Social Farming Evolutionary Web: from Public Intervention to Value Co-Production
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
3. Social Farming in the Co-Evolution between Practices and Research
- The first stage (knowledge creation), where research activities and debates focused mainly on a deeper comprehension of the emerging topic. In this phase, researchers and private and public stakeholders were involved in a collective process to create and share their understanding and values [7] surrounding the social farming concept, as well as its features and possible facets. This collective knowledge process was mainly supported by participatory methods within European and national projects and activities and remains ongoing in specific research areas. The main evidence from this phase provided a better understanding of how the same resources (plants, animals, farms, and groups of people involved) in diverse Europeans legal frameworks and welfare systems were able to produce specific social farming (SF) practices with different outcomes [2,10]. During the first stage, diverse terms like green care (an umbrella term related to all the activities done in the green, in nature, with plants and animals), care farming (linked to on-farm diversification activities in the frame of the Northern European welfare model), and social farming (attached to the Mediterranean welfare systems and the active involvement of farmers inside a welfare mix of actors) emerged not as synonymous terms but rather as concepts attached to diverse meanings, principles, cultures, public systems, and common frames and perspectives [7,16,18,35,36]. For most of the actors involved, it was evident that social farming initiatives represented an emerging part of a larger iceberg, but, at the same time, it was also clear how rich in terms of innovative elements these initiatives were;
- In the second stage, starting from the emerging evidence, research focused on developing a better understanding of the specific situations in European countries [12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,31], as well as in Asian contexts [21]. During this stage, educational and training projects, as well as national networking activities, spread this concept, albeit sometimes using different names with overlapping content and meanings [22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34]. At the same time, especially where the topics had already been explored, an attempt was made to deeply codify transitional management processes, trans-disciplinary paths, evaluation methods, and evidence-based outcomes [16,45,46];
- In the third ongoing phase, increasing attention to the topic emerged in the political arena. This political interest was stimulated by emerging research evidence, as well as the organization of regional and national platforms involving local public and private stakeholders who were advocating for policy support and regulatory frameworks. In many countries, to develop diverse top-down or bottom-up paths, such interests were translated into policy actions under the definition of national regulatory frames, laws, plans, and policy supports. This phase remains ongoing according to diverse national situations [31].
4. Discussion and Results
4.1. Social Farming: A Welfare Dependent Option
- Northern European model: Here, the presence of strong state intervention driven by the public social health system gives relevance to social workers and their main goals in terms of innovative and quality-based service provisions. Resources from agriculture can be activated by involving diverse farmers in the public logic of intervention. In this situation, farms provide services according to public demands and the existing sets of rules that economically recognize farmers’ participation in the social protection network and their provision of services for selected targeted groups. Farmers diversifying their activity in social services always reduce their interest in agricultural economic processes that might then become residual. A driving motivation for the public social health sector is the implementation of innovative tools able to diversify the offers of social health services. On the other hand, from a farmer’s perspective, a driving motivation is the opportunity to have an income when the agricultural process itself no longer provides a sufficient income in times of market competition. In this case, a socio-therapeutic experience commonly emerges, and economic sustainability is mainly due to public support.
- Workfare: Where farmers are not recognized, the social sector can activate natural and agricultural resources under the financial support of public policies. This is always the case for countries like Germany and France, where mostly social workers are engaged in the organization of large- and medium-sized structures, strongly supported by the state. In such situations, the activation of agricultural economic activities plays an important role by involving disadvantaged people (potentially facing serious difficulties) in vocational training and motivating activities in a protected environment mainly supported by public policies.
- Anglo-Saxon: This charity system is based on foundations able to support social farming and garden initiatives that are normally driven by charity groups and NGOs. Similar to experiences based on workfare systems, Anglo-Saxon systems can use agriculture to support the daily life of disadvantaged people by aiding their agricultural processes only marginally based on their direct economic sustainability. In this case, socio-therapeutic and social inclusion experiences mainly emerge, as in the other practices illustrated above.
- Eastern European: Here, welfare is evolving far from soviet institutional intervention and is readapting into a European frame with local and regional authorities. In this case, social farming initiatives and their debates are beginning to emerge in regimes where communities still have a relevant role due to the involvement of pioneer projects rooted in the support of different actors. Ministries of agriculture are primarily supporting projects and social farming initiatives (in the Czech Republic, Poland, and partially in Hungary), as well as the ministries of labor and social affairs, labor offices (Czech Republic), and European Social Fund (ESF) projects. Agricultural products are a source of income that can be smaller (especially in therapeutic communities) or larger (in case of job inclusion) and also depend on the sizes of the farms involved. For foundations and foundation funds, small donors can support specific projects (especially in Hungary and Slovakia) [31].
