Supporting global quality in livestock farming systems. Acquiring and assess a systemic approach by using serious games in local Geographical Indication dairy system in France and the UK

Updated: 2 months ago
Location: Clermont Ferrand, AUVERGNE
Job Type: FullTime
Deadline: 10 May 2024

14 Feb 2024
Job Information
Organisation/Company

Université Clermont Auvergne
Department

Institut Sciences de la vie, Santé, Agronomie, Environnement
Research Field

Agricultural sciences » Zootechnics
Agricultural sciences » Agronomics
Agricultural sciences » Agricultural products
Economics » Agricultural economics
Researcher Profile

First Stage Researcher (R1)
Country

France
Application Deadline

10 May 2024 - 17:00 (Europe/Paris)
Type of Contract

Temporary
Job Status

Full-time
Hours Per Week

35
Offer Starting Date

4 Nov 2024
Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme?

Not funded by an EU programme
Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure?

No

Offer Description

Supervisor

Stéphane INGRAND (UMRH, INRAE-VetAgro Sup)

Email address: [email protected]

Co-supervisor

Sylvain DERNAT(UMR Territoires, UCA, INRAE, AgroParis Tech, VetAgro Sup)

Email address: [email protected]

Co-supervisor

Michael LEE(School of Sustainable Food and Farming, Harper Adams University)

Email address: [email protected]

Scientific question/ Background/ Objectives and methodology/ Literature cited

Scientific question:

Livestock farming is often identified as one of the main agricultural drivers of climate change. Therefore, when considering the value of livestock products in terms of their environmental impact, a holistic assessment is required using balanced metrics and avoiding tunnel vision. In addition to considering nutritional and co-product benefits, other natural capital and societal assets that result from well-managed farming enterprises need to be recognised (Manzano et al., 2023). However, this approach remains difficult because it is subject to divergent interpretations depending on the stakeholders involved.

Global quality is an emerging concept in agriculture, particularly in livestock production systems (Legrand et al., 2023). It goes beyond the sanitary, economic and organoleptic aspects of quality as understood in the production and processing industries (ie the intrinsec dimension of quality), and takes in ecological, social and cultural dimensions (ie the extrinsic dimension of quality). However, putting this concept into practice is difficult because it involves so many different actors (farmers, processors, advisors, vets, distributors, but also elected representatives, citizens, ecologist associations, etc.).

This thesis is based within the field of farming systems and agricultural extension and aims to address the scientific front of participatory support for global quality in livestock farming, as well as its practical application in the field, using a dual approach. On the one hand, theoretical work will aim to better define the concept of global quality in livestock farming, and on the other, empirical work will aim to test the practical application of this concept to support virtuous changes in livestock farming systems in the field.

For this second aspect, the PhD student will use innovative tools such as serious games, which are now at the heart of a revival of agricultural guidance in Europe. Serious games are now commonly used to address systemic issues in agricultural sectors, particularly under geographical indication (GI) (Dernat et al., 2022). Unlike traditional top-down advice, games can be used to address complex systems by making them accessible to as many people as possible through simple but not simplistic modelling and knowledge sharing.

Issue:

The problem this thesis will address is therefore at the crossroads of two scientific fronts: that of overall quality in livestock farming and that of support approaches to accompany systemic changes in agriculture. As a result, the question to be addressed by this thesis will be:

How can serious games be a means for integrating the global quality approach to move livestock systems through the agroecological transition?

Objectives and methodology:

The thesis will be based on two case studies in France and the UK within two local GI dairy production sectors. GI sectors are particularly sensitive to these systemic issues, as they combine the economic constraints of the sector with territorial strategies linked to local issues. The aim is to support these sectors using a global quality approach in order to optimise their strategies by involving all the stakeholders, both inside and outside the sector and the territory. There is a need for engineering to do this and the serious game as an engineering tool will make it possible to federate various stakeholders around a common vision of the global quality of local GI dairy system. A comparison between France and the UK will be interesting in terms of institutional (EU vs. non-EU), cultural and technical differences, which may help to better understand the importance of the concept of global quality and its local application.

