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Degrowing alternative agriculture: institutions and aspirations as sustainability metrics for small farmers in Bosnia and India

Much sustainable development in agri-food systems is predicated upon increasing the production of agricultural commodities amid changing climates, political organization, and markets. While this growth in exports is critical for the expansion of alternative production supply chains like certified or...

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Published in:Sustainability science 2022-11, Vol.17 (6), p.2301-2314
Main Author: Flachs, Andrew
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Language:English
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description Much sustainable development in agri-food systems is predicated upon increasing the production of agricultural commodities amid changing climates, political organization, and markets. While this growth in exports is critical for the expansion of alternative production supply chains like certified organic commodities markets, the long-term success of alternative agriculture development programs in helping farmers achieve a range of rural aspirations depends not on sociotechnical fixes for specific ecological problems, but on the creative and performative reorganizations of labor and value in farm spaces. Degrowth, a political-economic theory of reorganizing production to achieve socio-ecological sustainability over the long term, provides a framework to evaluate the lasting impact of alternative agricultural development or persistent smallholder farming beyond the production or sale of agricultural commodities. This paper draws on research with organic cotton and coffee farmers in India, as well as a brief case study with small-scale heritage farmers in Bosnia, to argue that sustainability, broadly conceived, must account for factors beyond resource-efficiency or yields. Small-scale organic farming in India and household allotments in Bosnia will never outperform agri-food commodities producers with respect to profits, yields, or sustained growth. However, a degrowth perspective suggests that these are the wrong metrics for sustainability. Efforts that keep farmers in place and with local autonomy are best positioned to ensure that small-scale farmers can continue to manage agricultural landscapes over the long term.
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source ABI/INFORM Global; Springer Nature
subjects Agribusiness
Agricultural commodities
Agricultural development
Agricultural land
Agricultural production
Agriculture
Allotments
Alternative farming
Climate change
Climate Change Management and Policy
Coffee
Commodities
Cotton
Earth and Environmental Science
Environment
Environmental Economics
Environmental Management
Farmers
Farming
Farms
Food
Landscape Ecology
Organic farming
Public Health
Resource efficiency
Small farms
Small-scale farming
Special Feature: Original Article
Special Feature: Sustainability in Agri-Food Systems: Transformative Trajectories toward the Post-Anthropocene
Supply chains
Sustainability
Sustainable agriculture
Sustainable Development
title Degrowing alternative agriculture: institutions and aspirations as sustainability metrics for small farmers in Bosnia and India
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