Abstract

This article analyses the processes of  participation and integration of  groups living in and around protected areas, in efforts to convert conventional methods of agricultural production into agroecologicallysustainable practices. Taking as a case study a community located in the  buffer zone of a large conservation unit, and part of the main contiguous remaining areas of the Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest, this work focuses on the articulation among multiple  existing elements in this area: an  agroecological settlement, different levels of governance, internal social differentiation and classification  systems, community agency,  antagonistic visions of development, and their effects on community  development practices. It also  examines the external connections  that the community establishes, acting as an instrument of compliance and reproduction of the dominant agrifood regime, and contributing to the  formation and strengthening of an alternative short circuit of production and commercialization network, integrating local family producers to  the consumers in large urban centres.

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