2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodpol.2013.08.002
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Contradictions in state- and civil society-driven developments in China’s ecological agriculture sector

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Cited by 117 publications
(118 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…Other issues occur in the off-farming processing and the distribution of food, in particular, the use of additives. While state authorities have recognized food safety issues, China's many small-scale farmers and scattered channels of food distribution have made regulating the food system a dreadful task [18]. As a result, it has become harder to trace the origins of food production and evaluate the degree of safety in its methods.…”
Section: The Urban Food Desertmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Other issues occur in the off-farming processing and the distribution of food, in particular, the use of additives. While state authorities have recognized food safety issues, China's many small-scale farmers and scattered channels of food distribution have made regulating the food system a dreadful task [18]. As a result, it has become harder to trace the origins of food production and evaluate the degree of safety in its methods.…”
Section: The Urban Food Desertmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Emerging issues and dissatisfaction with the conventional food system, most notably that of food safety, has motivated China's civil society to initiate new approaches to how food systems should be organized [18]. The majority of these initiatives occurred in China's urban and peri-urban areas, but a few have been initiated in more remote areas as well [29].…”
Section: Responses In the Urban Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…To better accommodate the situation in China, we adopt this typology in the current study with two slight modifications: (1) we consider green, hazard-free, 1 and organic agriculture as ecological agriculture under the category of deepening strategy in this paper (see Scott, Si, Schumilas, & Chen, 2014, for the differences between organic, green, and hazard-free certification); and (2) we do not consider off-farm income to be a regrounding strategy for FPCs. Part-time farming is a common phenomenon in rural China, so it should not be viewed as an alternative farming activity.…”
Section: New Forms Of Cost Reductionmentioning
confidence: 99%