Designing a research agenda for coupled innovation

Designing a research agenda for coupled innovation towards sustainable agrifood systems – presentation of the collective article by Brun et al. (2021)

06 May 2021

Webinar

On Thursday 6 May at 2:00pm, Jean-Marc Meynard, UMR SAD-APT et Caroline Pénicaud, UMR SayFood,, will present the article published in the journal Agricultural Systems, titled “Designing a research agenda for coupled innovation towards sustainable agrifood systems”, co-authored by Juliette Brun, Marie-Hélène Jeuffroy, Caroline Pénicaud, Marianne Cerf and Jean-Marc Meynard.

Abstract:

CONTEXT. Researchers studying agriculture and researchers studying food share common interests in working on the sustainability of agrifood systems. Yet, they form two distinct scientific communities, which often struggle to work together due to both scientific specialization and existing disconnections between agriculture and food production standards. However, there is today a crucial need for research to generate new knowledge and innovations to meet the numerous challenges towards sustainable agrifood systems.

OBJECTIVE. This paper therefore presents how two scientific communities (those of agriculture and food) collectively explored cross-community research topics, which could foster coupled innovation in agrifood systems.

METHODS. Two innovative design methods - KCP and matching-building – were combined to propose a dedicated design process fostering this collective exploration of cross-community research topics.

RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS. Twenty cross-community priority research topics were thus proposed to address various sustainability challenges. These topics were designed to become common purposes for future research collaborations aiming to produce relevant knowledge to open new avenues for coupled innovation towards more sustainable agrifood systems. The originality of the 20 topics was discussed, in comparison with 25 international papers highlighting research priorities regarding food systems. 

SIGNIFICANCE. The originality of the paper is thus twofold: the article details the original dedicated design method used to build cross-community research topics, and presents the 20 research topics designed using this method.

Presentation material:

Video recording: https://youtu.be/0zECZJVr4zs

Onligne article: https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-03192800

Workshop report: https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-02266897

Contact: changeMe@inrae.fr