6533b835fe1ef96bd129e8e6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Towards (dis)continuity of agricultural wetlands: Latvia’s polder landscapes after Soviet productivism

Ivo VinogradovsPēteris ŠķIņķisAnita Zariņa

subject

ProductivismAntipodesEcology (disciplines)media_common.quotation_subjectGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologies0507 social and economic geographyWetland02 engineering and technologyManagement Monitoring Policy and LawPoliticsEnvironmental protectionPolitical scienceNature and Landscape ConservationGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commongeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybusiness.industry05 social sciences021107 urban & regional planningHigh modernismEconomyAgriculturebusiness050703 geographyDiversity (politics)

description

The concepts of agricultural regimes in advanced economies, such as productivism or non/neo/post-productivism, have been critically debated over the last decades to understand the transition and diversity of modern agriculture. We explore these concepts to understand the environmentally vulnerable landscape of agricultural wetlands in Latvia that, during the era of Soviet high modernism (productivist agricultural regime), have been converted into polders as part of a mass drainage movement. Today, these post-Soviet agro-polders can be characterised as antipodes in relation to integrity of heritage, ecology and the socio-economics of agricultural concerns. Building on case studies, wider political contexts and current debates on agricultural transitions, the paper traces the transition of wetlands through agricultural regimes and unfolds the various pathways for current polder landscapes. This paper concludes with critical notes on the contemporary co-existence of different agro-polder use of which...

https://doi.org/10.1080/01426397.2017.1316367