Not one Brexit: How local context and social processes influence policy analysis
Authored by Jiaqi Ge, J Gareth Polhill, Keith B Matthews, David G Miller, Michael Spencer
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0208451
Sponsors:
Scottish Government Rural Affairs
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
This paper develops an empirical agent-based model to assess the impacts
of Brexit on Scottish cattle farms. We first identify several trends and
processes among Scottish cattle farms that were ongoing before Brexit:
the lack of succession, the rise of leisure farming, the trend to
diversify and industrialise, and, finally, the phenomenon of the
``disappearing middle{''}, characterised by the decline of medium-sized
farms and the polarization of farm sizes. We then study the potential
impact of Brexit amid the local context and those ongoing social
processes. We find that the impact of Brexit is indeed subject to
pre-Brexit conditions. For example, whether industrialization is present
locally can significantly alter the impact of Brexit. The impact of
Brexit also varies by location: we find a clear divide between
constituencies in the north (highland and islands), the middle (the
central belt) and the south. Finally, we argue that policy analysis of
Brexit should consider the heterogeneous social context and the complex
social processes under which Brexit occurs. Rather than fitting the
world into simple system models and ignoring the evidence when it does
not fit, we need to develop policy analysis frameworks that can
incorporate real world complexities, so that we can assess the impacts
of major events and policy changes in a more meaningful way.
Tags
Agriculture
Empirical-evidence
Survival
Succession
Economic-impact
Farm diversification
Adjustment strategy
Scale
efficiency
Livestock farms
Family farms