Reprint

Economic Strategies and Policy Suggestions of Agricultural Sustainable Food Production

Edited by
May 2024
244 pages
  • ISBN978-3-7258-0959-2 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-7258-0960-8 (PDF)

This is a Reprint of the Special Issue Economic Strategies and Policy Suggestions of Agricultural Sustainable Food Production that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

Sustainability is increasingly becoming a keyword for viable agri-food systems. Alongside Agenda 2030, sustainability is acknowledged as a multidimensional issue involving three main spheres of knowledge and action: economic, social, and environmental. Agriculture and food are strongly influenced by climate change, increasing the scarcity of natural resources and changes in land availability and use. These affect, in turn, the economic performance of farms and the social organization in agriculture. At the same time, the agri-food system is at the center of relevant economic interests, in which the primary sector is often the weakest link of the supply chain. This calls for a new approach to primary agricultural activities and food production, and also for a different perspective in research. A sustainable approach to agriculture, in the context of global governance, can lead to the improvement of ecosystems, the reduction of waste of food and natural resources, and an equitable access to food. It also requires a new set of policies able to overcome the trade-offs among objectives and searching for win-win solutions. The articles in this Special Issue contribute to explore, discuss at a scientific level, and disseminate at an international level the possible economic strategies and policies for implementing sustainable agricultural systems and food products, and making rural areas more attractive, reducing unbalances with urban areas. The result is a combination of rich, interesting, and innovating approaches and challenging methodologies, with contributions from all over the world.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2024 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
short supply chains; producers; sustainability; participatory methods; co-creation exercise; farmers; risk aversion; offline technical training; online technical training; farmers’ water-saving irrigation technology adoption behaviour; moderating effect; green investment intention; theory of planned behaviour; religiosity; green consumption commitment; green investment knowledge; business model; irrigation advisory services; sustainable agriculture; irrigation; water use efficiency; citrus; total factor productivity; spatiotemporal evolution; Moran’s I index; spatial convergence; attention, interest, desire, and action (AIDA) model; digital technologies; perceptive index; technology acceptance model (TAM); multicriteria decision analysis; AHP; irrigation advisory services; agricultural decision making; economic sustainability; regional disparity; productivity disparities; agriculture; economy; sustainability; DEA; meta-frontier model; family farming; food sovereignty; agricultural; diversification; family labor force; agroforestry; sustainability; subsistence; commercialization; community forestry; citrus; technological progress; spatial correlation network structure; transcendental logarithmic cost function; social network analysis; assisted evolution technologies (AETs); consumer attitude; environmental risk and food safety; Italian consumer sample; n/a

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