- Mediterranean welfare: Social farming is organized among different stakeholders as the consequence of a welfare mix that includes (besides the public) the private specialized sector (the second sector), the so-called third sector (NGOs), families (the forth sector), and newcomers like responsible firms in agriculture (an emerging fifth sector). In this case, the provision of innovative services can be differently designed, becoming based more strongly on NGOs supported by public funding and/or farms operating at the community level. In the last case, recognition of farmers does not always come from direct public payments but is mainly activated by principles linked to the recognition of gifts and reciprocity in the community. In such practices, the participants involved are mainly those who need less attention and might be more easily involved in routine agricultural processes with specific support that are still manageable by the farmer.
- More recently, within the diverse welfare models, the role of the state has been complemented or substituted by private quasi-markets according to established public rules. In this case, families and users can directly buy social farming services provided by private firms in accordance with established guidelines provided normally by public institutions. This is the case for some specific co-therapeutic activities organized based on plants (horticultural therapy) and animals (animal-assisted activities) provided by both farmers and NGOs under state rules and directly funded by the users’ families. This is also the case for kindergartens organized by farmers or other emerging services under the same frame; in this case, agricultural resources are mainly used in a specialized way to provide innovative services for socio-therapeutic purposes or civil services.
4.2. Social Demands and Social Farming in a Challenging Scenario
- The emerging challenges in terms of resources and adaptations that the welfare systems in Europe (and elsewhere) are facing; these challenges depend on the countries and their general macro-economic trends;
- The national societal demands in connection with the outcomes expected from social health services, which might catalyze diverse sensibilities in terms of social inclusion principles and perspectives. Both these forces have an influence on the organization of the diffusion and application of social farming initiatives at the national level, despite a common welfare model being in use in diverse situations.
4.3. Social Farming as a Conceptual Framework
- Welfare models, which frame (with their institutional rules, cultural meanings, procedures, types of incentives, evidence, and practices) the landscapes in which social farming initiatives are established;
- Actors involved in the organization and evolution of the social farming sector are diverse, including public health–social–agriculture–rural technicians, the diversification of on-farm activities (in the northern European system), politicians, project holders (public, private, and third sector), users, and the association of users. Indirectly, citizens and food consumers can also be considered depending on the situation;
- How the driving trends are perceived by the actors that are activated by the welfare models;
- How active the local actors are and how accommodating the local environment is to innovation;
- What the relationships are between innovators and actors embedded in the existing regime and in what ways their relationships are able to facilitate innovation processes and mobilize resources from agriculture to provide innovative services.
- Styles that are more oriented toward an ethic of profit (strongly embedded in a state–market divide perspective);
- Those according to common ideas developed within local actors; they might also follow an ethic of responsibility and reciprocity (this is more evident in places where the welfare principle allows a larger perspective of mutual collaboration among the actors involved. Moreover, the demand for innovative solutions is higher due to the driving trends connected to funding availability and societal demands involving relationships within society).
- The idea of care and state intervention (again, mainly based on the perspective of strong state intervention);
- The perspective of social justice and the organization of a more supportive society by organizing the involvement of local communities (in a society, new perspective are focusing on the design of innovative solutions that consider participant rights and the relationships inside that society).
- A Specialized social farming model mainly based on direct public payments, with agricultural diversification still based on an ethic of profit, as well as specialization and accreditation of the farms involved in the new area of social services. In this model, attention is focused on the quality of the services provided to participants who can choose specific services over others. For social farming service providers, their activities move from the food/agricultural market to the market of services for the people. These services are provided under direct state payments and control. Participants are considered to be clients, and agricultural resources are a tool that can be usefully implemented in the social health sector under specialized competences. These solutions are mainly evident in the Northern European welfare models; they are strongly dependent on public funds and are able to activate specialized forms of horticultural-therapy and animal-assisted activity services devoted to caring activities.
