Abstract

The agro-food system needs a genuine sustainability transition to achieve sustainable food and nutrition security in the face of climate change, population growth, ecosystem degradation and increasing resource scarcity. Agro-food sustainability transitions refer to transformation processes needed to move towards sustainable agriculture and food systems. There is a broad range of theoretical and conceptual frameworks that have been used to understand and promote transition towards sustainability. These include the multi-level perspective (MLP) on socio-technical transitions, transition management (TM), strategic niche management (SNM), technological innovation system (TIS) and social practice approach (SPA). The paper analyses the use of these heuristic frameworks in research on agro-food sustainability transitions. A search carried out in March 2018 on Scopus yielded 791 documents, and 127 research articles underwent a systematic review. Results show that more than three-fifths of research papers dealing with sustainability transitions in agriculture, food processing, distribution and consumption use at least one of the five heuristic frameworks (MLP, TM, SNM, TIS and SPA). The MLP is the most prominent framework in research on agro-food sustainability transitions, followed by TM, SPA, SNM and then TIS. Nevertheless, MLP is increasingly complemented with frameworks that focus on human-related and social factors (SPA), management and governance (TM, SNM) or agency and interactions between actors (TIS) in sustainability transitions processes. Therefore, the paper makes the case for more integration of transition frameworks in order to better nurture and foster transitions towards sustainable agro-food systems.

Highlights

  • Contemporary environmental problems present formidable societal challenges that can be addressed only by radical, structural changes (Elzen et al 2004; Foxon 2008; Grin 2010)

  • The results of the systematic review show that all five heuristic frameworks are used in research on agro-food sustainability transitions (Table 3)

  • 68.5% of the selected research papers dealing with agro-food sustainability transitions use at least one transition framework

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Summary

Introduction

Contemporary environmental problems (e.g. climate change, resource depletion, biodiversity loss) present formidable societal challenges that can be addressed only by radical, structural changes (Elzen et al 2004; Foxon 2008; Grin 2010). These grand challenges relate to unsustainable consumption and production patterns in systems such as energy and agro-food (STRN 2017). Grin et al (2010) considered sustainability transition as a “radical transformation towards a sustainable society in response to a number of persistent problems confronting contemporary modern societies”. Grin et al (2010) considered sustainability transition as a “radical transformation towards a sustainable society in response to a number of persistent problems confronting contemporary modern societies”. Markard et al (2012) defined sustainability transitions as “long-term, multi-dimensional and fundamental transformation processes through which established socio-technical systems shift to more sustainable modes of production and consumption” (p. 956)

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