Games and fieldwork in agriculture: A systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science

Games are particularly relevant for field research in agriculture, where alternative experimental designs can be costly and unfeasible. Games are also popular for non-experimental purposes such as recreating learning experiences and facilitating dialogue with local communities. After a systematic re...

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Autores principales: Hernández Aguilera, J. Nicolas, Mauerman, Max, Herrera, Alexandra, Vasilaky, Kathryn, Baethgen, Walter E., Loboguerrero Rodriguez, Ana María, Diro, Rahel, Tesfamariam Tekeste, Yohana, Osgood, Daniel
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110118
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author Hernández Aguilera, J. Nicolas
Mauerman, Max
Herrera, Alexandra
Vasilaky, Kathryn
Baethgen, Walter E.
Loboguerrero Rodriguez, Ana María
Diro, Rahel
Tesfamariam Tekeste, Yohana
Osgood, Daniel
author_browse Baethgen, Walter E.
Diro, Rahel
Hernández Aguilera, J. Nicolas
Herrera, Alexandra
Loboguerrero Rodriguez, Ana María
Mauerman, Max
Osgood, Daniel
Tesfamariam Tekeste, Yohana
Vasilaky, Kathryn
author_facet Hernández Aguilera, J. Nicolas
Mauerman, Max
Herrera, Alexandra
Vasilaky, Kathryn
Baethgen, Walter E.
Loboguerrero Rodriguez, Ana María
Diro, Rahel
Tesfamariam Tekeste, Yohana
Osgood, Daniel
author_sort Hernández Aguilera, J. Nicolas
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Games are particularly relevant for field research in agriculture, where alternative experimental designs can be costly and unfeasible. Games are also popular for non-experimental purposes such as recreating learning experiences and facilitating dialogue with local communities. After a systematic review of the literature, we found that the volume of published studies employing coordination and cooperation games increased during the 2000–2020 period. In recent years, more attention has been given to the areas of natural resource management, conservation, and ecology, particularly in regions important to agricultural sustainability. Other games, such as trust and risk games, have come to be regarded as standards of artefactual and framed field experiments in agriculture. Regardless of their scope, most games’ results are subject to criticism for their internal and external validity. In particular, a significant portion of the games reviewed here reveal recruitment biases towards women and provide few opportunities for continued impact assessment. However, games’ validity should be judged on a case-by-case basis. Specific cultural aspects of games might reflect the real context, and generalizing games’ conclusions to di erent settings is often constrained by cost and utility. Overall, games in agriculture could benefit from more significant, frequent, and inclusive experiments and data—all possibilities o ered by digital technology. Present-day physical distance restrictions may accelerate this shift. New technologies and engaging mediums to approach farmers might present a turning point for integrating experimental and non-experimental games for agriculture in the 21st century.
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spelling CGSpace1101182025-11-11T18:50:19Z Games and fieldwork in agriculture: A systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science Hernández Aguilera, J. Nicolas Mauerman, Max Herrera, Alexandra Vasilaky, Kathryn Baethgen, Walter E. Loboguerrero Rodriguez, Ana María Diro, Rahel Tesfamariam Tekeste, Yohana Osgood, Daniel field experiments experimentación en campo agriculture agricultura Games are particularly relevant for field research in agriculture, where alternative experimental designs can be costly and unfeasible. Games are also popular for non-experimental purposes such as recreating learning experiences and facilitating dialogue with local communities. After a systematic review of the literature, we found that the volume of published studies employing coordination and cooperation games increased during the 2000–2020 period. In recent years, more attention has been given to the areas of natural resource management, conservation, and ecology, particularly in regions important to agricultural sustainability. Other games, such as trust and risk games, have come to be regarded as standards of artefactual and framed field experiments in agriculture. Regardless of their scope, most games’ results are subject to criticism for their internal and external validity. In particular, a significant portion of the games reviewed here reveal recruitment biases towards women and provide few opportunities for continued impact assessment. However, games’ validity should be judged on a case-by-case basis. Specific cultural aspects of games might reflect the real context, and generalizing games’ conclusions to di erent settings is often constrained by cost and utility. Overall, games in agriculture could benefit from more significant, frequent, and inclusive experiments and data—all possibilities o ered by digital technology. Present-day physical distance restrictions may accelerate this shift. New technologies and engaging mediums to approach farmers might present a turning point for integrating experimental and non-experimental games for agriculture in the 21st century. 2020-10-23 2020-11-11T16:26:30Z 2020-11-11T16:26:30Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110118 en Open Access application/pdf MDPI Hernandez-Aguilera, J.N.; Mauerman, M.; Herrera, A.; Vasilaky, K.; Baethgen, W.; Loboguerrero, A.M; Diro, R.; Tesfamariam Tekeste, Y.; Osgood, D. (2020) Games and Fieldwork in Agriculture: A Systematic Review of the 21st Century in Economics and Social Science. Games 11:47 ISSN: 2073-4336
spellingShingle field experiments
experimentación en campo
agriculture
agricultura
Hernández Aguilera, J. Nicolas
Mauerman, Max
Herrera, Alexandra
Vasilaky, Kathryn
Baethgen, Walter E.
Loboguerrero Rodriguez, Ana María
Diro, Rahel
Tesfamariam Tekeste, Yohana
Osgood, Daniel
Games and fieldwork in agriculture: A systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science
title Games and fieldwork in agriculture: A systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science
title_full Games and fieldwork in agriculture: A systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science
title_fullStr Games and fieldwork in agriculture: A systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science
title_full_unstemmed Games and fieldwork in agriculture: A systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science
title_short Games and fieldwork in agriculture: A systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science
title_sort games and fieldwork in agriculture a systematic review of the 21st century in economics and social science
topic field experiments
experimentación en campo
agriculture
agricultura
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110118
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