(RE)APPROXIMATING FOOD PRODUCERS AND CONSUMERS IN METRO VANCOUVER, CANADA

Nenhuma Miniatura disponível

Data

2016-01-01

Autores

Freitas Coca, Estevan Leopoldo de [UNESP]
Barbosa Junior, Ricardo Cesar

Título da Revista

ISSN da Revista

Título de Volume

Editor

Univ Autonoma Caribe-uac

Resumo

This paper interprets the Metro Vancouver food localization movement, thorough the lens of the second generation of food sovereignty, with the objective of exploring its economic dimensions. First we promote a theoretical discussion of food sovereignty explaining that it started in a rural setting of the global south as a means to contest the international neoliberal trade system, and how it has adapted in the global north to incorporate consumers. We then discuss the contradictions between British Columbia's and Metro Vancouver's food systems. In sequence, we present the results from interviews of the movement's stakeholders, offering a qualitative analysis. Our findings demonstrate that there are several economic consequences, identifying: i) farmer markets as currently the most significant channel for the commerce of local foods and how they have been responsible for (re) approximating food producers and consumers; also, ii) institutional markets as a next step that can represent a true democratization of good food.

Descrição

Palavras-chave

local food, food systems, food sovereignty, institutional markets, Metro Vancouver

Como citar

Dimension Empresarial. Atlantico: Univ Autonoma Caribe-uac, v. 14, n. 1, p. 11-25, 2016.