Authors
David C Diehl, Nicole L Sloan, Sebastian Galindo-Gonzalez, Wendy-Lin Bartels, Daniel R Dourte, Carrie Furman, Clyde W Fraisse
Publication date
2015
Journal
Journal of Rural Social Sciences
Volume
30
Issue
1
Pages
3
Description
With scientific consensus regarding the occurrence of climate variability and climate change it is clear that farmers can benefit from science-based adaptation strategies for managing climate-related risk. To this end, cooperative extension professionals must engage in climate training events that are carefully planned and tailored to their specific needs. This study consisted of 50 interviews with extension professionals from four states (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina) and collected information about the perceptions of climate variability and change as well as the preferred approaches for climate-related training in extension. Results include the need for accessible, climate-related training that prepares extension professionals to: understand both management-and technology-related adaptation strategies, engage in productive conversations with all stakeholders, and participate in the coproduction of knowledge related to climate issues.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DC Diehl, NL Sloan, S Galindo-Gonzalez, WL Bartels… - Journal of Rural Social Sciences, 2015