by Kirstie O'Neill
(@KirstieJONeill)
My PhD research focused on
what policy makers could do to help support localised food systems (LFS). Although LFS are difficult to define, the
number of LFS has grown over the last 15 years as producers and consumers seek
alternatives from mainstream, globalised food systems. A widely used definition is:
“rooted
in particular places, [LFSs] aim to be economically viable for farmers and
consumers, use ecologically sound production and distribution practises, and
enhance social equity and democracy for all members of the community” (Feenstra
1997)
Local food is frequently seen
as playing a role in rural development, as a way to overcome farming crises,
revive lagging rural economies and restore consumer confidence. Examples include farmers’ markets, farm
shops, box schemes, community supported agriculture, community gardens and
organic production. LFS are often based
on characteristics such as direct contact between consumers and producers,
increased trust, and greater proximity.
Olive grove in Anversa degli Abruzzi, Abruzzo (Photo: Kirstie O'Neill) |
My PhD research with policy
makers, local food businesses and consumers in East Yorkshire (UK - an area usually seen as industrial farming) and the
Abruzzo (Italy - the Abruzzo is often seen as marginal farming) explores how local food is contingent on specific localised
spaces. Using evidence from two
contrasting types of region, one so-called industrial agricultural region and
the other a more marginal region, helps to probe why some regions develop
strong LFS while others do not.
Relating to food production,
regions are frequently characterised as ‘marginal’ or ‘industrial’, but food
production can be more complex. Eastern
England is often viewed as being devoid of LFS, as a homogeneous intensive
agricultural region or a ‘placeless foodscape’ (Morgan et al., 2006). Regions that have been marginal to the post
World War II productivist agricultural regime are typically viewed as the stronghold
for LFS, in the UK, for example, linked to areas like Devon, Cumbria and Wales. Countries such as Italy and France are often
viewed as favourable for LFS as a result of cultural attachment to local food
(Montanari 1994). Such stereotyped views
may inhibit opportunities and developments in regions like East Yorkshire as well
as in countries like Italy, by glossing over more detailed local variations.
Such stereotypes of
‘conventional’ or ‘peripheral’ are problematic as these opposite ends of a
spectrum are not clear-cut, with a more nuanced picture emerging. Policy support is essential for the success
of LFS, yet how policy makers interpret and understand local food varies by
regional context. ‘Local food’ means
different things in specific contexts.
Contingent Local Food Systems and Regions
East Yorkshire (UK) and the Abruzzo
(Italy) were my case study regions for investigating LFS (see Figure 1). Although they are diverse in many respects,
similarities include the ways in which space affects the actions and thinking
of core actors involved in local food and rural development. East Yorkshire is an intensive agricultural
region embedded into global commodity networks yet with an emerging local food
sector, whereas the Abruzzo is the type of area frequently associated with
strong LFS. Italy per se is associated
with a strong food culture, assumed to have high levels of commitment to local
food (‘prodotti tipici’) (Helstosky
2004; Montanari 1994).
Figure 1. Map showing East Yorkshire (left) and
Abruzzo (right) (Source: Wikimedia commons).
In East Yorkshire, people
frequently linked areas like national parks with local food. Many referred to places like the North York
Moors and Yorkshire Dales (both national parks) as places where it would be
‘easier’ to run a local food business.
East Yorkshire was described as ‘flat and boring’ in contrast. One respondent thought that in contrast to
East Yorkshire ‘it’s
good to go to a farmers’ market in Devon and Cornwall’. While
one policy maker suggested that ‘local food has the perception of being produced
in the Dales or the hills, where you can see the animals’.
In contrast, the Abruzzo region
has one third of its land mass designated as protected land. Despite this many people saw the region of
Tuscany as better suited to local food.
Tuscany is a popular tourist destination, but is also firmly embedded in
the Italian psyche – ‘non è la Toscana’ (‘well, this isn’t Tuscany’) was a
common response. This suggests that both
areas, despite their differences, encounter similar problems in being
recognised as a local foodscape.
Can industrial foodscapes accommodate LFS?
East Yorkshire business selling locally landed shellfish to local markets (courtesy of www.what-a-catch.co.uk) |
This idea of local food as
being quite separate from places of intensive food production influences how
policy makers think about local food in the context of East Yorkshire and the
policies they subsequently develop.
