Colored Heirloom Corn as a Public Good: The Case of Tlaxcala, Mexico
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. Public Goods and Publicness
2.2. Value Chains (VC)
3. Methods and Materials
4. History and Context for Heirloom Corn
4.1. Territory and Biodiversity
4.2. Community, Entrepreneurship and Development
Production of public goods is based on human relatedness and needs other-regarding motivations such as gratitude for the gifts received, entrepreneurial spirit and service to others. Commitment to public goods does not earn immediate rewards, may offer uncertain personal benefits in the future and can even demand personal sacrifices. But, not infrequently, it is actually made because the interests of other people count, their rights are to be respected, and the needs of the community and society should be addressed.
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. Input-Product Dimension
5.1.1. Characteristics of the Product on the Market
5.1.2. Income Distribution along the Chain
5.1.3. Chain Structures for White and Heirloom Corn
5.2. Economic Geography
5.3. Institutional Framework
5.4. Governance
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Dimension | Category or Variable | Indicators for the Heirloom Corn Chain | Link with Public Goods |
---|---|---|---|
Input-Output | Characteristics of the marketed product | Race, variety, color, nutritional properties | Product differentiation |
Income distribution along the chain | Final consumer price | Collective benefit from local participation | |
Unit value | |||
Planting, harvesting, fertilization, pest control, land preparation, interests | |||
Price obtained by the producer | |||
Yield per hectare | |||
Total income per hectare | |||
GVC structure | Definition of participants in each link | Connection of actors with other actors within the chain | |
Economic Geography | Geo-economic structure of production | Corn production | Knowledge of the territory, economics, traditions, history, culture, society, biocultural heritage |
Socio-economic characteristics of primary maize producers (type of property, place of production, marginalization stratum, human development index) | |||
Geo-economic structure of consumption | Consumption of maize products | ||
Establishments for consumption of maize and other by-products | |||
Features of end consumers | |||
Institutional Framework | Institutional context | National and international bodies and institutions and their main maize roles and supports | Participation of external actors: public, non-governmental organizations and private actors external to the chain |
Protection and production support laws | Food security | ||
Seeds and transgenic maize laws | |||
Federal Law for the Promotion and Protection of Native Corn | |||
Heirloom Corn Protection and Conservation Law |
TYPOLOGY | Governance | Indicators | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DOMAIN | LINKAGE | CONVENTION | MARKET | INTERMEDIARIES | COORDINATION LEVEL | ASYMMETRY | COMPLEXITY OF TRANSACTIONS | HABILITY IN CODING TRANSACTIONS | CAPACITY OF RESPONSE OF THE SUPPLIERS | |
G1A | Buyer | Market | Market | Traditional market | Price | Extreme Low | Extreme Low | Low | High | High |
G2A | Buyer | Modular | Industrial | Several producers, one buyer | Key intermediary | Middle-low | Middle-low | High | High | High |
G3A | Buyer | Relational | Domestic | Relational intermediary | Middle | Middle | High | Low | High | |
G3B | Producer | Relational | Middle | Middle | High | Low | High | |||
G4A | Buyer | Captive | Domestic, Industrial, Opinion | Intermediaries | Middle-high | Middle-high | High | High | Low | |
G4B | Producer | Captive | Middle-high | Middle-high | High | High | Low | |||
G5A | Buyer | Hierarchical | Domestic, Industrial, Opinion | Monopoly or Oligopoly | Without intermediaries | High | High | High | Low | Low |
G5B | Producer | Hierarchical | High | High | High | Low | Low |
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Velázquez-Salazar, M.; Scalzo, G.; Byker Shanks, C. Colored Heirloom Corn as a Public Good: The Case of Tlaxcala, Mexico. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1507. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031507
Velázquez-Salazar M, Scalzo G, Byker Shanks C. Colored Heirloom Corn as a Public Good: The Case of Tlaxcala, Mexico. Sustainability. 2021; 13(3):1507. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031507
Chicago/Turabian StyleVelázquez-Salazar, Marisol, Germán Scalzo, and Carmen Byker Shanks. 2021. "Colored Heirloom Corn as a Public Good: The Case of Tlaxcala, Mexico" Sustainability 13, no. 3: 1507. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031507
APA StyleVelázquez-Salazar, M., Scalzo, G., & Byker Shanks, C. (2021). Colored Heirloom Corn as a Public Good: The Case of Tlaxcala, Mexico. Sustainability, 13(3), 1507. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031507