Yearly Archives: 2018

Lessons to be learned for our communities

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There has been talk in recent years of the need to develop an upland vision for Scotland. But without also ensuring greater government and agency support for establishing locally-led partnerships it might prove difficult to achieve any such vision in practice.

What We Have Learned So Far Using Social Network Analysis

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This blog will summarise what we have learned so far using social network analysis with the ReSULTS project.

Scale Free Networks Theoretical Framework for the ResULTS Project

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In 1775, at the start of the American Revolution, the British were determined to disarm the rebel militias and seize their military supplies.

ResULTS produces three project factsheets

The ResULTS team have produced a range of leaflets (PDF) which communicate aspects of the project in a graphical and colourful format.

Small World Networks Theoretical Framework for the ResULTS Project

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A small world network’s resilience comes from a combination of its cluster which encourages cohesion and the interconnections between the clusters which encourages flows of information and ideas. Is there a small world network among Orkney’s livestock farmers? We do not know yet.

Social Network Analysis and the ResULTS project

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My name is Cornell Jackson and I am a social network analyst. I work on the ResULTS project trying to understand how social networks help or hinder the resilience of livestock agriculture. I am focused on the Orkney Islands.

About the ResULTS project

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The ResULTS project focuses on beef and sheep production in upland regions of Northern England and Scotland. We are interested in how livestock farmers and the rural systems that depend on them adapt to adverse events such as climate change, reduced subsidies and price fluctuations, and in what effect their adaptations might have on local, national and global food system.

Project objectives

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The overall aims of this project are to understand the resilience of livestock production in remote upland regions of the UK to climate change and other shocks, the consequences to the global and local food systems of these responses, and to provide policy makers, food chain actors and individual stakeholders’ knowledge with which to adapt to challenges to food systems.

© 2018. ResULTS