Abstract
This exploratory study focuses on the role of the university in supporting sustainable development in rural areas, focusing on small wine producers, particularly those located in remote and disadvantaged areas. Disadvantaged areas have distinctive features. Firstly, they are fragile areas from a sociodemographic point of view because of population ageing. Secondly, they are unstable from an environmental (physical, eco-systemic) point of view, as a consequence of insufficient maintenance of their seminatural capital. University–business cooperation with companies located in those areas thus needs to be designed by considering the specific characteristic of the place. Therefore, this exploratory study sought to understand how the university can work with small wineries and support them and their rural area to face inequalities and low growth, and foster social innovation. We present a case study based on field research in Italy. The results—based on the analysis of 26 semistructured interviews with small wine producers—are discussed by exploring the potential form of cooperation between rural stakeholders and universities, beyond the concept of knowledge transfer. Conclusions highlight the need for the university to act as a facilitator of dialogue at a territorial level, as a first step toward to formulation of shared sustainable goals.
Highlights
This exploratory study focuses on university–business cooperation in the wine sector
It explores the potential role of the university to support sustainable development in disadvantaged rural areas, through collaboration with small wine producers
Analysis of data was carried out around the two dimensions under investigation: the first addressed to understand the challenges of running a business in wine in disadvantaged areas, and the second to explore the potential of university–business and territorial cooperation, to draw inputs for future planning of the universities’ action at the local level
Summary
This exploratory study focuses on university–business cooperation in the wine sector. It explores the potential role of the university to support sustainable development in disadvantaged rural areas, through collaboration with small wine producers. Conclusions highlight that trust and relationships should be taken as a foundation for any strategy of the university cooperation with rural actors. Theoretical backgrounds on the addressed topics are presented: the theoretical introduction reports on the relationship between sustainable development and the characteristics of disadvantaged rural areas; the policies addressing them; university–business cooperation in the field of wine, as played out so far; the challenges of small wineries in disadvantaged locations.
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