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022 _a1161-0301
024 8 _ahttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.eja.2022.126573
040 _aMX-TxCIM
041 _aeng
100 1 _aJeuffroy, M.H.
_915378
245 1 0 _aDesign workshops for innovative cropping systems and decision-support tools :
_bLearning from 12 case studies
260 _bElsevier,
_c2022.
_aNetherlands :
520 _aAddressing the issues that agriculture is currently facing requires disruptive innovations, which may be stimulated through a process of innovative design, enhancing exploration in specific situations. In the aim to equip this process, several researchers implemented 'design workshops'. Yet, the literature poorly describes the way to organize, implement and capitalize design workshops, in the view to achieve their objectives. We conducted a comprehensive cross-analysis of 12 case studies of design workshops, informed both by data on the preparation, course and outputs of the workshops, and by collective interactions among the workshop managers. Steered by theoretical elements from design science, we identified similarities and divergences across cases, and derived methodological lessons concerning preparation, implementation, and follow-up for future design workshops. Our analysis provides new insights on the key steps for the management of design workshops: key elements to define and share an ambitious but realistic design target were highlighted; the choice of actors participating in the design workshops appeared as a crucial step in the preparation of all the workshops; the initial knowledge basis shared before the exploration had a determinant role on the design process; we identified the need to adapt, to a diversity of agricultural situations, the sequencing, the facilitation of design workshops, and the width of exploration; means to manage, during the design process, the systemic nature of most agricultural innovations were specified; and new criteria, consistent with the diversity of the objectives, were proposed to assess the success of a design workshop. Finally, our research has shown that design workshops promote collective creativity in agriculture, and feed open innovation processes.
546 _aText in English
650 7 _aAgroecology
_2AGROVOC
_93995
650 7 _aInnovation
_2AGROVOC
_94423
650 7 _aCropping systems
_2AGROVOC
_91068
650 7 _aWorkshops
_2AGROVOC
_95296
700 1 _aLoyce, C.
_916860
700 1 _aLefeuvre, T.
_928163
700 1 _aValantin-Morison, M.
_928164
700 1 _aColnenne-David, C.
_928165
700 1 _aGauffreteau, A.
_928166
700 1 _aMédiène, S.
_928167
700 1 _aPelzer, E.
_928168
700 1 _aReau, R.
_928169
700 1 _aSalembier, C.
_928170
700 1 _aMeynard, J.M.
_928171
773 0 _tEuropean Journal of Agronomy
_gv. 139, art. 126573
_dNetherlands : Elsevier, 2022
_x1161-0301
_wG446870
942 _cJA
_n0
_2ddc
999 _c65474
_d65466