Agroecosystem Analysis
Agroecosystem analysis (AEA) is a systems-diagnosis framework, formalized by Gordon Conway in 1987, that characterizes any agricultural system through four properties: productivity, stability, sustainability, and equitability. Rather than judging a farming system by yield alone, AEA treats the agroecosystem as an ecological system shaped by human management and asks how much it produces, how reliably it produces it across seasons and shocks, whether it can maintain output over the long run, and how its benefits are distributed among the people who depend on it. The analyst bounds a system at an appropriate hierarchical level — plot, field, farm, watershed, or region — and uses interdisciplinary teams, ranked questions, and simple structured diagrams to surface the key relationships and the trade-offs among the four properties that drive design and policy choices.
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Sources
- Conway, G. R. (1987). The properties of agroecosystems. Agricultural Systems, 24(2), 95-117. DOI: 10.1016/0308-521X(87)90056-4 ↗
- Collinson, M. P. (Ed.) (2000). A History of Farming Systems Research. Wallingford, UK: CABI Publishing & FAO. ISBN: 9780851994055
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Agroecosystem Analysis (Conway's System Properties Framework). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/food-agriculture-studies/agroecosystem-analysis
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