4.6 Article

Protecting Food Cultural Biodiversity: From Theory to Practice. Challenging the Geographical Indications and the Slow Food Models

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13095265

Keywords

origin food; slow food; geographical indications; cultural biodiversity; heritage; knowledge; specifications; cheese

Funding

  1. Agricultural Transformation by Innovation (AGTRAIN) Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate Programme - EACEA (Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency) of the European Commission
  2. 'Economic assessments of the sustainability of agri-food systems' project, by UNICT 2016-2018 Piano per la Ricerca. Linea di intervento 2-Seconda annualita P7/WP2 [5A722192141]

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This paper compares two types of Origin Food Schemes (OFS), Geographical Indications and Slow Food Presidia, to explore their commonalities and differences in relation to cultural biodiversity. Through ethnographic findings from case studies in France, Italy, and Morocco, it is found that OFS have the potential to defend cultural biodiversity and contribute to sustainable development by mobilizing collective and context-dependent knowledge and practices.
A global expansion in public and private initiatives seeks to strengthen the link between traditional products and sustainable development by creating a niche in the market for these products. Relevant examples are the Geographical Indications and the Slow Food Presidia models. This paper compares both types of Origin Food Schemes (OFS) to disclose the main commonalities and differences in their institutionalization, and their complex outcomes on cultural biodiversity (CB), which is a major concern for the sustainability of rural communities. We used underpinning knowledge dynamics as an analytical lens through the cross-comparison of ethnographic findings collected in four case studies of origin cheeses located in France, Italy and Morocco. Our findings suggest that OFS have high potential to defend CB because of their collective and context-dependent approaches. We argue that knowledge and practices mobilized in OFS are the result of power relations and confrontations among local actors, and show how four identified tensions between different forms and types of knowledge differently shape food culture, food technique, perceptions, and representations. In conclusion, the institutional approaches, practices and knowledge dynamics compared in this analysis show six effective ways to link OFS and CB, facilitating the trajectory toward sustainable development.

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