The Duchy College Rural Business School was founded in 2006. It is part of the Cornwall College Group and its main purpose is to provide a range of services that meet the needs of rural communities, including training opportunities, business support and an ongoing research programme. Richard Soffe is Director of the Rural Business School.
Rural Business Research is a team of British researchers working in the areas of farming, the environment and rural business. It is a consortium of academic units delivering projects for government, levy-funded research bodies, research councils, and commercial clients. It runs the Farm Business Survey, which it carries out for Defra.
Postgraduate Study
Postgraduate Study is offered through the Rural Business School at Duchy College. Subject matter is based within land-based and rural industry sectors and is offered in a versatile format to accommodate the requirements of students.
The Rural Business School runs a number of RDPE funded projects. These include:
The Skills Programme
The Skills Programme offers support funding for training. Training on the Skills Programme is delivered by a partnership led by the Rural Business School. The other partners are the Royal Agricultural University and Lantra.
Healthy Livestock
The Healthy Livestock Project focuses on controlling the incidence of various conditions in livestock.
The Southwest Layers and Game Bird Initiative offers funding for training events, conferences and activities designed to improve flock health. It is driven by the Rural Business School who are running a three-year project funded through the Southwest Healthy Livestock Initiative. This project has been formulated with the West Country Layers Association.
The Rural Business School delivers the South West Healthy Livestock Initiative Knowledge Exchange project in partnership with the University of Bristol Veterinary School. This initiative recognises the economic and cultural significance of livestock rearing to the region. The project provides knowledge support to SWHLI sector projects at a regional level and communicates the resulting information on the health and welfare of the region’s livestock population to the wider farming community.
The main aim of South West Agricultural Resource Management is to share information on resource management within the farming community in the South West Region of England. SWARM works with funding agencies, farming groups and other stakeholders to ensure up to date knowledge on all aspects of farm resource management is available to the local farming community.