Making specialty coffee and coffee-cherry value chains work for family farmers’ livelihoods: A participatory action research approach

IF 2.2 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Johanna Jacobi , Derly Lara , Sebastian Opitz , Sabine de Castelberg , Sergio Urioste , Alvaro Irazoque , Daniel Castro , Elio Wildisen , Nelson Gutierrez , Chahan Yeretzian
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Coffee provides a livelihood to millions of smallholder farmers, but comes with serious challenges as incomes are often meagre and the climate crisis threatens most coffeegrowing areas. Specialty coffee markets reward quality, which can increase farm-gate prices, and may enhance shaded and diversified coffee-farming systems. In origin countries such as Colombia and Bolivia, specialty coffee is typically exported, whereas lower-quality coffee is marketed for domestic consumption. Local demand for specialty coffee is growing, however, and coffee-cherry products are increasingly traded and consumed. This bears potential for retaining more value in origin countries and among farmers. However, how farming families can better profit from specialty coffee and its by-products, such as dried coffee cherries (also known as cascara or sultana), remains poorly understood. We applied a value-chain analysis combined with institutional analysis and the Participatory Market-Chain Approach (PMCA) to investigate the impact of specialty coffee and coffee-cherry products on farming families’ livelihoods in Colombia and Bolivia. We embedded the research in an institutional analysis and development framework to identify actors and value chains, costs and benefits for farmers, and livelihoods. Then, we adopted an action research approach to bring the different actors together and co-create value-chain improvements for green coffee, roasted coffee, and coffee cherries. Our approach included: (1) interviews, surveys, participant observation, and document analysis; and (2) events, videos, courses, competitions, and a recipe collection for coffee-cherries. We found that direct sale of green coffee to international customers, and sale of roasted coffee in local markets or in farmer-owned coffee shops were the most beneficial value-chain models for coffeegrowing families. The action research approach generated tangible results in terms of product development, value-chain organization, and educational organization. Government and private-sector support should consider the functioning of the entire sector and the social-ecological outcomes from production to consumption.

让特色咖啡和咖啡-樱桃价值链为家庭农民的生计服务:参与式行动研究方法
咖啡为数百万小农提供了生计,但也面临着严峻的挑战,因为收入往往微薄,气候危机威胁着大多数咖啡种植区。精品咖啡市场奖励质量,这可以提高农场的价格,并可能加强遮荫和多样化的咖啡种植系统。在原产国,如哥伦比亚和玻利维亚,精品咖啡通常出口,而低质量的咖啡则销售给国内消费。然而,当地对特色咖啡的需求正在增长,咖啡樱桃产品的交易和消费也越来越多。这有可能在原产国和农民中保留更多的价值。然而,农民家庭如何更好地从精品咖啡及其副产品中获利,如干咖啡樱桃(也被称为卡斯卡拉或苏丹纳),仍然知之甚少。我们将价值链分析与制度分析和参与式市场链方法(PMCA)相结合,调查了哥伦比亚和玻利维亚精品咖啡和咖啡樱桃产品对农户生计的影响。我们将研究纳入制度分析和发展框架,以确定行为者和价值链、农民的成本和收益以及生计。然后,我们采用行动研究的方法,将不同的参与者聚集在一起,共同创造绿咖啡、烘焙咖啡和咖啡樱桃的价值链改进。我们的研究方法包括:(1)访谈、调查、参与观察和文献分析;(2)活动、视频、课程、比赛和咖啡樱桃配方集。我们发现,直接向国际客户销售生咖啡,以及在当地市场或农民拥有的咖啡店销售烘焙咖啡是咖啡种植家庭最有利的价值链模式。行动研究方法在产品开发、价值链组织和教育组织方面产生了切实的结果。政府和私营部门的支助应考虑到整个部门的运作和从生产到消费的社会生态结果。
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来源期刊
World Development Perspectives
World Development Perspectives Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
65
审稿时长
84 days
期刊介绍: World Development Perspectives is a multi-disciplinary journal of international development. It seeks to explore ways of improving human well-being by examining the performance and impact of interventions designed to address issues related to: poverty alleviation, public health and malnutrition, agricultural production, natural resource governance, globalization and transnational processes, technological progress, gender and social discrimination, and participation in economic and political life. Above all, we are particularly interested in the role of historical, legal, social, economic, political, biophysical, and/or ecological contexts in shaping development processes and outcomes.
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