Abstract

In recent years, the transition to sustainability at a food systems’ scale has drawn major attention both from the scientific and political arenas. Agroecology has become central to such discussions, while impressive efforts have been made to conceptualize the agroecology scaling process. It has thus become necessary to apply the concept of agroecology transitions to the scale of food systems and in different “real-world” contexts. Scaling local agroecology experiences of production, distribution, and consumption, which are often disconnected and/or disorganized, also reveals emergent research gaps. A critical review was performed in order to establish a transdisciplinary dialogue between both political agroecology and the literature on sustainable food systems. The objective was to build insights into how to advance towards Agroecology-based Local Agri-food Systems (ALAS). Our review unveils emergent questions such as: how to overcome the metabolic rift related to segregated activities along the food chain, how to feed cities sustainably, and how they should relate to the surrounding territories, which social subjects should drive such transitions, and which governance arrangements would be needed. The paper argues in favor of the re-construction of food metabolisms, territorial flows, plural subjects and (bottom-up) governance assemblages, placing life at the center of the food system and going beyond the rural–urban divide.

Highlights

  • Over the last decades, the discipline of agroecology has evolved to encompass a variety of approaches and has moved from being shaped as a science, a social movement, and a set of farming practices for agricultural sustainability, mainly at farm and farming system scales [1]

  • We conducted the same exercise with the literature on Sustainable Food Systems, including the literature related to Alternative Food Networks as a complementary approach to the latter, which is of interest in relation to our aim of bringing local agroecological experiences to food systems scale

  • Such an operation revealed three main issues in relation to the development of the full potential of the comprehensive sustainability of Agroecology-based Local Agri-food Systems: (1) the twofold metabolic rift of food systems, whose activities are segregated between urban and rural settings, and productive and reproductive economies; (2) the need to focus on local socio-technical processes, and to articulate the different territorial levels of food systems, in order to address sustainability in a nested structure of sub-systems; and (3) the theoretical and methodological challenges introduced by the plural subject and the governance arrangements to be constructed in order to promote food systems’ scale in relation to agroecological transitions

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Summary

Introduction

The discipline of agroecology has evolved to encompass a variety of approaches and has moved from being shaped as a science, a social movement, and a set of farming practices for agricultural sustainability, mainly at farm and farming system scales [1]. Agroecology has addressed the challenges of developing territorialized, sustainable food systems by promoting legal and political frameworks favorable to agroecological transitions [9,10] and incorporating the emergent complexity of broader territorial scales [11]—agroecology up-scaling. The dialectics between both agroecology up-scaling and out-scaling has led to an expansion of the scientific debate on power, agency, subjects, methodologies, and devices.

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