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Applying Lisa Concepts on Southern Farms

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2017

John E. Ikerd*
Affiliation:
University of Missouri, Columbia, MO

Extract

The term LISA was coined in 1988 as an acronym to identify a federally funded research and education program designed to address the public issue of agriculture and the environment (USDA-CSRS, p. 2). LISA is made up of two related, but different, concepts: low input and sustainable agriculture. This combination reflects a compromise between two different perspectives of the environmental issues confronting agriculture.

The low input perspective is that farmers must reduce their use of commercial chemical inputs as a means of reducing environmental and ecological risks. The sustainable agriculture perspective is that long-run productivity and utility of agriculture depend ultimately on our ability to keep farms both ecologically sound and economically viable. Reduced reliance on commercial inputs is seen as one means of addressing the ecological risks that could threaten long-run sustainability.

Type
Invited Papers and Discussions
Copyright
Copyright © Southern Agricultural Economics Association 1991

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