- A Charity/project based social farming model, where the efforts of the public or third sector are still embedded in state intervention (funding and projects). Here, there is a prevalent ethic of responsibility and reciprocity among the actors involved, farmers are not directly involved in social farming, and the agricultural processes are run more in a relationship with caring activities that for their own sustainability. Such solutions are mainly developed in the Anglo-Saxon and in workfare welfare models but are also present in the Mediterranean system and in Eastern European countries for projects that contain some productive agricultural elements that involve active, at work, and disadvantaged people (although this model is strongly dependent on external funding under the organization of specific projects and supports);
- Community based social farming, where farmers are actively involved in local new networks where public and third sector social workers are also active. Farmers act on a voluntary basis, with little to no direct economic recognition. Direct state intervention is very limited due to funding scarcity. Agricultural processes are mainly run professionally, as economic sustainability still depends on them. Collaborative nets are organized, and the local society and consumers actively reshape their relationships, placing more emphasis on ethical food [71,72] and acting reciprocally with local farmers (e.g., using gifts) to facilitate the involvement of disadvantaged members of society. On a voluntary basis, farmers provide new opportunities to disadvantaged people by including them in everyday agricultural processes. Farming activities—agricultural as well as animal husbandry—remain food-business oriented but also support social opportunities for the participants involved. In this case, agricultural resources are mainly valorized for social health uses by strengthening their multifunctional aspects and the co-production of food and social services at the same time. Farmers work in collaboration with the social health sector (the public or third sector) and, in the meantime, gain evidence and recognition in the local society and by consumers. In this model, consumers are willing to recognize social farmers’ roles in society and pay new attention to the food they produce. These solutions are mainly developing in Mediterranean countries but, due to growing economic constraints, are also growing in Northern European countries, as well as in Eastern European countries.
- The Specialized model (supported by state policies or direct family payments and a quasi-market) always defines quality and structured services that are able to support the lives of people in need and design innovative specialized services (e.g., AAA (Animal Assisted Activities) and also services for children and elders).
- The Charity model is still supported with public funds and/or charity support from the communities; it primarily involves social health and public/NGO actors and facilitates training and social inclusion mainly via agricultural processes and job support, and might generate a social impact on society.
- The Community-based model starts from a novel recognition of the diverse actors embedded in local society and the possibility for them to interact at different levels. The values that are needed in the community (economic, social, and environmental values) do not arise from specialized work divisions but instead from the reorganization of community coalitions among diverse stakeholders aiming at the design of more resilient and future-proof values. From this point of view, state and third sector interventions are complemented by private enterprise engagement but from the perspective of voluntary support (gifts) that are indirectly recognized by society (reciprocity). Subsidiarity, co-production, and civic economy are the emerging principles in this model.
4.4. Redesigning Services and Value Creation in Social Farming
4.5. Social Farming: the Co-Production Paradigm
4.6. Social Farming Looking Forward
5. Concluding Remarks
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Social Democratic | Workfare | Anglo-Saxon | Mediterranean | Eastern European | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Welfare organization | Strong state intervention, accreditation system, direct payments | Support for job creation support for projects | Charities and State intervention | Welfare mixed with the public, private third sector, families, and farm involvement | In transition after EU entrance |
With many SF projects | Norway, Finland, The Netherlands, Belgium (Flanders) | Germany, France | UK, Ireland | Italy, Spain, Portugal, | Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia Hungary, |
With few SF projects | Sweden, Denmark | Luxemburg | Greece, Malta, Cyprus | Bulgaria, Ukraine Romania Lithuania | |
Social farming stage | Organized interventions established by law and public interventions | Public/third sector caring activities established within public legal frameworks | Regional networks led by NGOs | Defined by national and regional laws (Italy), bottom-up networks with farms, expansion phenomenon | Local bottom-up initiative still isolated. Some formal recognition in the Czech Republic |
Farms involvement | Per diem payments to accredited farms | Recognized structure, sheltered workshops, NGOs, some new bottom-up farm solutions | Foundation and community support, NGOs, few farms except in Ireland | Farms (private and NGOs) | Mainly NGOs, associations and local communities with public charity support |
Budget trends | Still high or being reduced | Still high with constraints | Depending on national policies and charity support | Little direct payment support, fiscal crises | Little direct payment support |
Main targets | Specified targets defined by health/educational policies | Mainly people with disabilities, addictions, and disadvantaged people | Mainly people with disabilities, elders | Many targets, mainly vocational training for disadvantaged people, civil services supported by local health policies/families | Mainly people with disabilities and elderly, jobless, and addicted people |
Social farming models | On-farm diversification, nature-based solutions | Farm activities in specialized health /centers-structures | NGO initiatives, farms in Ireland | Professional farms differently run, multifunctional agriculture (family farms or Social Coop B in Italy; NGOs elsewhere) | NGOs, religious groups, innovative farms, |
