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Public Policy
California's future prosperity relies on making difficult, and sometimes controversial, policy choices when it comes to distributing economic and natural resources between agriculture and urban development.
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Emerging biotechnologies continue to evolve, but to ensure their widespread adoption public policy should be informed by careful science-based evaluation of the benefits, potential risks and ethics of these technologies. Importantly, the benefits to society should be communicated to allay public concerns.
The Agricultural Research Institute (ARI) and its research collaborators are well-positioned to serve as non-partisan, scientifically based resources for policymakers. Wise choices about land use, water cost, water quality and allocation, air quality standards, farm worker safety, environmental protection and restoration, and agricultural and municipal waste management will heavily influence agriculture's future profitability, competitiveness, and sustainability.
The formation of agricultural policy involves a diverse set of stakeholders, but few Americans are directly involved in farming, ranching and timber production. Science-informed policies are more likely to sustain agriculture, protect the environment and provide California with a rich and diverse economic base. In addition to research conducted at the interface of public policy, science and agriculture, the ARI is supporting students to develop backgrounds in science and public policy through internships.
A short list of project and focus areas that have been supported by the ARI includes:
- Developing the next generation of agricultural safety and health leaders
- Implications of trade barriers applied to citrus export products
- Analyses of fire risk at the urban-wildland interface
- Public land management from a social science perspective