4.7 Article

Exploring the economic, social, and environmental dimensions of community-supported agriculture in Italy

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 316, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.128233

Keywords

Sustainable agriculture; Civic agriculture; Urban agriculture; Alternative food network; Short food supply chains

Funding

  1. European Union [773785]
  2. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [773785] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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The diffusion of community supported agriculture (CSA) in Italy is a recent phenomenon, with a focus on investigating its current status and evolution, as well as the benefits and challenges faced by CSA members. Findings indicate that overall, the CSA phenomenon in Italy is meeting sustainability goals but with room for improvement in terms of member involvement, economic viability, and environmental impact. Social transformations where consumers take on dual roles of producers and consumers with increased responsibility are being observed.
The diffusion of community supported agriculture (CSA) in Italy is a very recent phenomenon. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the current status and the evolution of this reality, understanding the social, environmental, and economic benefits for CSA members and the local context. Based on access to CSA data and participant observation during a CSA meeting, a thematic network analysis was adopted to analyse a large piece of information spanning from social, economic, and environmental topics as well as existing relationships between different CSA. Later, we interviewed CSA representatives about CSA production structure and several issues concerning their sustainability, including the role played by CSA members; the economic self-sufficiency; the environmental impact associated with food production. Findings highlighted that in general, the CSA phenomenon in Italy meets sustainability goals, even with different levels of members' involvement, working conditions, economic viability, and environmental impact from a community to one another, with desirable further improvements along all dimensions for most of them. Social transformations in which consumers take the role of producers and consumers at the same time with increased responsibility have been observed. In this context, the members' degree of responsibility contributes to distinguishing CSA in its full sense from CSA initiatives somehow started as ethical purchasing groups, with lower levels of commitment by members, then trying to trigger a higher involvement. The lack of policy support is containing further CSA diffusion and consolidation: new mechanisms are necessary at least to figure out, recognise, and reward the mitigation of environmental impacts characterising local food production and distribution.

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