Construction of Knowledge Agroecological: questioning the process.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33240/rba.v11i3.49914Keywords:
Agroecological transition, Dialogue knowledge, ParticipationAbstract
The notion of Construction of Agro-ecological Knowledge-CCA began to be used simultaneously by a group of writers who produce in an agro ecological perspective, but is characterized as a concept in preparation not having his widely detailed elements. The aim was to discuss precisely what constitutes the CCA process seeking to expand their understanding. This research is placed within the field of Agroecology being theoretically supported by Actor-Oriented Perspective (LONG, 2001). The method can be described as a qualitative research literature that speaks to the findings of the author's doctoral thesis. The main elements of CCA discussed in the text are: a contemporary view of science, the immersion process in social relations, the construction of social projects of the actors, the dialogue of knowledge, the ecological principles of agriculture, social embeddedness of markets, participatory approach, agroecological transition and participation. At the conclusion it is allocated one concept proposal for the CCA process aiming a collaboration to build the agro-ecological science.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2016 autor
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Copyright Notice
The copyright of articles published in this journal remains with the authors, with first publication rights for the journal.
License
When published in this open access journal, licensed through CC BY 4.0, articles are distributed free of charge and can be shared and adapted for any purpose, including commercial. As attribution of use, the license requires that due credit be given, with a link to the license and indication of changes. This does not mean that the licensor endorses the use of the information in the article, or the person who used this information. It also implies the impossibility of applying legal or technological measures that restrict the use of the information by third parties.