Lehrer Nadine, Sneegas Gretchen
Food Studies, Falk School of Sustainability and the Environment, Chatham University, Eden Hall Campus, 6035 Ridge Rd., Gibsonia, PA 15044, USA.
Department of Geography, University of Georgia, 210 Field Street, Room 204, Athens, GA 30602, USA.
Agric Human Values. 2018 Jan;35(1):131-147. doi: 10.1007/s10460-017-9810-z. Epub 2017 Jun 30.
Controversies in food and agriculture abound, with many portrayed as conflicts between polarized viewpoints. Framing such controversies as dichotomies, however, can at times obscure what might be a plurality of views and potential common ground on the subject. We used Q methodology to explore stakeholders' views about pesticide safety, agricultural worker exposure, and human health concerns in the tree fruit industry of central Washington State. Using a purposive sample of English and Spanish-speaking agricultural workers, industry representatives, state agencies, educators, and advocates (n = 41), participants sorted 45 statements on pesticide use and perceived human safety risks in the tree fruit industry in 2011. We used PQMethod 2.33 statistical software program to identify viewpoints, based on differences between how participants sorted the statements. The results revealed three distinct viewpoints among 38 sorters that explained 52 percent of the variance. The viewpoints included the: (1) skeptics (n = 22) who expressed concern over the environmental and human health impacts of pesticide use; (2) acceptors (n = 10) who acknowledged inherent risks for using pesticides but saw the risks as known, small and manageable; and (3) incrementalists (n = 6) who prioritized opportunities to introduce human capital and technological improvements to increase agricultural worker safety. We then brought representatives with these different viewpoints together to analyze the results of the Q study, and to brainstorm mutually acceptable improvements to health and safety in tree fruit orchards. In describing and analyzing this case study, we argue that Q methodology can serve as one potentially effective tool for collaborative work, in this case facilitating a process of orchard safety improvements despite perceived stakeholder polarization.
食品与农业领域存在诸多争议,其中许多被描述为两极化观点之间的冲突。然而,将此类争议框定为二分法,有时可能会掩盖该主题上可能存在的多种观点和潜在的共同点。我们运用Q方法来探究利益相关者对华盛顿州中部树果产业中农药安全、农业工人接触情况以及人类健康问题的看法。我们选取了说英语和西班牙语的农业工人、行业代表、州机构人员、教育工作者及倡导者作为有目的的样本(n = 41),让参与者对2011年树果产业中农药使用及感知到的人类安全风险的45条陈述进行排序。我们使用PQMethod 2.33统计软件程序,根据参与者对陈述排序方式的差异来确定观点。结果在38名排序者中揭示了三种不同的观点,这些观点解释了52%的方差。这些观点包括:(1)怀疑者(n = 22),他们对农药使用对环境和人类健康的影响表示担忧;(2)接受者(n = 10),他们承认使用农药存在固有风险,但认为这些风险是已知的、微小的且可控的;(3)渐进主义者(n = 6),他们将引入人力资本和技术改进以提高农业工人安全的机会置于优先地位。然后,我们将持有这些不同观点的代表召集在一起,分析Q研究的结果,并就树果园健康与安全方面相互认可的改进措施进行头脑风暴。在描述和分析这个案例研究时,我们认为Q方法可以作为合作工作的一种潜在有效工具,在这个案例中,尽管利益相关者存在明显的两极分化,但它促进了果园安全改进的进程。