ABSTRACT
This concluding chapter offers a pragmatic implication for using assemblage thinking and everyday governance. The chapter explores ways to mobilise our understanding of assemblage in the construction of future governance practices. Although the chapter refrains from prescribing a guideline, it identifies four principles as points of departure for building a new form of governance. Here, we expand from the reflexive governance literature, as a very important basis, to propose a governance of emergence. This form of governance shifts towards redistributing responsibilities, prioritising processual and relational objectives, embracing reflexive and processual monitoring methods, and experimenting with spaces of possibilities by targeting attractors. In conclusion, the chapter offers this governance of emergence as a new attractor for redirecting agri-environmental governance (AEG), nurturing a desire for renewed practices and logics in the wide and global AEG assemblage.
