. Schübel, I. Walliman-Helmer |
Publisher | Wageningen Academic Publishers |
Chapter | 52 |
Pages | 337-340 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 13 Jun 2021 |