Abstract

Ecological approaches to farming are gaining increasing interest in the EU's Rural Development (RD) policy. From a societal perspective, these approaches are expected to deliver public goods in terms of environmental and social benefits for both consumers and rural actors. This study aims to investigate the policy discourses that are being used in the Rural Development Programmes (RDPs) of Sweden, France, Bavaria, Hungary, Poland and Romania to depict and justify the support for ecological approaches across three programming periods of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). For this purpose, a model integrating both CAP and RD discourses was developed and applied using deductive content analysis focused on the policy documents of RDPs. The results suggest that during the entire CAP period from 2000 to 2020, ecological approaches were mainly justified in a multifunctionality discourse, especially with the two RD discourses of i) nature conservation in all considered EU member states and regions, with the exception of Sweden, and ii) agri-ruralism, including Sweden. The neomercantilist discourse appears to be the third most dominant discourse in the two most recent CAP periods from 2007 to 2013 and 2014–2020, becoming more prominent between these two periods. Ecological approaches are almost never advocated along liberal lines as the neo-liberalist discourse is almost absent. These results highlight that these six EU member states and regions recognize the potential of these approaches for delivering public goods, despite a lesser emphasis on socio-economic benefits.

Highlights

  • Since the MacSharry reforms of 1992, the European Commission has signalled its willingness to ‘green’ its Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) by making agriculture more compatible with environmental sustain­ ability

  • This study aimed to explore the dominant policy discourses used in the Rural Devel­ opment Programmes (RDPs) of six EU member states and regions to depict and promote ecological approaches during three different CAP periods

  • The study contributes to the literature, in which there is a scarcity of geographical comparisons in national discourses related to rural development (RD) policy, by contrasting them in certain EU member states and regions

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Summary

Introduction

Since the MacSharry reforms of 1992, the European Commission has signalled its willingness to ‘green’ its Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) by making agriculture more compatible with environmental sustain­ ability. As EU member states enjoy relatively more flexibility in adapting the second pillar’s measures to their specificities compared to the first pillar (Agra Europe, 2006), focusing on the RDPs in order to examine policy discourses could reveal these contrasting societal views. This would inform about how ecological approaches are perceived and promoted in different societies and about the types of approaches that are recognized in national policy. Both these di­ mensions could, in turn, add to the understanding of the potential rea­ sons for regional differences in the uptake of ecological approaches in rural areas

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