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Journal ArticleDOI

Choosing a Food Future: Differentiating Among Alternative Food Options

Jeffrey R. Follett
- 01 Feb 2009 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 1, pp 31-51
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TLDR
In this article, the authors examine the diversity of food networks that fit within the alternative food system of the United States and suggest that strong alternative food networks are better suited to create social and political change because they challenge the foundations of the conventional food system: standardized and generic products, price-based competition, consolidated power, and global scale.
Abstract
This article examines the diversity of food networks that fit within the alternative food system of the United States. While farmers' markets, community supported agriculture schemes, and corporate organic food markets all fit within the alternative food system, they differ greatly in the conventions and beliefs that they represent. The alternative food system has divided into two movements: corporate, weak alternative food networks; and local, strong alternative food networks. The weak corporate version focuses on protecting the environment; however, it neglects issues concerning labor standards, animal welfare, rural communities, small-scale farmers, and human health. Local, strong alternative food networks not only assure environmental protection, but they also address the issues that weak alternatives neglect. Using three case studies from the Washington, D.C. metro area, the author explains that strong alternative food networks are better suited to create social and political change because they challenge the foundations of the conventional food system: standardized and generic products, price-based competition, consolidated power, and global scale. To affect true social and political change in the United States, the author recommends supporting strong alternative food networks by creating the requisite cultural and political space for them to succeed.

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Strawberry fields forever? Urban agriculture in developed countries: a review

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Conventionalisation of organic farming practices: from structural criteria towards an assessment based on organic principles. A review.

TL;DR: It is argued that to strengthen organic farming’s transformative potential, the debate must move beyond its focus on the bifurcation between artisanal and conventionalised organic farms, so as to capture the full range of empirical heterogeneity.
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Organic food consumers' trade-offs between local or imported, conventional or organic products: a qualitative study in Shanghai

TL;DR: In this paper, a qualitative study of the trade-offs made by organic food product consumers in the Chinese Metropolis of Shanghai is presented, where the authors used a qualitative methodology using open questions and projective techniques and based on 23 individual interviews.
Journal ArticleDOI

Peri-urban farmland conservation and development of alternative food networks: Insights from a case-study area in metropolitan Barcelona (Catalonia, Spain)

TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of the Baix Llobregat Agricultural Park (BLAP) in metropolitan Barcelona is presented, which concludes that alternative food networks in peri-urban areas are only possible if farmland preservation is guaranteed.
References
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