2022
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-98617-9_22
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Cooperate to Transform? Regional Cooperation in Community Supported Agriculture as a Driver of Resilient Local Food Systems

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Cited by 11 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Various scholars have proposed strategies for establishing effective and legitimate telecoupled governance systems. This includes problem‐oriented research efforts (Cotta et al, 2022), the development of frameworks for quantifying the environmental impacts of telecoupling (Guo et al, 2021), and the formation of international communities (Rommel et al, 2019). Notably, Garrett and Rueda (2019) suggest the promotion of responsible and ethical consumption as a means to advance novel governance mechanisms for telecoupled systems, as consumers play a pivotal role in propelling voluntary environmental policies and standards within the business sector (Rueda et al, 2017).…”
Section: Achieving Sustainable Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Various scholars have proposed strategies for establishing effective and legitimate telecoupled governance systems. This includes problem‐oriented research efforts (Cotta et al, 2022), the development of frameworks for quantifying the environmental impacts of telecoupling (Guo et al, 2021), and the formation of international communities (Rommel et al, 2019). Notably, Garrett and Rueda (2019) suggest the promotion of responsible and ethical consumption as a means to advance novel governance mechanisms for telecoupled systems, as consumers play a pivotal role in propelling voluntary environmental policies and standards within the business sector (Rueda et al, 2017).…”
Section: Achieving Sustainable Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Espelt [30] shows how CSAs around Barcelona use collaborative online tools to promote prosumer models. Rommel et al [7] uncover how German CSAs sometimes share resources and trade with conventional farms to diversify their output.…”
Section: Community-supported Agriculturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…These benefits and shortcomings are well-established, yet they are based predominantly on the performance of individual CSA initiatives. By contrast, we know surprisingly little about the extent to which CSAs can tackle these shortcomings by collaborating in larger networks and with other types of organisations, which could enable them to expand, diversify, and institutionally consolidate their practices [7]. This paper aims to alleviate this blind spot by investigating the scale, practices, and challenges of local CSA collaboration in Wales and central Germany.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, the Solawi network was born as a bottom-up response to the industrial, globalised agri-food system, which forces smallholders to grow and industrialise, as otherwise they are squeezed out of the market (Blättel-Mink et al 2017). Seeking to bring about a paradigm change towards a regional, ecologically sound, and socially responsible agriculture, the Solawi network promotes the spread of a CSA model, which isolates small-scale producers from market pressures: establishing a long-term producer-consumer partnership in which consumers collectively share the risks and costs of farming in return for a harvest share (Rommel et al 2022).…”
Section: Persisting Tension: Broad Versus Narrow Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…isolating small-scale producers from the pressures of the global market, CSA connects producers with consumers within their region, who commit to collectively bearing the costs and risks of agriculture in return for a share of the harvest(Bonfert 2022b;Rommel et al 2022). In many CSA initiatives, at least in Germany, consumers practise solidarity not only with producers (the German name of CSA is Solidarische Landwirtschaft [Solawi]-solidarity agriculture) but also among consumers, making the financial contributions dependent on a member's budget (through so-called 'contribution rounds')(Blättel-Mink et al 2017).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%