Ecological Resilience, Next Generation EU and Sustainable Social Systems
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Social Ecology and Sustainability".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (24 July 2023) | Viewed by 21482
Special Issue Editors
Interests: marketing innovation; inter-organizational networks; blockchain technology; agri-food supply chain sustainability
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: food waste and loss; rural development and landscape; food innovation and health; food systems management and safety
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: innovation and competitiveness in the agri-food system; health systems and food; food innovation; CAP; innovation and management in the agri-food system; models of technology transfer; ICT in Agriculture; food and environment; rural development and multifunctionality; didactic and social farms; agri-food districts and chains; internationalization of SMEs in the agri-food
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
This Special Issue will include impactful papers focused on the critical role played by the resources able to build resilient socioeconomic systems.
This is a moment of great and traumatic change for societies in a traumatic way due to COVID-19, but it can unleash unparalleled opportunities to improve business production processes in eco-compatible terms, decision-making processes for public authorities and regulators, the safety for consumers, and ultimately the quality of life for citizens.
The concept of ecological resilience is at the heart of this change process and inspires new research questions on how to develop synergistic paths oriented towards resilience to build sustainable economic systems.
This Special Issue aims to investigate how the agro-food system’s actors can develop resilient value creation processes to generate value for the consumers at the same time by improving environmental and climatic performance.
We welcome contributions tackling this broad area of research and include, among others, the following topics:
- Agro-food Supply chain management;
- Agriculture 4.0;
- Resilient production process;
- Resilient Business Management;
- Resilient decision-making processes;
- Case studies from Green Deal Tools;
- ICT and new opportunities for a sustainable economy;
- Block-chain;
- NGEU and digitalization;
- Sustainability.
This Special Issue welcomes both theoretical and empirical papers, leveraging various methodological approaches, strongly supported by management literature.
Nowadays, complex reality and systems are not able to consider distinctly economic, social, environmental and health crises. The COVID-19 crisis has strongly emphasised the failure and unsustainability of the leading economic model linear culture of
“waste”-based and consequently the necessity of a change (Contò and Fiore, 2020). Struggling with the culture of waste and observing the future in terms of sustainability, ethics/equity, and environment to defend the "common home" (the economy) and forthcoming generations are the contemporary challenges. The concept summarising the aptitude of an organisation coordinated in the use of resources and economically focused on reacting to negative economic pressures is resilience (Fiore, 2022; Contò and Fiore, 2020). The term “resilience” means to successfully adapt and recover from detrimental effects (Masten, 2007; Skodol, 2010) by effectively handling negative emotions and finding and discovering behavioral responses (Tugade, 2011).
According to FAO (2019, 2016), resilience is the aptitude of persons, communities, or systems that are challenged by disasters or crises to resist damage and recuperate rapidly.
Climate change and environmental degradation pose a huge threat to the entire planet. To overcome these challenges, the European Green Deal aims to transform the EU into a modern, resource-efficient, and competitive economy through a reduction in greenhouse gases, sustainable eco-friendly economic growth, and social inclusion. One-third of the EUR 1.8 trillion investments in the NextGenerationEU recovery plan and the EU's seven-year budget will finance the European Green Deal. The reduction in the agro-food supply chain pressure on natural resources and the strengthening of ecosystem services guaranteed by primary activity for the benefit of the community represent the main agro-food system purpose to fully grasp the objectives of the Green Deal and other related strategies. The Green Deal aims at improving the climate and environmental performance of production systems: the point is the ways to develop these synergistic paths oriented towards resilience to build sustainable economic systems.
Dr. Raffaele Silvestri
Prof. Dr. Mariantonietta Fiore
Prof. Dr. Francesco Contò
Guest Editors
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