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WS 26.103

Alpine Farming Futures

Session status: Accepted
Content last updated: 2026-04-16 00:06:26
Online available since: 2025-12-17 09:55:08

Details

  • Full Title

    Alpine Futures: Reimagining Mountain Farming in a Changing World
  • Scheduled

    TBA
    TBA
  • Chair

    Stotten, Rike
  • Co-chair(s)

    Penker, Marianne; and Altenbuchner, Christine
  • Thematic Focus

    Agriculture, Anthropology, Culture, Gender, Sustainable Development
  • Keywords

    Mountain Farming, Social-Ecological Change, Rural Communities, Resilience & Adaptation, Alpine Futures

Abstract/Description

The content was (partly) adapted by AI

Mountain farming in the Alps is undergoing profound transformation driven by climate change, demographic shifts, evolving labour conditions, market volatility, and changing societal expectations regarding food, landscapes and cultural heritage. These pressures reshape not only food systems, but also the social fabric, livelihoods, identities, and futures of mountain communities. Within these developments, shifts in gender roles and the evolving responsibilities of female farmers represent an important yet often understated aspect of change. This session explores how Alpine farming is being challenged, adapted and reimagined in a rapidly changing world, drawing on social-science perspectives and interdisciplinary insights.

The session invites contributions that examine current transformations and future pathways of mountain farming through lenses such as rural sociology, anthropology, geography, political ecology, agricultural economics, governance studies and sustainability research. We welcome empirical case studies, comparative analyses across Alpine regions, conceptual or methodological innovations, and transdisciplinary work involving practitioners, policy actors, farmers, and local communities.

Key themes include socio-economic and demographic changes; evolving labour dynamics and the future of seasonal work; new forms of agricultural organisation and cooperation; cultural heritage and identity; multifunctional and agroecological approaches; land-use change and biodiversity implications; and the governance frameworks shaping the long-term sustainability. The session aims to illuminate how mountain farming systems can navigate tensions between tradition and innovation, ecological constraints and economic viability, and local needs and broader policy frameworks.

By fostering dialogue between researchers and stakeholders, the session seeks to stimulate reflection on resilient futures for Alpine agriculture and rural communities. It contributes to a forward-looking understanding of the role of mountain farming in shaping liveable, biodiverse, and socially cohesive Alpine landscapes.

Registered Abstracts

ID: 3.21

The changing community-based management of Alpine pastures in the Slovenian Alps

Elizabeta Vrsnik

Abstract/Description

Many Alpine pastures are shaped by a long history of traditional collective land management practices. Those pastures that are based on collective management or ownership can be understood as a sustainable example of a system rooted in the local environment, based on cooperation, shared responsibility and close interaction between humans, animals, and the environment. Today, however, such areas are undergoing transformation, adaptation, or decline, while remaining a key element of the Alpine cultural landscape. These extensive farming systems are increasingly shaped by modern policies, socio‑economic transformations, and both natural and cultural conservation regimes that directly influence them. In this way not only public perceptions of the pastures and the surrounding landscape change, but also the material landscape and the everyday practices of those who graze their livestock on the Alpine pastures.

Here we present ongoing research based primarily on two case studies in the Slovenian Alps. By using a mixed-methods approach that combines policy analysis, historical land-use records, and ethnographic fieldwork with local communities and decision-makers, we examine how these Alpine pastures are evolving while navigating multi-level governance. The research explores the conflicts, synergies, and power relations that emerge among local users, institutions and decision-makers in community-based management, showing how traditionally managed systems interact with contemporary policies and shifting societal expectations.

ID: 3.11

The Role of Women in Alpine Farming

Constanze Rammer

Abstract/Description

The Role of Women in Alpine Farming

Constanze Rammer

Alpine pastures shape Austria’s landscapes and cultural heritage while providing critical ecological functions. Yet, in less favorable sites, abandonment continues despite conservation measures, accelerating scrub encroachment and reforestation. This presentation examines how women-led agritourism and diversification strategies are reimagining alpine farming to enhance resilience, economic viability, and social sustainability.

