以豆类为基础的农业食品系统的转型-匈牙利利益相关者的观点

B. Balázs, E. Kelemen, Diána Szakál
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引用次数: 0

摘要

迫切需要彻底转变为更可持续的农业和粮食系统,这一点直到最近才得到更多的认识,使几种未充分利用的作物发挥了新的作用。豆类已成为研究和分析关注的主要焦点,首先是农业生态学,最近是国际政策团体和社会科学。豆类具有毫不费力地将氮固定在土壤中,替代动物蛋白,减少温室气体排放的才能,现在被认为是被遗忘的明星,可以帮助农业和食品工业变得更加生态。然而,豆科植物的生产和消费,尽管有多种优势,在欧洲仍然处于边缘地位,原因如下。本文采用了一个解释性政策框架来解决豆类悖论,即我们依赖豆类的农业食品系统依赖进口,同时保持豆类的生产和消费不足。我们通过分析概念框架和探索性混合方法研究的数据,回顾了匈牙利以豆类为基础的食品系统的现状。在案例研究中,我们通过绘制关键利益相关者对匈牙利豆类价值链的挑战和潜力的理解,分析了这一最新技术的根本原因。我们的主要研究问题是背后的原因是什么,以及匈牙利的利益相关者如何理解这种悖论。我们还探讨了目前的趋势如何为更多的豆类生产和消费开辟道路。根据文献和匈牙利利益相关者访谈的见解,我们展示了一个极其封闭的农业食品系统。我们的研究结果表明,特别是小规模生产者面临着解决豆科作物产量稳定性问题的困难。廉价进口的植物蛋白食品、饲料和无机氮肥的倾销、几乎没有小规模加工、消费者不了解豆类的好处、专注于肠道不适、食品服务机构不愿尝试美味的植物蛋白食品,这些都进一步加剧了他们的挣扎。我们提出了几个未来的研究课题和途径,以促进更可持续的豆类食品系统。总之,我们认为,任何向豆类食品和饲料系统的过渡,最初都需要价值链中多个利益相关者的相互参与,以及公共机构精心安排的强有力的政策支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Transitions of Legume-based Agrifood Systems - Stakeholders' view from Hungary
The pressing need for the radical transformation towards more sustainable agricultural and food systems, which only recently gained substantially more acknowledgement, staged several underutilised crops in new roles. Legumes have become the primary focus of research and analytical attention first in agroecology, and lately in international policy communities and the social sciences. With their effortless talent to fix nitrogen into the soil, substitute animal protein, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, legumes are now recognised as forgotten stars, that could help both agriculture and the food industry become more ecological. However, legume production and consumption, albeit multiple advantages, remain still marginal in Europe for several reasons. This article adopts an interpretative policy framework to address the legume paradox, that is our legume-dependent agri-food systems relying on imports and simultaneously maintaining deficient production and consumption of legumes. We reviewed the state of the art of legume-based food systems in Hungary by analysing conceptual frameworks and data from exploratory mixed-method research. In a case study research, we analysed the root causes of this state-of-the-art through mapping the understanding of challenges and potentialities of legume value chains in Hungary by critical stakeholders. Our primary research question is what is at play behind and how Hungarian stakeholders make meaning of this paradox. We also explore how the current trends could still open pathways for more legumes in production and consumption. Drawing on insights from the literature and stakeholder interviews in Hungary, we show an extremely locked-in agri-food system. Our results indicate that especially small scale producers face difficulties to tackle with shallow yield stability of legumes. Their struggle is further aggravated by the dumping of cheap import of plant-based protein food and feed and inorganic nitrogen fertilisers, virtually absent small-scale processing, consumers' unawareness of legumes' benefits and preoccupation with their gut discomfort and food services' unwillingness to experiment with tasty plant-based protein food. We suggest several future research topics and pathways to promote more sustainable legume-based food systems. In conclusion, we argue that any transition towards legume-based food and feed systems would initially require the mutual engagement of multiple stakeholders in the value chains, strong policy support orchestrated by public institutions.
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