Journal article
Silent Spring at 60: Assessing environmentalism in the cranberry treadmill of production in Massachusetts
Journal of rural studies, v 95, pp 505-520
Oct 2022
Featured in Collection : UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
Abstract
While the Massachusetts cranberry industry is in many ways a quintessential “agricultural treadmill,” recent decades have seen a shift in the industry toward adopting environmental concerns, beginning roughly with Rachel Carson and other influential scientists critical of unfettered chemical use in cranberry production. Sixty years after the publication of Silent Spring is an opportune moment to assess the impact of environmentalist pressures on the messaging of powerful organizational actors in the cranberry industry, especially the influential UMass Cranberry Station, an outreach program of UMass Extension. Using a mixed methods approach, we examine their Newsletter to evaluate its treatment of environmental topics and non-chemical growing methods over time. Additionally, we gathered survey data from over 90 growers and in-depth interview data from 17 of them to better understand how growers experience the agricultural treadmill, especially regarding synthetic agrichemical use. Newsletter data reveal that while Extension, in the area of cranberry production, has indeed increased its environmentally friendly discourse, statistical analysis of survey data shows that agrichemical use continues to expand, thus supporting the treadmill theory. In-depth interview data further document the cranberry industry as suffering from overproduction and reflecting a treadmill of both chemicals and pollination problems. We conclude that if the cranberry industry is to move away from agricultural treadmill tendencies, the UMass Extension Cranberry Station must provide stronger direction for growers seeking to create less input-dependent and more ecologically integrated cranberry systems. Given the chemical-intensive nature of the cranberry agricultural treadmill, however, this will likely be an uphill battle.
•Analyze: 1) Extension newsletters; 2) semi-structured interviews with cranberry growers; 3) survey data of chemical use.•Due to environmentalist pressures Extension has augmented its usage of discourse to support the environment over time.•Growers experience the treadmill through overproduction, problems with chemical inputs, and the pollination treadmill.•Surveys suggest that agri-chemical usage has nonetheless increased despite increases in environmental discourse.•Extension should offer the socio-ecological expertise necessary to achieve meaningful agri-chemical use reductions.
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Details
- Title
- Silent Spring at 60: Assessing environmentalism in the cranberry treadmill of production in Massachusetts
- Creators
- Brian J. Gareau - Boston CollegeXiaorui Huang - Drexel UniversityTara Pisani Gareau - Boston CollegeSandra DiDonato - Boston College
- Publication Details
- Journal of rural studies, v 95, pp 505-520
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Sociology
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000876988900002
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-85141928109
- Other Identifier
- 991021848512504721
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- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- Web of Science research areas
- Geography
- Regional & Urban Planning