Drawing on narrative interviews with female alpine farmers who offer agrotourism services across Austria, including direct marketing, workshops, farm stays, and artisan production, the study uses thematic analysis to explore women’s roles in innovation, farm management, and community engagement. First findings highlight that women are pivotal in developing multifunctional farm models, integrating traditional pastoral practices with new revenue streams. These initiatives support ongoing grazing and landscape maintenance, stabilize household incomes, strengthen local value chains, and deepen visitor connections to alpine environments. They also reposition women as key decision-makers and entrepreneurs, reshaping gender norms within farm families and rural communities.

The analysis identifies enabling factors (e.g., transferable skills, social networks, digital marketing) and recurring constraints (e.g., seasonal workload peaks, childcare and care responsibilities, limited infrastructure and broadband, regulatory complexity and market access). By foregrounding women’s agency in diversification and place-based innovation, this work offers empirically grounded insights into the socio-ecological pathways that can counter pasture abandonment and align alpine farming with climate adaptation, landscape stewardship, and vibrant rural futures.

ID: 3.36

Collective action and the future of agrarian mountain livelihoods: The case of South Tyrol/Alpes

Stephanie Leder-Büttner

Abstract/Description

Collective action has historically sustained agrarian mountain livelihoods. Irrigation, livestock, hay work, sharing of knowledges and farm technologies such as tractors has been organized by communities themselves both through institutionalized forms such as farmer organisations and informal arrangements among neighbors and communities. In the last decades, however, a shift from peasant to capitalist modes of production, farm specialization, mechanization, subsidy regulations, and a devaluation of family farming has resulted in fundamental shifts in agrarian economies and rural out-migration. These demographic, economic and socio-spatial changes have challenged the sustainability of smallholders globally, and in particular, in the European Alps. Building on qualitative fieldwork on smallholders in mountain elevations above 1200 m in South Tyrol, this talk will present diverse smallholders’ perspectives on changes in collective action, and reflect on current forms of collective action in mountain agriculture. I argue that, rather than dissolving under these changes, collective action has been reworked and sometimes revitalized. If new and socially vibrant rural futures in the European Alps are to be realized, it is necessary to understand the forms, scales, and social relations of collective action and their contribution to sustainable mountain livelihoods.

ID: 3.76

Balancing water, forests and pastures in a Swiss mountain village

Matthias Schmidt

Abstract/Description

The management of common-pool resources such as water, forests and pastureland in the small mountain village of Törbel in the Swiss canton of Valais gained worldwide attention through studies by the anthropologist Robert Netting and economist Elinor Ostrom. Törbel was considered a prime example of the thesis that natural resources such as water, pastureland and forests can be managed successfully and sustainably by the local community over centuries. However, the profound socio-economic, socio-cultural and technological developments and transformations of recent decades have not left the Valais untouched. As a result, the environment and infrastructure, as well as the lives and lifestyles of the inhabitants of Törbel, have changed significantly. The presentation explores the question of whether the theory on successful common property regimes still hold true today and will continue to do so in the future in Alpine mountain villages. The hypothesis is that the common property regime, which ensured the survival of the inhabitants of Törbel for many centuries, has now been greatly eroded and its significance has changed. It could continue to play an important role in terms of landscape conservation and strengthening the village structure. The study is based on empirical field research conducted in the study region in 2025.

ID: 3.80

Needs-based and automated irrigation as part of a sustainable ecological landscape management strategy in mountainous areas

Davnah Urbach
Randin, Christophe; Girardin, Eric; Rubin, Michael; Oberhummer, Evelyne; Schnyder, Mario; Mengotti, Carlo; Compagnoni, Thomas; Goetz, Markus

Abstract/Description

Switzerland’s mountain landscapes have been shaped and maintained by agriculture for centuries and are an important part of our identity and economy. However, climate change is altering these landscapes visibly and poses increasing challenges for mountain farming. Adaptations are therefore needed to ensure the sustainable management of mountain areas as part of a landscape conservation strategy. Needs-based and automated irrigation of mountain meadows is part of a portfolio of such adaptation strategies. It is considered a proactive measure to avoid resource conflicts and ensure the long-term sustainable use of valuable mountain landscapes, despite changes in the accessibility, the predictability, as well as the amount of irrigation water. Using two examples from Valais and Val Poschiavo in Switzerland, this presentation illustrates the application of resource-saving and sustainable model-based irrigation of mountain meadows in public-private partnerships with researchers, park authorities, individual farmers, local cooperatives, and small-to-medium enterprises.

Submitted Abstracts

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