Abstract

Given how difficult it is for small and medium food producers to commercialize their products, several initiatives against large-scale food distribution have emerged, being carried out by different social actors. Using qualitative methods that focus on the voice of social actors, the text discusses and broadens the postulates around intermediation, based on two representative experiences in the central region of Colombia. These experiences dynamize and design intermediation strategies which support the local, regional, and national articulation and participation of peasant actors, as well as that of urban and rural social organizations. The results showcase the possibilities for the construction of solidarity intermediation processes for transforming the intermediation, based on strategies that involve stronger levels of autonomy, reciprocity, and equity among participants.

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