Visioning the agriculture blockchain : the role and rise of blockchain in the commercial poultry industry
Blockchain is an emerging technology that is being explored by technologists and industry leaders as a way to revolutionize the agriculture supply chain. The problem is that human and ecological insights are needed to understand the complexities of how blockchain could fulfill these visions. In this work, I assert how the blockchain's promising vision of traceability, immutability and distributed properties presents advancements and challenges to rural farming. This work wrestles with the more subtle ways the blockchain technology would be integrated into the existing infrastructure. Through interviews and participatory design workshops, I talked with an expansive set of stakeholders including Amish farmers, contract growers, senior leadership and field supervisors. This research illuminates that commercial poultry farming is such a complex and diffuse system that any overhaul of its core infrastructure will be difficult to "roll back" once blockchain is "rolled out." Through an HCI and sociotechnical system perspective, drawing particular insights from Science and Technology Studies theories of infrastructure and breakdown, this dissertation asserts three main concerns. First, this dissertation uncovers the dominant narratives on the farm around revision and "roll back" of blockchain, connecting to theories of version control from computer science. Second, this work uncovers that a core concern of the poultry supply chain is death and I reveal the sociotechnical and material implications for the integration of blockchain. Finally, this dissertation discusses the meaning of "security'' for the poultry supply chain in which biosecurity is prioritized over cybersecurity and how blockchain impacts these concerns. Together these findings point to significant implications for designers of blockchain infrastructure and how rural workers will integrate the technology into the supply chain.
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- In Collections
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Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Copyright Status
- Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International
- Material Type
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Theses
- Thesis Advisors
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Jordan, Stephanie
Bauer, Johannes
- Committee Members
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Stern, Michael
Rhodes, Nancy
- Date Published
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2022
- Subjects
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Computer science
Agriculture--Data processing
Computer security
Poultry industry--Technological innovations
Blockchains (Databases)
- Program of Study
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Information and Media - Doctor of Philosophy
- Degree Level
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Doctoral
- Language
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English
- Pages
- xiii, 176 pages
- ISBN
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9798438730798
- Permalink
- https://doi.org/doi:10.25335/721z-7090