Recent attempts to stimulate a LFS include a number of food festivals in
the area, a Local Food Directory (here, including businesses like the one left here), dedicated local food workers and a not-for-profit
company promoting local food. All of
these actions have challenged common perceptions of industrial farming regions,
as one policy maker said ‘to everybody’s astonishment it was amazing just what
is made in East Yorkshire, and is overlooked because the image and everybody’s
thought process goes straight to North Yorkshire’. Increasing the visibility of foods produced
in the region has contrasted with previous perceptions; as one tourism business
said ‘15 years ago I would have said “well we’re just corn barons really,” you
know there wasn’t a lot of diversity’.
However, for some the image
of East Yorkshire as industrial foodscape is enduring and represents a
potential barrier for developing LFS in the region. Although there is increasing diversity of
local foods in places like East Yorkshire, many still associate such regions
with intensive agriculture, as emphasised by a policy maker:
‘...it’s
easy to see how you would promote lamb from the North Yorkshire Moors isn’t
it? Promoting wheat from Holderness
is…just doesn’t work in the same way...[it’s] not...something that’s sold
directly to the end consumer’.
Thus, industrial farming
regions are still viewed by some as agriculturally homogeneous, leaving little
room for the diverse range of products made in East Yorkshire, including goats’
cheeses, organic salads, smoked fish as well as lamb. Many of the views I encountered during my
research can be understood in the context of large-scale and financially profitable
agriculture being seen as the norm locally.
This frames how other farming activities are understood and perceived,
so that practices not fitting into this image of ‘proper’ farming are devalued.
Contrasting evidence from the Abruzzo region
Despite
the Abruzzo being geographically different to East Yorkshire, and arguably a
region with an ‘attractive’ landscape, many businesses and policy-makers
reported similar issues. Many
respondents stated that Tuscany represented a better, stronger LFS; popular
images of Tuscany were how local food producing regions were imagined. Interviewees suggested that although the
remote and wild landscapes of the Abruzzo region offered similar potential,
they were not (yet) able to compete with places like Tuscany. Italy
is a varied country and respondents illustrated the difficulties that they
faced in Abruzzo, such as a low external profile, relative geographical
remoteness and a lack of potential customers.
For instance, one regional policy maker stated that ‘no-one knows where the
Abruzzo region is, not even in Italy’.
Mountain scene, Gran Sasso National Park (Photo: Kirstie O'Neill) |
Organic agriculture was more
common in Abruzzo, as the mountainous parts of the region were not suitable for
industrialised agriculture. This
‘unspoilt’ aspect of agriculture was seen as strengthening local food
production, for many ‘l’agricoltura
industriale non è pensabile’ (industrial agriculture would be unimaginable
here). Organic production was accepted as a
‘good thing’ in Abruzzo, whereas in East Yorkshire organic food was viewed with
suspicion, as being for ‘hippies’ and critical of conventional agriculture.
The Italian producers were aware of their fragile
position in a remote part of Italy which is not the Italy that most people
imagine. Policy makers in the region referred to an
increasing distance between consumers and producers, despite the vision of
Italy as a nation of food lovers.
Paradoxically, despite bemoaning the increasing distance between
producers and consumers, LFS businesses in Abruzzo actively promote their produce to people outside the region,
for example by targeting tourists or selling to buying groups (‘gruppi di acquisto sociale’) within Italy, or international sales using the
Internet.
Conclusions
In depth discussions in
both places revealed geographically-specific interpretations of what local food
is, dependent upon local contexts.
Previous conceptualisations of LFS rarely take industrial agricultural
regions into account. However, East
Yorkshire is one such region successfully developing local food, thus
challenging common perceptions of such places.
Similarly, regions like Abruzzo, which are generalised as having the
‘right’ conditions for successful LFS, also require support and determination
to take advantage of the opportunities presented by LFS. Despite such regions being associated with
strong LFS, they do not automatically establish them, particularly as they are
often sparsely populated and may be distant from consumer demand.
My research suggest that
policy makers need to address the future role of such places in food production
– the development of local food in both locations is something that has to be
worked at and in both cases this has been achieved through policy makers trying
to create a local food network/culture. It cannot be assumed that certain regions will develop
LFS while others will not – the success of LFS are not tied to particular
characteristics, but can succeed with the appropriate support, promotion and
determination.
A longer version of this paper has been accepted for
Regional Studies, Regional Science, forthcoming.
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