短食品供应链的意义:来自SKIN专题网络的趋势和瓶颈

Pub Date : 2019-08-13 DOI:10.22004/AG.ECON.292231
J. Hyland, P. Crehan, F. Colantuono, Á. Macken-Walsh
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引用次数: 12

摘要

短食品供应链(SFSCs)是替代食品运动话语的核心。SFSCs基于直接参与食品生产、加工、分销和消费的行动者之间的相互关系。它们取决于行动者调动各种资源:技能;知识;劳动力;资本;建筑等。政策和法规等外部因素也可以鼓励创建这些较短的链。SFSCs的发展仍然会受到一系列其他因素的阻碍。尽管如此,通过在不同行为体和地区之间传播良好做法,分享成功的SFSCs信息,可以克服瓶颈。短供应链知识与创新(SKIN)项目使用术语“良好”而不是“最佳”实践,以引起人们对最终用户最终评估实践的主观视角的关注。本文首先概述了SFSC参与者面临的许多问题,这些问题代表了采用“良好实践”的瓶颈。然后,它记录了作为SKIN项目的一部分收集的良好实践,作为sfsc如何克服这些挑战的具体例子。随后评估从项目重点中吸取的经验教训,以减轻和提供与SFSCs相关的挑战的解决方案。本文展示了SFSCs固有的巨大潜力。然而,为了使农业部门充分实现短供应链的承诺,它必须首先意识到与他们的繁荣相关的问题。
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The Significance of Short Food Supply Chains: Trends and Bottlenecks from the SKIN Thematic Network
Short Food Supply Chains (SFSCs) are central to the alternative food movement discourse. SFSCs are based upon the interrelations among actors who are directly involved in the production, processing, distribution, and consumption of food products. They depend upon actors mobilising resources of various kinds: skills; knowledge; labour; capital; buildings etc. External factors such as policies and regulations can also encourage the creation of these shorter chains. The development of SFSCs can still be hindered by a range of other factors. Nevertheless, bottlenecks can be overcome via the sharing of information on successful SFSCs through the dissemination of Good Practices between various actors and territories. The Short Supply Chain Knowledge and Innovation (SKIN) project uses the term ‘good’ rather than ‘best’ practice to draw attention to the subjective lens through which a practice is ultimately evaluated by an end-user. This paper first outlines the many issues that confront SFSC actors which represent bottlenecks to the adoption of ‘Good Practices’. It then documents the Good Practices collected as part of the SKIN project as tangible examples of how SFSCs overcome such challenges. Lessons learnt from project highlights are subsequently assessed in an effort to mitigate and offer solutions to the challenges associated with SFSCs. The paper demonstrates the considerable latent potential inherent to SFSCs. However, in order for the agricultural sector to realise the full promise of short supply chains it must first be conscious of the issues pertinent to their prosperity.
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