posted on 2024-09-05, 20:49authored byDominic Glover
This paper discusses how the theory of affordances can be used to investigate how a spectrum of opportunities,
benefits, costs and risks is generated and unevenly distributed by different kinds of technology (where ‘tech nology’ is understood as techniques, processes and practices of doing and making, rather than technical artefacts
and systems). Affordances are possibilities for action, which arise from relations between humans and entities
that surround them. This paper discusses three kinds of affordances: material, cultural and socio-economic. The
theory of affordances offers a coherent way to explain why different technologies have different implications,
and why those implications vary for different stakeholders. Applied to the domain of development-oriented
agricultural research and innovation, the theory of affordances could be used by researchers and practitioners
to examine the differentiated implications of different kinds of farming technology and alternative programmes
of technological change in agriculture, both ex ante (e.g. in their design, development and implementation) and
ex post (e.g. in their evaluation). To illustrate the argument, the paper uses the example of weeding in the System
of Rice Intensification. Since affordances in theory are generated relationally and situationally for each person,
the full array of implications arising from the introduction of new technology could be wide and diverse. A
practical challenge, therefore, is whether and how the theory of affordances can be used practically and oper ationally to design, implement and evaluate the appropriateness, accessibility, utility and value of agricultural
technology and technological change for specific people and groups of interest.
Funding
Default funder
History
Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Glover, D. (2022) 'Affordances and agricultural technology,' Journal Article, Journal of Rural Studies, Volume 94, Pages 73-82, DOI: 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2022.05.007