
How do Farming Systems Cope with Marketing Channel Requirements
in Organic Horticulture? The Case of Market-Gardening in Southeastern
France
Mireille Navarrete
Abstract
Organic market-gardening farming systems are extremely diverse, ranging
from the extensive to the very intensive, although all follow organic
standards. This study aimed to analyze the extent to which the diversity
of farming systems in southeastern France may be explained by the marketing
channels adopted by growers.
Eighteen organic market gardeners were
surveyed. Three types of growers were identified, differentiated
by the way they combine farming and marketing systems: (1) growers
selling
a diversity of food products through local marketing channels, which
allows them to increase plant species biodiversity and enhance natural
regulations in accordance with agro-ecology principles; (2) specialized
growers selling a limited number of food products through long marketing
channels at the few periods most economically favorable with regard
to the export-market, a questionable strategy in terms of environmental
sustainability; and (3) intermediate growers combining short and
long marketing channels, who potentially may reconcile environmental
and
economic components of sustainability.
The study confirmed the importance
of better understanding the relationships between farming practices
and marketing channels so that commercialization does not to become
an impediment to sustainability in organic farming
Source
Journal of Sustainable Agriculture (2010) 33: 552-565
Author Location and Affilation
INRA, Unit SAD Ecod veloppement, Avignon, France
en français
Posted February 2010
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