Social Farming Evidence | Trend 2 | Evolving Societal Demands in Terms of Social Justice and Social Inclusion (Where the Country Is Going) | |
---|---|---|---|
Trend 1 | Level | Low | High |
Challenges in public welfare resources (where the country is) | Low | (1) Isolated innovative solutions attached to the vision of local groups | (3) Reshaping specific services for emerging societal demands |
High | (2) Efforts in replacing existing or missing services with new solutions in specific geographical areas of intervention | (4) Redesigning new solutions and more equitable access to service in the broader society |
State Intervention | Charity | Quasi-Market | Indirect Recognition, Reputation | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Social activities as a promotion of multifunctional agriculture | Private farmers | Private farmers, Food Consumers, Citizens | ||
Social activities as on-farm diversification | Public health/social workers/rural policies, farmers | Private farmers | Users and user associations | |
Social activities with plants/animals as tool in therapeutic centers | NGOs | NGOs | ||
Interactions with | Consumers | |||
Users and associations, policymakers |
History | A small family farm with old managers and without generational renewal. The daughter works in other businesses, but she started to redesign the process to accompany the everyday lives of her old parents and chose to open the farm to disadvantaged people in the area. The farm became an active place where parents are actively included in other social tasks that the farm offers outside. Here, external guests might also find a new natural environment for their daily activities and exercise. Parents are thus actively engaged in a relational environment in their everyday life. |
Target | People with mental disabilities, refugees |
Management | Psychiatric hospitals bring groups of youngsters to the farm on specific days. The groups are involved in everyday farm activities under the control and support of the old farmers and social workers. In the last few years, specific welcome rooms have been renewed with the support of Tuscany Rural Development Plan (Measure 16.9) to better welcome people and organize didactic activities for schools in the area. In the room, the farm’s products are also sold. The farm is not paid by the center but receives support in terms of human resources. A refugee is included under the training schemes. The farm also develops activities with other social farms and public institutions in the area. |
Future | The perspective is to better organize the farm’s provision of services and rebuild some parts to organize a real community for the people visiting the farm. |
Principles | Subsidiarity emerges in the relationships between the farms, local public health institutions, and local social cooperatives. Co-production is evident in the management of inclusive agricultural processes devoted to the production of food and wellness for the people involved. In this case, the farmers are both entrepreneurs and users of the social farming initiative. Civil economy: the farm is intended mainly for social purposes under economic sustainability. |
History | A group of young people acting in voluntary association with Lucca (and with experience in the cooperation of developing countries) started organizing the farm with a specific focus on social inclusion. They established a social cooperative (type B) and became farmers according to Italian law. They concentrated initially on the production of wine and olive oil, including different target groups in the process (those with mental disabilities, those with addictions, refugees, and migrants). The farm is run professionally with increasing income. At the same time, it offers significant opportunities for the disadvantaged people and the groups involved. Step by step, the economic activities grew to include new horticultural processes and direct delivery in the city of Lucca. The farm also provides services for other farms in the area by managing the workforce and increasing the number of the people included at work. Today, about 30 people are paid and supported by the farm. |
Target | People with mental disabilities, refugees, those with addiction, migrants, long-term unemployed individuals |
Management | Group-run agricultural processes inside and outside the farm. They directly manage the relationships with local public social health services. The farm’s agricultural activities have a strong impact on job creation but with specific attention given to overall economic sustainability. The wine production is biodynamic. The farm pays strong attention to its commercial and marketing aspects to establish direct relationships with consumers, especially for its horticultural products. At the same time, the farm manages grants for training activities for disadvantaged people. |
Future | The farm has quickly grown in the last few years due to its strong effectiveness from both technical and economic perspectives. It is enlarging its production to include agricultural products, green services provided outside, and collaboration with public institutions and other social farms in the area at a national scale. |
Principles | Subsidiarity emerges in the relationships among the farms with local public health institutions, local communities, and organized consumer groups. Co-production is evident in the management of its inclusive agricultural processes devoted to the production of food, as well as social inclusion and work for the people involved. Civil economy: the farm is planned mainly for social purposes under the need for economic sustainability, creating about 30 job positions over the last few years. |
History | A partnership among diverse actors—UniPisa, two social cooperatives, and a farm. This group started about 11 years ago, in 2009, under the budgetary constraints of Pisa university, which created difficulties in the management of this small university farm that was then included in the project. The group organized different internal roles and activities. The university farm manages the land and the agricultural processes, while the social coops manage the relationships with local public health institutions and services and tutors the groups of people involved in the agricultural processes. The products are sold at the university’s food shop. The farm participates in technical support and market activities and provides continuity to socially inclusive processes. |