To achieve this, the thesis will use serious games as part of an overall support process. Part of the work will involve identifying and adapting existing games or, failing that, creating a new game dedicated to global quality in livestock farming. This process will be tested in real conditions with stakeholders in the sectors, using the principle of action research as already tested on a PDO cheese (Dernat et al., 2022). The evaluation framework for step-by-step support developed by Etienne et al. (2023) or by Sneessens et al. (2019) could be used to measure and adjust the effects on the real practices of the operators involved.

Contribution of the thesis to science:

The thesis will be an opportunity to make an important theoretical contribution to livestock farming systems approach, mainly by addressing the concept of global quality. In this respect, the person recruited will be able to take part in EAAP (European Federation of Animal Science), IFSA (International Farming Systems Association) or IWFSD (International Workshop for Farming Systems Design) scientific events. Empirical approaches may also be the subject of investment in the ESEE (European Seminar on agricultural Extension & Education).

Practical contribution of the thesis to livestock farming: 

The aim of the thesis will be to provide useful and operational tools to help all stakeholders of a sector to asses and to achieve global quality. These tools can then be disseminated and mobilised by agricultural advisory services.

More broadly, the participatory proposal of the thesis opens up to a public that is partly outside the agricultural world (citizens, elected representatives, etc.). This highlights the practical challenge of putting into operation a process with this wider perimeter, which is socially interesting but not often addressed in the actual practice of field support (Coeugnet et al., 2023).

Minimum expected publications:

- An article on the concept of global quality in livestock farming

- An article on the results of the support provided to farming groups during the thesis, in particular a comparison between France and the UK.

Target journals: Animal, Agricultural systems, Agriculture for Sustainable Development.

Logistical aspects of the thesis:

The thesis will be hosted in Clermont Ferrand within INRAE. It will provide support for the overall work of the thesis and specifically for the French field. One of the supervisors is a research engineer, who has worked extensively on futures issues and adaptations of livestock and is a specialist in the livestock farming systems. The other French supervisor is a research engineer, whose research focuses on supporting transitions in farming communities. He is also responsible for the GAMAE platform, which specialises in serious agri-environmental games. The person recruited will also be able to benefit from the teaching staff of the Gloqual master's programme (Global quality in livestock farming), in which the French supervisors of this thesis are involved. More practically, the PhD student will be hosted by UMR Territoires, which will manage the budget in line with the projects in the French fields, and will also provide the ideal setting for developing serious games and evaluating them in a participatory process (creation workshop and digital tools of the GAMAE platform, unique in Europe).

The PhD student will also be hosted by Harper Adams University in England to enrich the approach and carry out experiments in the English field. The presence in UK is expected for 1 year. In particular, the School of Sustainable Food and Farming will be contributing its expertise in supporting agricultural sectors throughout the value chain (from producer to distributor). The English supervisor will bring his knowledge of local farming systems and quality issues in the livestock sector. It will also enable the person recruited to be integrated into the various scientific communities involved in livestock farming in UK and in the Morrisons Sustainable Farm Network project.

Case studies:

In UK, to support the thesis work, resources will be mobilised in conjunction with the Morrisons Sustainable Farm Network project via the Saputo Dairy. Saputo produces the GPI cheese Wensleydale, an English cheese that originated in Wensleydale, England. Saputo is ranked within the top 10 global dairy processors, with leading market positions in Canada, the USA, Australia,  Argentina, and UK.

In France, the thesis will be supported by the RMT (Réseau mixte technologique) Fromages de Terroir to work with a PDO/GPI cheese close to Wensleydale (in organoleptic and production terms, to have this same basis to compare) on the global quality. It will also benefit from the work of the ANR Gingko project and/or European GI-Smart project to carry out fieldwork.

Over the three years, case studies will also benefit from the support of the Gloqual Master's students as part of their annual group project. Students will go to France and/or UK to help the PhD student to prepare the field actions and assess the impact of the support.

Literature cited

Dernat, S., Rigolot, C., Vollet, D., Cayre, P., & Dumont, B. (2022). Knowledge sharing in practice: a game-based methodology to increase farmers’ engagement in a common vision for a cheese PDO union. The Journal of Agricultural Education and Extension, 28(2), 141-162.

