Moore, Keith M.2016-04-192016-04-192008Rural Sociology 73(3): 414-439http://hdl.handle.net/10919/68929Metadata only recordThis article explains how networks between researchers, extension agents, and farmers can help transfer technology and interconnect people in such a way that promotes the universal implementation of best management practices for pesticide use. The author contends that it is very important for decision makers and agricultural scientists to pay attention to how their negotiations and policies impact farm level decisions. To reinforce his argument, the author offers three case studies to analyze a few current practices that promote technological change in agriculture. Ultimately, in order to pursue sustainable agriculture we need to search for solutions that integrate local and scientific knowledge into a more holistic understanding of the production circumstances involved with smallholder farms.text/plainen-USIn CopyrightFarmer field schoolsBest management practicesPest managementAdoption of innovationsLocal knowledgeKnowledge networksSocial networksNegotiationActor-network theoryFarming systems modelsNetwork segmentsFarm/Enterprise Scale Field Scale GovernanceNetwork framing of pest management knowledge and practiceAbstractCopyright 2008 by the Rural Sociological Societyhttps://doi.org/10.1526/003601108785766552