News and Events
Farm Planning Course for Spring
Quarter 2008
A farm planning course featuring the
Mellinger Farm will be offered this Spring Quarter. Course
details and contact information can be found at:
FarmPlanDesignCourse1.pdf
Leap into Local Foods
The Leap into Local Foods Workshop was held on
February 29, 2008.
Attached is the meeting summary :
Leap into Local Foods Workshop write-up.pdf .
One of the workshop goals was to increase ease
and opportunity to keep the participants in touch after the
meeting, to keep the selected projects in focus and to expand
the network of people committed to the success of increasing
local food production and consumption here in Ohio. A website
blog was created for this purpose. Please check out the site and
add your thoughts and suggestions. The site is found at:
http://socialsynergyweb.org/oardc/main-group
Newletter
Please enjoy a look
at the last edition of our
newsletter. In future
issues we plan to include thought provoking essays as well as
updates on the activities of our program and team members. If
you have a topic you'd like discussed or an essay you'd like to
submit, please send it along to
ampmail@osu.edu
Employment Opportunities with AMP
The Agroecosystems Management Program of the Ohio Agricultural
Research and Development Center offers a unique opportunity for
relatively self-directed research by highly qualified
postdoctoral scholars. One Associateship is currently being
offered in the natural/physical sciences and one in the
social/behavioral sciences. The Postdoctoral Associates
will be mentored by the multidisciplinary faculty participating
in the Program in pursuing research and education opportunities
of mutual interest and consistent with the Program goals.
In general the Program addresses the environmental, economic and
social challenges an opportunities facing farmers and rural
communities. Associates will be expected to maintain a
strong publication record, seek extramural funding, contribute
to graduate education, and work effectively in interdisciplinary
teams that include stakeholder partners.
Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Natural/Physical
Sciences
This position requires an individual who will initiate, develop,
and manage research projects including keeping of all records on
research activities with preparation of manuscripts for
publication and grant proposals for continued funding.
Research could include, but would not be limited to, field
experiments on agroecosystem function and change, GIS analysis
of agroecosystem spatial patterns and dynamics. A Ph.D. is
required in any of the natural/physical sciences with focus on
ecosystems and the environment. This position also requires
expertise in systems analysis and good quantitative skills
including statistics, GIS and spatial analysis. Desirable
training, skills and experience include ecological research
particularly focused on agriculture and the environment, broad
training in the biophysical as well as socioeconomic
disciplines, excellent verbal and written communication skills,
demonstrated publishing and proposal development interest and
potential, demonstrated interest and ability to work in
interdisciplinary teams, demonstrated interest and ability in
outreach education.
Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Social/Behavioral
Sciences
This position requires an individual who will initiate, develop,
and manage research projects including keeping of all records on
research activities and preparation of manuscripts for
publication and grant proposals for continued funding. Research
could include, but would not be limited to, research at the
individual, family and community levels on agroecosystem
function and change, GIS analysis of agroecosystem spatial
patterns and dynamics of social variables at landscape scales.
A Ph.D. is required in any of the social/behavioral sciences
with focus on ecosystems and the environment. The position
also requires expertise in analysis of complex systems and good
quantitative skills including statistics and GIS.
Desirable training, skills and experience include social and/or
economic research particularly focused on agriculture and the
environment, broad training in the biophysical as well as
socioeconomic disciplines, excellent verbal and written
communication skills, demonstrated publishing and proposal
development, interest and potential, demonstrated interest and
ability to work in interdisciplinary teams, demonstrated
interest and ability in outreach education.
These positions offer competitive salaries and a full package of
benefits including health insurance. To build a diverse
workforce Ohio State encourages applications from individuals
with disabilities, minorities, veterans, and women. The Ohio
State University is an EEO/AA employer. Applicants must apply
on-line at
http://jobs.osu.edu.
The requisition reference number for the Natural/Physical
Science position is 326221; the requisition reference number for
the Social/Behavioral Science position is 326222.
In addition, applicants should submit a cover letter, c.v., and
the names, addresses, phone and email addresses for 3 references
to:
Casey W. Hoy, Kellogg
Endowed Chair in Agricultural Ecosystems Management
Agroecosystems
Management Program
The Ohio State
University, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center
1680 Madison Ave.
Wooster, Ohio 44691
Applications will be reviewed beginning June 1, 2007 and until
suitable candidates are found.
Paper and Poster Presentations
Jason Parker
recently traveled to
Louisville, Kentucky where he presented a poster,
"Conservation use and quality of life in a rural community: Goldschmidts's finding revisited", and a paper, "Sociocultural
integration and conservation in the Sugar Creek watershed: What
is the real promise of globalization?", to the Rural
Sociological Society. Meanwhile, Richard Moore presented a paper, "The
ecological integration of the social and natural sciences in the
Sugar Creek Method", to the Ecological Society of America in
Memphis, Tennessee.
Welcome Alexandre Joannon
Dr. Alexandre
Joannon and his family will be joining us from France for one
year. Affiliating through the HCRD Department, he will be
working on a project in Sugar Creek regarding field and
farm-scale agroecological landscape patterns. He is a visiting
scientist from INRA which is the National Institute for
Agricultural Research at Rennes. This is the same group from
which Dr. Jacque Baudry came who visited us earlier this
year. Alex's group has a website at
http://www.rennes.inra.fr/sad/index_en.htm if you are
interested in learning more about what they do. Perhaps you
might also be interested in learning about their long-term
research site at:
Better yet, Alexandre's office is in the AMP area of Thorne
Hall at OARDC; you can talk to him in person or contact him by
email at Joannon.1@osu.edu or by phone at 330-202-3555 ext:
2582. Welcome Alex!
Kellogg Endowed Chair
WOOSTER, Ohio - Ohio State University entomology professor
Casey Hoy has been chosen as the new W.K. Kellogg
Foundation-endowed chair in agricultural ecosystems management
in the university's College of Food, Agricultural, and
Environmental Sciences.
