Thursday, 13 December 2018
Meeting in the Middle: Scaling‐up and Scaling‐over in Alternative Food Networks
Culture, Agriculture, Food and Environment Volume 40, Issue 2
Research Article
Lilian Brislen
First published: 21 October 2018
https://doi.org/10.1111/cuag.12176
Cited by: 2
Lilian Brislen is the Executive Director of The Food Connection at The University of Kentucky, Lexington KY. Food Connection, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
Abstract
The “scaling‐up” of Alternative Food Networks (AFN) through food hubs and other values‐based supply chains has the potential to simultaneously serve the needs of mid‐sized farmers and expand the scope of AFN impact and access. This paper argues for greater consideration of the process and practice of scaling‐up as it applies to farmers transitioning into AFNs from conventional markets. Interviews with mid‐sized farmers from two food hubs in the Southeastern U.S. shows that food hub farmers consist of a mixture of new‐entrant farmers growing their farm enterprises from direct markets, and heritage (e.g., multi‐generational) farmers already engaged in large‐scale production who are scaling‐over to wholesale AFNs from traditional commodity production. Relative to first‐generation farmers, the larger scale heritage farmers have distinct motivations and challenges that vary along a number of dimensions of their personal and enterprise history. The paper concludes that by supporting the unique needs of mid‐sized farmers scaling‐over from conventional markets, Food Hubs can play a transformative role in the expansion of AFNs and thus the broader goal of transforming our food systems.
Citing Literature
Number of times cited: 2
Kathryn De Master, New Inquiries into the Agri‐Cultures of the Middle, Culture, Agriculture, Food and Environment, 40, 2, (130-135), (2018).
Wiley Online Library
Ashley Stinnett and Jennifer Jo Thompson, An Introduction: Ethnographic Accounts of “The Middle” in Anthropological Studies of (Agri)Culture, Culture, Agriculture, Food and Environment, 40, 2, (73-74), (2018).
Wiley Online Library