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A philosophy of knowledge exchange

The role of the professions in science-based farming and land management Jeremy Phillipson, Amy Proctor and Philip Lowe. A philosophy of knowledge exchange. Knowledge producers. Knowledge users. Knowledge Transfer. A philosophy of knowledge exchange. Knowledge Exchange. Knowledge producers.

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A philosophy of knowledge exchange

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  1. The role of the professions in science-based farming and land management Jeremy Phillipson, Amy Proctor and Philip Lowe

  2. A philosophy of knowledge exchange Knowledge producers Knowledge users Knowledge Transfer

  3. A philosophy of knowledge exchange Knowledge Exchange Knowledge producers Knowledge users

  4. A philosophy of knowledge exchange • stakeholders engaged throughout as active partners in research • reciprocal exchange between scientists and stakeholders • knowledge exchange through people exchange and informal networks • bringing social consideration to bear on technical research combined socio-technical innovation

  5. The Advisory Professions as Knowledge Intermediaries? Farmers Weekly 12 July 2011 “Teamwork reaps benefits on beef finishing unit”

  6. The Advisory Professions as Knowledge Intermediaries?

  7. The Advisory Professions as Knowledge Intermediaries? Formal Professional Knowledge Formal Scientific Knowledge LAND MANAGER FIELD-BASED PROFESSIONALS Regulatory Knowledge

  8. The Advisory Professions as Knowledge Intermediaries? “I think I have a very important role in converting what the scientists have done and come up with into a format that my farm clients can use and understand” (Veterinarian) “You always make a point of reading certain technical journals to see what the latest things are and you try and remember what’s happened. You will pick up some good ideas and you will try and implement them …. You don’t realise you’re necessarily using these things, but it’s part of your personal knowledge bank and, therefore, it comes into play. You think, ‘Oh yeah, well, that’s something that’s worth applying” (Land agent) “I think the skill of empathy and the skill of being able to explain your technical knowledge in ways that the farmer can understand is the most important thing really. Ecology can get very, very technical and very science, if you like, so it's being able to translate that into sort of sensible, understandable information really for the farmer” (Ecologist)

  9. The Advisory Professions as Knowledge Producers? Experiential Knowledge Formal Professional Knowledge Formal Scientific Knowledge LAND MANAGER FIELD-BASED PROFESSIONALS Experimental Knowledge Regulatory Knowledge

  10. The Advisory Professions as Agents for Socio-Technical Innovation? • Research and agriculture = innovative modern food production Getting a glimpse of future precision farming tech Farmers Weekly 05 November 2009

  11. Landbridge and Today’s Workshop • How are public and private research agendas and strategies responding to the needs of the agriculture and land advisory professions? • What knowledge exchange approaches and mechanisms have been adopted and how could they be improved?

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