Abstract
This paper explores the role of ethics and responsibility as drivers of a transition to a more sustainable agri-food system, by drawing on an investigation of the governance of social sustainability in the UK’s conventional food supply. The paper investigates how and why various non-state actors in the conventional food supply construe certain social obligations as being part of the remit of the food supply; whether ethics plays a motivating role; and the extent to which their activities are linked to sustainability. The paper uses data collected via two surveys of diverse entities in the conventional food supply, the first a survey of public-facing websites, the second a series of in-depth interviews. The entities ranged from primary producers, manufacturers and food service operators to consultancies, standard-setting organisations and advocacy groups. The study finds that actors view a variety of socially focused or socially beneficial activities as legitimate governance concerns for the conventional food supply, and that ethics plays a role in motivating or justifying these activities. However, the activities are inconsistently associated with sustainability, a finding that may undermine the use of sustainability programmes as tools for driving ethical agendas. Moreover, the dominant business framing of the conventional food supply means that ethical considerations are often expressed in terms of more instrumental priorities. Social sustainability or responsibility actions can be justified on moral grounds as ‘the right thing to do’ but usually have to be backed up in more pragmatic terms as a way of ‘doing well by doing good’.
Highlights
This paper explores the role of ethics and responsibility as drivers of a transition to a more sustainable agri-food system, by drawing on a study of the governance of social sustainability in the UK’s conventional food supply
The study investigated how and why various non-state actors in the conventional food supply construed certain social obligations as being part of the remit of the food supply; whether ethics played a motivating role; and the extent to which the actors associated these activities with sustainability
Ethics is taken here to describe the frameworks within which people try to determine how they ‘should’ behave, and how they choose between doing right and wrong (Honderich 1995)
Summary
This paper explores the role of ethics and responsibility as drivers of a transition to a more sustainable agri-food system, by drawing on a study of the governance of social sustainability in the UK’s conventional food supply. The study focused on the social dimension of sustainability and the conventional food supply in the UK.. The study underpinning this paper took a broader look, examining how a wide range of actors conceptualised and operationalised the social obligations of the conventional food supply. The following section summarises how the social ‘pillar’ of sustainability emerged and has been interpreted in relation to food; it describes how sustainability has been adapted to the world of business, relevant here because the conventional food supply is overwhelmingly conducted by businesses of various sorts. (or policies that promote them) can drive the sustainability transition
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have