Coeugnet, P., Labatut, J., Duval, J., & Vourc'h, G. (2023). Including citizens through co-design in a participatory research project to explore innovative agro-food systems: the case of future dairy livestock systems. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 7, 1098295.

Etienne, R., Dernat, S., Rigolot, C., Ingrand, S. (in press). Évaluation et ajustement chemin faisant de la mobilisation de jeux sérieux afin d’accompagner les éleveurs dans leurs changements de pratiques. Nature Science Société.

Legrand, I., Nicolazo De Barmon, A., Albert, F., Berton, M., Bourin, M., Bühl, V., ... & Laithier, C. (2023). The INTAQT project: stakeholders’ opinions on future multicriteria scoring tools for animal products. In Book of Abstracts of the 74th Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science (pp. 827-827). Wageningen Academic Publishers.

Manzano, P., Rowntree, J., Thompson, L., del Prado, A., Ederer, P., Windisch, W., & Lee, M. (2023). Challenges for the balanced attribution of livestock’s environmental impacts: the art of conveying simple messages around complex realities. Animal frontiers, 13(2), 35-44.

Sneessens, I., Sauvée, L., Randrianasolo-Rakotobe, H., & Ingrand, S. (2019). A framework to assess the economic vulnerability of farming systems: application to mixed crop-livestock systems. Agricultural Systems, 176, 102658.


Requirements
Research Field
Agricultural sciences
Education Level
Master Degree or equivalent

Skills/Qualifications

- Mastery of the systems approach to livestock production

- Ability to conduct and analyse interviews

- Proficiency in bibliographical analysis

- Ability to run workshops with professional stakeholders in agricultural sectors

- Ability to write


Specific Requirements

Required Languages: As the PhD will be conducted between France and UK, applicants should at least have an excellent English level and a good level in French.

English > Excellent

French > Good


Languages
ENGLISH
Level
Excellent

Languages
FRENCH
Level
Good

Additional Information
Eligibility criteria

Master Degree or equivalent (engineer diploma) in agricultural sciences or agricultural economics

1 to 6 months training in a research laboratory will be a plus.

An experience in a participatory project will be a plus.


Selection process

https://www.uca.fr/formation/nos-formations/graduate-school-cap-20-25

Clermont Auvergne University, Clermont-Ferrand, France and its Clermont Auvergne Project Graduate School (CAP GS) programme offer a PhD opportunity that will be conducted in partnership between Clermont Auvergne University and a foreign research Institution. The associated Changing Environments Graduate Track presents three PhD proposals published on EURAXESS, of which one only will be funded. The selection process will take all applications into consideration. The best fitting candidate will be invited to an audition between end of June  and mid-July. The laureate will do her/his research on the selected topic at the PhD supervisor's research laboratory at Clermont Auvergne University in Clermont-Ferrand.

Applicants who have earned their higher educational qualifications outside Europe or in Greece must attach to their application a certificate of equivalence of the diploma (Master degree). The certificate can be obtained following the procedure indicated here: https://phoenix.ciep.fr/inscriptions/

Application deadline: Friday May the 10th, 5 pm Paris time, 2024. Applications arriving after the application deadline will not be taken into consideration.


Additional comments

Applications should include a cover letter indicating your motivation and relevant research experience, a detailed curriculum vitae, academic transcripts and contact information for at least two referees. Please send the application via Email to : [email protected] , [email protected] , and [email protected]

PhD studies will start in November 2024. A salary will be paid for 3 years (36 months).

Additional funding of 15,000 euros for travel expenses between Clermont-Ferrand and the foreign co-supervisor's research laboratory is available.


Work Location(s)
Number of offers available
1
Company/Institute
University Clermont Auvergne - UMR Territoires
Country
France
City
Clermont-Ferrand
Postal Code
63000
Geofield


Where to apply
E-mail

[email protected]

Contact
City

Clermont-Ferrand
Website

https://www.uca.fr/
Street

49 bd François Mitterrand
Postal Code

63001
E-Mail

[email protected]

STATUS: EXPIRED