Abstract

Social farming is gaining increasing attention from multiple stakeholders in Europe because it can generate several socioeconomic benefits, for farming households too. The research—which is part of a project carried out by a healthcare authority in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region in order to investigate social farming in the local area—is a first attempt to analyse social farm results and to what extent they are affected by farm assets, as well as by the environment in which farms are embedded. The proposed model is based on the investigation of the causal relationships between “structural”, “relational” and “social farm result” constructs (latent variables), and on the identification of their measurement scales (observed variables). The causal relationships between these three constructs have been tested via a structural equation model calculated with the linear structural relationship method. The findings show that social farm results are mainly influenced by the relational variables (e.g., social and economic relations). On the contrary, the structural variables (e.g., size) do not directly affect the results, but they do have a negative indirect effect on them which is mediated by the relational variables. The findings suggests that alongside structural investment support, it is also important to strengthen relations and networks at local level in order to reinforce social farm results. Overall the findings contribute to the further understanding of the driving forces affecting social farm performance and provide policy makers and practitioners with information for scaling-up social farming.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe Healthcare Authority nr. 6 West Friuli (in Italian, Azienda per i Servizi Sanitari n. 6-Friuli occidentale) in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region carried out a project aimed at investigating social farming in the local area, the province of Pordenone (Italy)

  • The Healthcare Authority nr. 6 West Friuli in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region carried out a project aimed at investigating social farming in the local area, the province of Pordenone (Italy)

  • The project activities included a preliminary study of social farm performance and how the performance may be affected by farm assets, as well as by the environment in which farms are embedded

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Summary

Introduction

The Healthcare Authority nr. 6 West Friuli (in Italian, Azienda per i Servizi Sanitari n. 6-Friuli occidentale) in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region carried out a project aimed at investigating social farming in the local area, the province of Pordenone (Italy). EU policies have gradually broadened their scope: from supporting agricultural practices to giving more attention and financial support to the improvement of the environment, the countryside and the quality of life in rural areas, as well as to the multifunctionality of rural economies. Multifunctionality, a core issue in the EU agricultural and rural development agenda, refers to the different functions that agriculture fulfils in society, functions that go well beyond the production of food and fibres. They include, for instance, the stewardship of natural resources, landscapes and biodiversity, the creation of new job opportunities and the enhancement of the rural area attractiveness for tourists and other users of rural services. The choices for farms within the multifunctional paradigm are diverse, the common denominator being that farmers are willing to accept multiple responsibilities; to reconsider their predominant orientation towards primary production and profit maximisation; to build new cross-sectoral and social alliances; and to adopt more socially responsible patterns of production and marketing (Dessein et al 2013; Durand and van Huylenbroeck 2003; Knickel and Renting 2000; van der Ploeg and Renting 2000; Renting et al 2009)

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