Target | People with mental disabilities, refugees, people with addictions, and ex-prisoners. The project has become pivotal for the area, offering technical advice and network management for other farmers in the area and providing pivotal entry-level services for people experiencing severe difficulties. |
Management | The social coops organize their activities with the public social health services in the area under specific projects designed with the local municipalities. Resources from the project cover the costs of the social workers tutoring people included in the farm and especially those with strong difficulties involved in co-therapeutic activities. A group of 5 or 6 people is accompanied daily in the farm during the morning, and the group experiencing harder difficulties are accompanied in the afternoon. The people involved work with the university staff, some of whom are past participants in the project. |
Future | The partnership will renew itself in the next few months. The farms seek to improve their everyday activities and better organize those activities for their diverse target groups. Networking activities with other farms, citizens, and consumers are also emerging. |
Principles | Subsidiarity is already emerging from membership in the partnership, as well as in the relationship with local public health institutions, farms, and consumers and citizens. Co-production: each kilogram of vegetables sold at 1.7 €/kg generates an added value of 0.30 € for the project, which allows 7 min of work for disadvantaged people. The public institutions save about 0.74 € of each kg through involvement in the farm instead of public daily centers. In addition to the costs of unused drugs (not estimated here), the consumers experience a benefit of about 0.70 €/kg from directly buying vegetables at the university shop compared to a supermarket. Civil economy: the farm is planned mainly for social and public (teaching and research) purposes under economic sustainability constraints. |
History | In this area, the Coldiretti farmer association has innovated in the field of social services for rural areas since 2004. The farm’s collaboration with Pisa University had already grown in 2008 and remains operational. Since then, through research activities, living labs, and participatory transition paths, a network of about 90 actors between public institutions, consortia of services, farms, social cooperatives, and associations of users has been established. In 3 years, about 40 new job positions were generated for disadvantaged people without direct public investments. New social farming services for elders and youngsters have been created for about 120 people in times of crisis every year. |
Target | People with mental disabilities, refugees, those with addiction, migrants, long-term unemployed individuals, victims of trafficking, elders, youth and adults with autism |
Management | The network is facilitated by Coldiretti association, which has managed to consolidate its net and enlarge it to include new farmers and actors in the area. At the same time, the farm participates in the political arena to mobilize policy resources to reinforce projects and activities. Coldiretti also runs farmer’s markets, where specific visibility is given to social farming products. A series of innovative activities and actions include young students from secondary schools, elders, teachers, and municipalities who aim to increase common awareness of food production, regenerative cities, and social inclusion. During the COVID-19 situation, Turin managed to open its farmer’s market under strict controls and organize, among other activities, a “spesa sospesa”, in which consumers leave extra payment to the farmer for food left for people in need, while the farmer adds the same amount from his/her side. This activity was done in connection with Caritas, which runs a project in the Turin area called “civic territories” that aims to generate social impact mechanisms in social inclusion processes. Quality food for people in need was a secondary outcome of the project. |
Future | The network is enlarging, and the national Coldiretti association has been informed about Turin’s attempts to replicate it on a national scale. Those responsible for each regional Coldiretti association were trained and are facilitating social farming networks and activities on a national scale. |
Principles | Subsidiarity emerges through the organization of a large group of public and private actors supporting the local initiative. Co-production: in 3 years, besides the job positions created and the new services provided, about 3 million euros’ worth of food were produced by the farms involved. The jobs created normally cost public policies about 7 million, which, in this case, were not invested due to the emerging network capabilities in resource mobilization. Food from social farming was labeled as civic food and delivered to a public market in Moncalieri. Civic economy: with its civic food and networks of farms and other actors, this project represents the largest experiment of civic economy in social farming at a local scale. Its introduction at a national scale could generate 5400 new job positions for disadvantaged people, new services for about 22,000 people, public investment savings of 1 billion, €60 million in public expenditure savings for traditional services, about 0.5 billion € in civic food, and 1.3 billion € in wellness for consumers. |
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Di Iacovo, F. Social Farming Evolutionary Web: from Public Intervention to Value Co-Production. Sustainability 2020, 12, 5269. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135269
Di Iacovo F. Social Farming Evolutionary Web: from Public Intervention to Value Co-Production. Sustainability. 2020; 12(13):5269. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135269
Chicago/Turabian StyleDi Iacovo, Francesco. 2020. "Social Farming Evolutionary Web: from Public Intervention to Value Co-Production" Sustainability 12, no. 13: 5269. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135269
APA StyleDi Iacovo, F. (2020). Social Farming Evolutionary Web: from Public Intervention to Value Co-Production. Sustainability, 12(13), 5269. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12135269