Social Innovation and Sustainable Rural Development: The Case of a Brazilian Agroecology Network
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Theoretical Framework: Social Innovation and Rural Development
3. The Case of Rede Ecovida de Agroecologia
3.1. Methodological Approach
3.2. History, Organization and Social Innovation
3.3. Functioning of Participatory Guarantee Systems (PGS)
- (1)
- Third-party certification, operated by an independent company, subject to Conformity Assessment Bodies (in Portuguese: Organismos de Avaliação da Conformidade, or OAC);
- (2)
- Participatory Guarantee Systems, operated by a Participatory Body for Conformity Assessment (in Portuguese: Organismos Participativos de Avaliação da Conformidade, or OPAC), under which Ecovida operates; and
- (3)
- Social Control Organizations (in Portuguese: Organização de Controle Social, or OCS), operated by local organizations, intended to be used only to sell products according to direct marketing strategies.
3.4. Social Set-Up of the Markets
4. Discussion and Concluding Remarks
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Year | Farmer Families | Farmer Groups | Municipalities | NGOs | Consumer Organizations | Regional Centres | Traders | Agro-Industries |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | 343 | 35 | N/A | 4 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
2005 | 2438 | 272 | 180 | 28 | 06 | 21 | N/A | N/A |
2007 | 2700 | 290 | 205 | 35 | 08 | 24 | N/A | N/A |
2009 * | 3000 | 300 | 220 | 35 | 08 | 25 | N/A | N/A |
2011 ** | 2444 | 213 | 178 | 35 | 21 | 17 | 39 | 113 |
2016 | 4500 | 300 | 170 | 30 | 20 | 28 | N/A | N/A |
Organizational Bodies | Decision and Organization |
---|---|
Plenary Meeting | Every two years with all those who are part of the Network. It works as a General Assembly where strategic guidelines are decided. |
General Assembly of RCs | With two members of each regional centre (RC) with two meetings per year. |
Coordination Meetings | Where decisions from the Plenary Meetings and General Assembly of RC’s are put into action, working at two levels: (a) General Coordination; (b) Coordination in each State (Paraná, Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul). |
Regional Centres | Spread across micro-regions in southern Brazil, these assume specific organizational strategies with respect to their own specific situations, led by the principles and guidelines of Ecovida. They are made up of: (i) Coordination; (ii) Secretariat; (iii) Financial Sector; (iv) Ethics Committees *; (v) Groups. |
Year | Stage | |
---|---|---|
1970s/1980s | Stage 1: Political organization of family farmers and setting-up of social and political organizations | |
1990s | Stage 2: Food production based on alternative farming (agroecology), adding value to local agro-biodiversity | Transition from the 1990s to the 2000s matches the creation of Ecovida, characterized by a global increase in organic street markets and the need to offer trade opportunities to develop agroecological production with the establishment of trading posts |
2000s | Stage 3: Trading produce as well as fostering a national proposal for participatory certification of organic productions | |
2010s | Stage 4: Strengthening of elements from previous stages, adding more focus on trade and production and less on valuing political and organizational training |
Analytical Elements of Social Innovation | Characteristics of Ecovida |
---|---|
1. Motivations for the participation of its actors | Ideological engagement by transforming the model of rural development, based on agroecology and biodiversity. |
Exchange of knowledge, seeds, information on methods and techniques, among other things. | |
2. Composition and dynamics of actor-network | A decentralized and multi-directional network where decision processes occur simultaneously at different levels. |
Open and transparent communication through a mailing list without any management filters. | |
3. Influence of non-social elements on decisions of social actors | Agrobiodiversity of production systems is prioritized. |
The need for agrobiodiverse trade stimulates the organization and engagement in specific markets. | |
4. Dependence and relationship with specific territorial processes and general policies | It influences public regulations and adapts itself to the norms of participatory certification of organic produce. It has been supported by infrastructure to improve its market dynamics, mainly by the Federal Government. |
It has its own regulations with general principles and guidelines, following the norms of national organic produce legislation. | |
RCs base their actions on the general principles and rules of the network but keep a strong autonomy, working as the central functional organs of Ecovida. |
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Rover, O.J.; De Gennaro, B.C.; Roselli, L. Social Innovation and Sustainable Rural Development: The Case of a Brazilian Agroecology Network. Sustainability 2017, 9, 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9010003
Rover OJ, De Gennaro BC, Roselli L. Social Innovation and Sustainable Rural Development: The Case of a Brazilian Agroecology Network. Sustainability. 2017; 9(1):3. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9010003
Chicago/Turabian StyleRover, Oscar José, Bernardo Corrado De Gennaro, and Luigi Roselli. 2017. "Social Innovation and Sustainable Rural Development: The Case of a Brazilian Agroecology Network" Sustainability 9, no. 1: 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9010003
APA StyleRover, O. J., De Gennaro, B. C., & Roselli, L. (2017). Social Innovation and Sustainable Rural Development: The Case of a Brazilian Agroecology Network. Sustainability, 9(1), 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9010003