A faculty member in the Department of Entomology since 1987
and associate chair since 2001, Hoy will continue the work of
the late Ben Stinner, who held the Kellogg-endowed chair until
his untimely death Nov. 23, 2004, in a car accident.
"Casey is an outstanding research scientist who has an
established record of working successfully in agroecosystems
management," said OARDC Director Steve Slack. "We know that he
will continue the legacy of excellence we expect from the person
in this position."
As the Kellogg-endowed chair, Hoy will lead the
Agroecosystems Management Program (AMP), a grassroots effort
that has brought together citizens and Ohio State faculty, staff
and students on a wide range of projects that lead to
sustainability - a balance between environmental, social and
economic goals. Most AMP projects to date have been initiated by
farmers, conservationists, educators and entrepreneurs who
dedicate themselves to Ohio agriculture and rural communities,
with research and education support from their Ohio State
partners.
Agroecosystems management is defined as the integration of
production, environment, economics and social systems - a
concept that provides a holistic and useful framework for
addressing complex societal issues. AMP, of which Hoy has been a
member since its inception, has taken a broad view of this
definition to include field, farm, community, watershed and
regional scales, as well as the links from farmer to market to
consumer.
"I see my role as someone who will help make connections:
between academic disciplines, between people and the land,
between farmers and non-farmers, between non-farmers and their
agricultural roots of just a few generations back," said Hoy,
who will also be a specialist with Ohio State University
Extension.
A national and international expert in developing integrated
pest management (IPM) strategies for vegetable crops, Hoy's
research has enabled growers to cut their pesticide use and grow
even safer products for consumers. He has also conducted
significant research on quantitative ecology, including insect
spatial dynamics and their impact on pest management as well as
quantitative assessment of agroecosystem health.
Hoy believes agroecosystems management can make a significant
contribution to the economic well-being of Ohio, as the state
continues to seek a balance between its strong agricultural base
and its rapidly expanding urbanization.
"One of the areas of tremendous opportunity that isn't
recognized until you start to do your accounting by the triple
bottom line (environmental, economic and social goals combined)
is the mutually supportive relationship between farms and
economic development in neighboring communities," he pointed
out.
"Farms can provide the quality of life that makes Ohio the
place to be for the world's brightest entrepreneurs. Communities
that recognize the many assets that farms provide have a reason
to help their farm neighbors stay on the land and stay in
farming. Helping to make that mutually supportive and
sustainable connection between farms and the economic
development desired by Ohio will be an important goal for me."
Since the death of his predecessor and friend, Hoy has been a
driving force in establishing and funding the Ben Stinner
Endowment for Healthy Agroecosystems and Sustainable Communities
- an effort to continue Stinner's lifework in agroecology by
funding projects that bring Ohio State researchers together with
Ohioans to improve their agroecosystems and communities.
"Ben's vision is very much alive in all of us who worked with
him and will continue through its impact on our future work,"
Hoy said. "I still rely on him at times, through memories and
the inspiration he gave me. At a personal level, it is a
tremendous honor to take up his role, and a serious
responsibility to maintain his exceptional focus on the
combination of environmental, economic and social goals in
everything we do."
Hoy holds both B.S. and Ph.D. degrees in entomology from
Cornell University. He has been president of the Wooster City
Schools Board of Education and has been engaged in K-12 outreach
through grant proposal development for several initiatives
involving Ohio State and the public schools.
Hoy lives in Wooster with his wife, Karen Skubik, and their
children, Briana, 15, and Sean, 11. In addition to the many
outdoor and educational activities of his busy family life, he
enjoys soccer "with a group of good friends in regional leagues
for mature players" and "a long-term project in learning to play
the fiddle."
OARDC and OSU Extension are part of Ohio State's College of
Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences.
Writer: Mauricio Espinoza
espinoza.15@osu.edu
(330) 202-3550
Call for Funding Requests
The Agroecosystems Management Program (AMP) invites requests
for small amounts of funding that can be used as start-up or
leverage for interdisciplinary research, education and outreach
projects that demonstrate compatibility and synergism among
social, economic and environmental objectives. A total of $5000
is available to be awarded FY2006. Your request (1-3 pages)
outlining how the funds will be used and how they will leverage
additional resources can be sent to grant.47@osu.edu. The AMP
Executive Committee meets periodically and will review requests
on an ongoing basis throughout the year until the funds are
expended.
Growing Together - Agriculture and the
Arts
Our agriculture and the arts project culminated in the
concert Growing Together - Agriculture and the Arts
performed by the Springfield Orchestra to standing ovations. In
the debut performance of "Our Fields, Farms and Families",
photographs of Clark County's agriculture were projected onto three large screens above the
orchestra performing works of Aaron Copland. Also included
in the program are James Westwater's photochoreographed "Love of Our Land" performed to
Appalachian Spring, Heitzig's Symphony to a Prairie
and Thomson's The Plow that Broke the Plains.
Two accompanying "exploration" concerts for school
aged children were performed to over 1700 students.
The Springfield Arts Council sponsored Bob Ford to
travel to schools in the area to help promote the concert
and to give students an "Ag and Arts" in the classroom
experience. Our project provided Bob with the
photography that he used in the project. To date he has made
over 20 presentations.
A $10,000 supplemental grant was received from the USDA
Foreign Agricultural Service to fund additional expenses of a DVD. Copies will be provided to their 100 field offices in
80 countries around the world. They are hoping that this will
be an effective way to represent the American farmer because
international consumers only see the giant agri-business.
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