Abstract
For some time we have seen a shift away from direct marketing, a core feature and dominant exchange form in the alternative food world, towards a greater role for intermediation. Yet, we still need to better understand to what extent and in what ways new mediated Alternative Food Networks (AFNs) represent an evolution of or departure from core tenets of alternative food systems. This paper focuses on AFNs with new intermediaries that connect small-scale producers with urban end-consumers. Based on original research in Frankfurt, Berlin, and Calgary, we analyze three different types of mediated AFNs: one driven by consumers, one by an external intermediary, and one by producers. Our cases include non-capitalist, capitalist, and alternative capitalist economic practices as identified by Gibson-Graham. Conceptually, we base our analysis on the three-pillar-model of alternative agri-food systems, which we further refine. Besides comparing our cases with each other, for heuristic purposes we also compare them with an ideal-type model that adheres to core tenets of alterity in all three pillars. Our empirical analysis shows that intermediary organizations can bring important benefits and that mediated AFNs are in principle able to hold true to the core tenets of alternative agri-food systems. However, it is very important to develop models of democratic control and ownership as well as economic arrangements in which created value is fairly shared. Only then can the potentials of new mediated models be realized while the pitfalls of the conventional systems they seek to replace be avoided.
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Notes
Generally speaking, AFNs seek to provide a spatial, economic, environmental, and social alternative to conventional food chains. They are usually based on Short Food Supply Chains (SFSCs), which are food chains involving fewer actors, more direct connections between producers and consumers, and shorter geographical distance between locales of production and consumption. The shortest option for such food chains is direct marketing.
Mount and Smither (2014, p. 117), for example, in their conclusions present the question of “whether the conventionalization seen in intermediary-led chains is an inevitable outcome in alternative markets (…), or if the cooperative (…) practices common to small-scale, direct marketing groups can be replicated” as the main further research need.
The German sociologist Max Weber conceived the notion of ‘ideal-types’ as methodological tools to help understand and analyze social reality: “(…) we can make the characteristic features of [the relationship between empirical data and an abstract construct] pragmatically clear and understandable by reference to an ideal-type. This procedure can be indispensable for heuristic as well as expository purposes. The ideal typical concept (…) is not a description of reality (…) In its conceptual purity, this mental construct cannot be found empirically anywhere in reality. It is a utopia. (…) research faces the task of determining in each individual case, the extent to which this ideal-construction approximates to or diverges from reality (…)” (Weber 1949 [1905], p. 90).
The source for this definition is a report prepared for ‘urgenci—The International Network for Community Supported Agriculture’ (a grassroots network of European CSAs) that analyzed the diverse forms of CSAs emerging across Europe in a collaborative, citizen-led, and self-managed manner.
There are, however, solidarity models in which members pay according to their abilities (personal observation in Germany and e.g., Grasseni 2018 for Boston, MA).
Those expectations can’t possibly be met from the supply side, i.e., the CSA farmer. Instead of following an unattainable supermarket ideal through even more customization of CSA shares for example, Galt et al. (2019) therefore suggest to ‘cultivate CSA people’ through communication and education in a collective effort of producers and consumers (see also DeLind 1999). A recent large quantitative study on perception by non-participants of CSA in Germany also emphasizes education on transformative benefits of the model, integration into everyday life, as well as connecting it to a pro-environmental and pro-social image (rather than just advertising fresh and regional food as this can be obtained elsewhere); and highlights the significance of social peer-group influence and a raised public profile (Diekmann and Theuvsen 2019).
More internationally comparative empirical research would be needed to confirm this initial assessment which is based on information provided in European CSA Research Group (2016).
We refer to the German model only. Note that beyond media coverage and some entries in Wikipedia, academic publications on Marktschwärmer are sparse and, apart from brief mentions in other studies, limited to two student theses (Bajer 2017; Roth 2018) and a working paper (Scherf and Kampffmeyer 2020).
In the UK, where the model was called Food Assembly, it only operated from 2014 to 2018.
Its growth strategy has been relatively successful in Germany where numbers of Schwärmereien doubled from 2017 to 2018, and has in early 2020 reached 130 (see https://marktschwaermer.de/de, last accessed 2021/03/24).
See https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Ruche_qui_dit_oui_!, last accessed 2021/03/24.
See https://rue89bordeaux.com/2014/12/ruche-dit-oui-amap-paysans-circuit-court/, last accessed 2021/03/24.
YYC refers to the Calgary airport acronym and is commonly used to replace the city’s name.
See https://yycgrowers.com/movement/, last accessed 2021/03/24.
Although CSAs and box-schemes are distinct, they are sometimes conflated in practice. Box schemes home deliver fresh produce and other products, source from different producers, potentially also internationally. Customers can usually order specific items. While box schemes also promote ‘good’ food, they do not share the economic principles of CSAs (see section “Integrating the three pillars: Community Supported Agriculture CSA”).
More empirical research is needed to determine in what way those goals and motivations conflict with each other and if and how they can be reconciled (see Kirkwood and Walton 2014 for an example).
Abbreviations
- AFN:
-
Alternative Food Networks
- AOTM:
-
Agriculture of the Middle
- CSA:
-
Community Supported Agriculture
- USDA:
-
United States Department of Agriculture
- SFSC:
-
Short Food Supply Chain
- VBSC:
-
Value Based Supply Chain
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Acknowledgement
We are indebted to our interviewees who shared their ideas and experiences with us. We are grateful to Kye Kocher, Lauren Kepkiewicz, Charlie Spring, Abby Landon, and the Calgary Institute for the Humanities Food Studies Interdisciplinary Working Group members for their helpful comments on an earlier version of the manuscript. Finally, we thank the five anonymous reviewers; their thoughtful comments greatly strengthened the paper. This research was supported through the Canada Research Chair program of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) as well as through the Mitacs Globalink Program.
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Rosol, M., Barbosa, R. Moving beyond direct marketing with new mediated models: evolution of or departure from alternative food networks?. Agric Hum Values 38, 1021–1039 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10460-021-10210-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10460-021-10210-4