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Bringing agroecology to scale: key drivers and emblematic cases

Mier y Terán Giménez Cacho, Mateo [autor] | Giraldo Palacio, Omar Felipe [autor] | Aldasoro Maya, Elda Miriam [autora] | Morales, H [autora] | Ferguson, Bruce G, 1967- [autor] | Rosset, Peter Michael [autor] | Khadse, Ashlesha [autora] | Campos, Carmen [autora].
Tipo de material: Artículo
 en línea Artículo en línea Tipo de contenido: Texto Tipo de medio: Computadora Tipo de portador: Recurso en líneaTema(s): Escalamiento agroecológico | Agroecología | Movimientos sociales | Estudio de casosTema(s) en inglés: Agroecological scaling | Agroecology | Social movements | Case studiesDescriptor(es) geográficos: Chimaltenango (Guatemala) | Cuba | Chiapas (México) | India | Brasil Nota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso En: Agroecology And Sustainable Food Systems. Volumen 42, número 6 (Mar. 2018), páginas 637-665. --ISSN: 2168-3565Número de sistema: 58834Resumen:
Inglés

Agroecology as a transformative movement has gained momentum in many countries worldwide. In several cases, the implementation of agroecological practices has grown beyond isolated, local experiences to be employed by ever-greater numbers of families and communities over ever-larger territories and to engage more people in the processing, distribution, and consumption of agroecologically produced food. To understand the nonlinear, multidimensional processes that have enabled and impelled the bringing to scale of agroecology, we review and analyze emblematic cases that include the farmer-to-farmermovement in Central America; the national peasant agroecologymovement in Cuba; the organic coffee boom in Chiapas, Mexico; the spread of Zero Budget Natural Farming in Karnataka, India; and the agroecological farmer-consumer marketing network "Rede Ecovida," in Brazil. On the basis of our analysis, we identify eight key drivers of the process of taking agroecology to scale: (1) recognition of a crisis that motivates the search for alternatives, (2) social organization, (3) constructivist learning processes, (4) effective agroecological practices, (5) mobilizing discourses, (6) external allies, (7) favorable markets, and (8) favorable policies. This initial analysis shows that organization and social fabric are the growth media on which agroecology advances, with the help of the other drivers. A more detailed understanding is needed on how these multiple dimensions interact with, reinforce, and generate positive feedback with each other to make agroecology's territorial expansion possible.

Recurso en línea: https://doi.org/10.1080/21683565.2018.1443313
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Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso

Agroecology as a transformative movement has gained momentum in many countries worldwide. In several cases, the implementation of agroecological practices has grown beyond isolated, local experiences to be employed by ever-greater numbers of families and communities over ever-larger territories and to engage more people in the processing, distribution, and consumption of agroecologically produced food. To understand the nonlinear, multidimensional processes that have enabled and impelled the bringing to scale of agroecology, we review and analyze emblematic cases that include the farmer-to-farmermovement in Central America; the national peasant agroecologymovement in Cuba; the organic coffee boom in Chiapas, Mexico; the spread of Zero Budget Natural Farming in Karnataka, India; and the agroecological farmer-consumer marketing network "Rede Ecovida," in Brazil. On the basis of our analysis, we identify eight key drivers of the process of taking agroecology to scale: (1) recognition of a crisis that motivates the search for alternatives, (2) social organization, (3) constructivist learning processes, (4) effective agroecological practices, (5) mobilizing discourses, (6) external allies, (7) favorable markets, and (8) favorable policies. This initial analysis shows that organization and social fabric are the growth media on which agroecology advances, with the help of the other drivers. A more detailed understanding is needed on how these multiple dimensions interact with, reinforce, and generate positive feedback with each other to make agroecology's territorial expansion possible. eng

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