Saving, sharing and shaping landrace seeds in commons: unravelling seed commoning norms for furthering agrobiodiversity

Emil Sandström*, Tove Ortman, Christine A. Watson, Jan Bengtsson, Clara Gustafsson, Göran Bergkvist

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

One of the major challenges facing agricultural and food systems today is the loss of agrobiodiversity. Considering the current impasse of preventing the worldwide loss of crop diversity, this paper highlights the possibility for a radical reorientation of current legal seed frameworks that could provide more space for alternative seed systems to evolve which centre on norms that support on-farm agrobiodiversity. Understanding the underlying norms that shape seed commons are important, since norms both delimit and contribute to what ultimately will constitute the seeds and who will ultimately have access to the seeds and thus to the extent to which agrobiodiversity is upheld and supported. This paper applies a commoning approach to explore the underpinning norms of a Swedish seed commons initiative and discusses the potential for furthering agrobiodiversity in the context of wider legal and authoritative discourses on seed enclosure. The paper shows how the seed commoning system is shaped and protected by a particular set of farming norms, which allows for sharing seeds among those who adhere to the norms but excludes those who will not. The paper further illustrates how farmers have been able to navigate fragile legal and economic pathways to collectively organize around landrace seeds, which function as an epistemic farming community, that maintain landraces from the past and shape new landraces for the present, adapted to diverse agro-ecological environments for low-input agriculture. The paper reveals how the ascribed norms to the seed commons in combination with the current seed laws set a certain limit to the extent to which agrobiodiversity is upheld and supported and discusses why prescriptions of “getting institutions right” for seed governance are difficult at best, when considering the shifting socio-nature of seeds. To further increase agrobiodiversity, the paper suggests future seed laws are redirected to the sustenance of a proliferation of protected seed commoning systems that can supply locally adapted plant material for diverse groups of farmers and farming systems.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages16
JournalAgriculture and Human Values
Early online date28 Jun 2024
DOIs
Publication statusFirst published - 28 Jun 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.

Keywords

  • Agrobiodiversity
  • Bio-cultural commons
  • Commoning
  • Commons
  • Crop diversity
  • Environmental governance
  • Farming norms
  • Heritage seeds
  • Landrace cultivation
  • Landrace seeds
  • Landrace varieties
  • Seed commons
  • Seed swapping
  • Socio-nature

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