4.6 Review

An Operational Approach to Agroecology-Based Local Agri-Food Systems

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13158443

Keywords

sustainable food systems; agroecological transitions; political agroecology; agroecology scaling

Funding

  1. Third Sector grants of the Spanish Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge, call 2021
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [RTI2018-093970-B-C31]
  3. Junta de Andalucia [Andalusian Regional Government] [UPO-1260167]

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The transition to sustainability at the scale of food systems has garnered attention from scientific and political arenas. Agroecology plays a central role in these discussions and efforts have been made to scale the agroecology process. There is a need for transdisciplinary dialogue to address emergent research questions and to advance towards Agroecology-based Local Agri-food Systems.
In recent years, the transition to sustainability at a food systems' scale has drawn major attention both from the scientific and political arenas. Agroecology has become central to such discussions, while impressive efforts have been made to conceptualize the agroecology scaling process. It has thus become necessary to apply the concept of agroecology transitions to the scale of food systems and in different real-world contexts. Scaling local agroecology experiences of production, distribution, and consumption, which are often disconnected and/or disorganized, also reveals emergent research gaps. A critical review was performed in order to establish a transdisciplinary dialogue between both political agroecology and the literature on sustainable food systems. The objective was to build insights into how to advance towards Agroecology-based Local Agri-food Systems (ALAS). Our review unveils emergent questions such as: how to overcome the metabolic rift related to segregated activities along the food chain, how to feed cities sustainably, and how they should relate to the surrounding territories, which social subjects should drive such transitions, and which governance arrangements would be needed. The paper argues in favor of the re-construction of food metabolisms, territorial flows, plural subjects and (bottom-up) governance assemblages, placing life at the center of the food system and going beyond the rural-urban divide.

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