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The participatory construction of new economic models in short food supply chains
Abstract While a number of works question the alterity of alternative food chains, little has been said about the social processes under which new economic models are, or may be, developed within the broader movement around ‘short food supply chains’ (SFCs) in Europe. Considering SFCs as economic organisations, we propose an analytical framework based on New Economic Sociology and Convention Theory, enriched by Social and Solidarity Economics, to capture the social construction of new economic models in such chains. We apply this framework to two case studies: an open-air market promoting short food supply chains in France, and a partnership between an agricultural cooperative and several solidarity purchase groups (GAS) in Italy. Analysing the trajectories of the two initiatives, we highlight the processes through which new economic models are jointly built via interactions between different actors. Our results open two lines of discussion: one concerning the ‘new economic models' that emerge from the two cases, a second regarding the actors' participation in elaborating and enacting these new models.
Highlights Short food supply chains are economic organisations designed by social interactions. The construction of new economic models is made of negotiations and compromises. Different ways to organise a new food economy can be described through common criteria. New economic models rely on trust, transparency, mutual acknowledgment and learning. Participation of specialists and non-specialists favours new economic models.
The participatory construction of new economic models in short food supply chains
Abstract While a number of works question the alterity of alternative food chains, little has been said about the social processes under which new economic models are, or may be, developed within the broader movement around ‘short food supply chains’ (SFCs) in Europe. Considering SFCs as economic organisations, we propose an analytical framework based on New Economic Sociology and Convention Theory, enriched by Social and Solidarity Economics, to capture the social construction of new economic models in such chains. We apply this framework to two case studies: an open-air market promoting short food supply chains in France, and a partnership between an agricultural cooperative and several solidarity purchase groups (GAS) in Italy. Analysing the trajectories of the two initiatives, we highlight the processes through which new economic models are jointly built via interactions between different actors. Our results open two lines of discussion: one concerning the ‘new economic models' that emerge from the two cases, a second regarding the actors' participation in elaborating and enacting these new models.
Highlights Short food supply chains are economic organisations designed by social interactions. The construction of new economic models is made of negotiations and compromises. Different ways to organise a new food economy can be described through common criteria. New economic models rely on trust, transparency, mutual acknowledgment and learning. Participation of specialists and non-specialists favours new economic models.
The participatory construction of new economic models in short food supply chains
Chiffoleau, Yuna (Autor:in) / Millet-Amrani, Sarah (Autor:in) / Rossi, Adanella (Autor:in) / Rivera-Ferre, Marta Guadalupe (Autor:in) / Merino, Pedro Lopez (Autor:in)
Journal of Rural Studies ; 68 ; 182-190
20.01.2019
9 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
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