S
Sara Mingorría
Researcher at Autonomous University of Barcelona
Publications - 18
Citations - 680
Sara Mingorría is an academic researcher from Autonomous University of Barcelona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Supply chain & Environmental justice. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 17 publications receiving 468 citations. Previous affiliations of Sara Mingorría include Polytechnic University of Catalonia.
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Traditional Ecological Knowledge Trends in the Transition to a Market Economy: Empirical Study in the Doñana Natural Areas
TL;DR: The transmission of traditional knowledge among rural local people in communities linked to protected areas in Doñana, southwestern Spain is analyzed to suggest an abrupt loss of traditional agricultural knowledge related to rapid transformations and intensification of agricultural systems, but maintenance of knowledge of traditional livestock farming, an activity allowed in the protected areas that maintains strong links with local cultural identity.
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Environmental conflicts and defenders: A global overview
Arnim Scheidel,Daniela Del Bene,Juan Liu,Juan Liu,Grettel Navas,Sara Mingorría,Federico Demaria,Sofia Avila,Brototi Roy,Irmak Ertör,Irmak Ertör,Leah Temper,Leah Temper,Joan Martinez-Alier +13 more
TL;DR: This report concludes that global grassroots environmentalism is a promising force for sustainability and combining preventive mobilization, tactical diversity and litigation increases activists’ success.
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The oil palm boom: socio-economic implications for Q’eqchi’ households in the Polochic valley, Guatemala
TL;DR: The authors analyzed the implications of the combined effect of labouring in oil palm plantations and land access on households, and discussed how these implications affect human well-being in two indigenous communities of the Polochic valley, Guatemala.
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Violence in environmental conflicts: the need for a multidimensional approach
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on direct, structural, cultural, slow, and ecological forms of violence in environmental conflicts in Central America and find that violence can reach not only environmental defenders, but also communities, nature, and the sustainability of their relations.
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The Complexity of Food Systems: Defining Relevant Attributes and Indicators for the Evaluation of Food Supply Chains in Spain
Gonzalo Gamboa,Zora Kovacic,Marina Di Masso,Sara Mingorría,Tiziano Gomiero,Marta G. Rivera-Ferre,Mario Giampietro +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify a set of relevant narratives on food supply chains in Spanish and Catalan contexts and carry out an integrated assessment of three organic tomato supply chains from different perspectives.