Synergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (Southeastern Mexico)

The dominant regime in coffee growing regions has been molded by multilateral entities' policies together with transnational food corporations and national governing bodies, which in turn are driven by unsustainable production chains fed by unorganized farmers. This regime has managed to maintain low-priced commodities, thus leaving in poverty 75% of the rural population in coffee growing regions in Chiapas, Mexico. As a result, innovation "niches" have been formed-such as fair trade initiatives launched by Coordinadora Mexicana de Pequeños Productores de Comercio Justo (CMCJ, Mexican Coordinator of Fair Trade Small-Scale Farmers)-which focus on coffee growing families searching for better prices in coffee and looking to improve their quality of life. However, most often, the academic sector has implemented scientific policies that favor disciplinary research in relation to enterprises within the "regime." This situation has led to the scarce development of capacities to face complex socio-environmental problems that haunt farmer families within innovation "niches," where multidisciplinary, reliable, and socially sturdy knowledge is needed.In this regard, the present study aims to identify key elements to build this type of knowledge by means of analyzing two critical case studies, namely, the collaboration between the Research Group on Coffee-Producer Regions of ECOSUR (GIEZCA) and Fair Trade on one side, and the collaboration of GIEZCA with the Institute of Coffee of Chiapas (INCAFECH) on the other. Our results show that in the latter case study, the process of knowledge generation was of the type "mode one" or academic science which tends to be disciplinary. In contrast, results of the former case study reveal that niche integration, multidisciplinary research groups and the "quadruple helix"-in an ongoing social learning process enlivening the territory-are key components to help these farmers cope with coffee crises due to volatile prices and agricultural pests.

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Main Authors: Herrera Hernández, Obeimar Balente Doctor autor 7946, Guerrero Jiménez, Trinidad Cristina Doctora autora 14173
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Grupo de Investigación de ECOSUR en Zonas Cafetaleras (México), Instituto del Café en Chiapas (México), Cafeticultores, Asociaciones campesinas, Sistemas agroalimentarios, Pobreza, Innovación socioambiental,
Online Access:http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2621507
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:60523
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Grupo de Investigación de ECOSUR en Zonas Cafetaleras (México)
Instituto del Café en Chiapas (México)
Cafeticultores
Asociaciones campesinas
Sistemas agroalimentarios
Pobreza
Innovación socioambiental
Grupo de Investigación de ECOSUR en Zonas Cafetaleras (México)
Instituto del Café en Chiapas (México)
Cafeticultores
Asociaciones campesinas
Sistemas agroalimentarios
Pobreza
Innovación socioambiental
spellingShingle Grupo de Investigación de ECOSUR en Zonas Cafetaleras (México)
Instituto del Café en Chiapas (México)
Cafeticultores
Asociaciones campesinas
Sistemas agroalimentarios
Pobreza
Innovación socioambiental
Grupo de Investigación de ECOSUR en Zonas Cafetaleras (México)
Instituto del Café en Chiapas (México)
Cafeticultores
Asociaciones campesinas
Sistemas agroalimentarios
Pobreza
Innovación socioambiental
Herrera Hernández, Obeimar Balente Doctor autor 7946
Guerrero Jiménez, Trinidad Cristina Doctora autora 14173
Synergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (Southeastern Mexico)
description The dominant regime in coffee growing regions has been molded by multilateral entities' policies together with transnational food corporations and national governing bodies, which in turn are driven by unsustainable production chains fed by unorganized farmers. This regime has managed to maintain low-priced commodities, thus leaving in poverty 75% of the rural population in coffee growing regions in Chiapas, Mexico. As a result, innovation "niches" have been formed-such as fair trade initiatives launched by Coordinadora Mexicana de Pequeños Productores de Comercio Justo (CMCJ, Mexican Coordinator of Fair Trade Small-Scale Farmers)-which focus on coffee growing families searching for better prices in coffee and looking to improve their quality of life. However, most often, the academic sector has implemented scientific policies that favor disciplinary research in relation to enterprises within the "regime." This situation has led to the scarce development of capacities to face complex socio-environmental problems that haunt farmer families within innovation "niches," where multidisciplinary, reliable, and socially sturdy knowledge is needed.In this regard, the present study aims to identify key elements to build this type of knowledge by means of analyzing two critical case studies, namely, the collaboration between the Research Group on Coffee-Producer Regions of ECOSUR (GIEZCA) and Fair Trade on one side, and the collaboration of GIEZCA with the Institute of Coffee of Chiapas (INCAFECH) on the other. Our results show that in the latter case study, the process of knowledge generation was of the type "mode one" or academic science which tends to be disciplinary. In contrast, results of the former case study reveal that niche integration, multidisciplinary research groups and the "quadruple helix"-in an ongoing social learning process enlivening the territory-are key components to help these farmers cope with coffee crises due to volatile prices and agricultural pests.
format Texto
topic_facet Grupo de Investigación de ECOSUR en Zonas Cafetaleras (México)
Instituto del Café en Chiapas (México)
Cafeticultores
Asociaciones campesinas
Sistemas agroalimentarios
Pobreza
Innovación socioambiental
author Herrera Hernández, Obeimar Balente Doctor autor 7946
Guerrero Jiménez, Trinidad Cristina Doctora autora 14173
author_facet Herrera Hernández, Obeimar Balente Doctor autor 7946
Guerrero Jiménez, Trinidad Cristina Doctora autora 14173
author_sort Herrera Hernández, Obeimar Balente Doctor autor 7946
title Synergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (Southeastern Mexico)
title_short Synergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (Southeastern Mexico)
title_full Synergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (Southeastern Mexico)
title_fullStr Synergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (Southeastern Mexico)
title_full_unstemmed Synergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (Southeastern Mexico)
title_sort synergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (southeastern mexico)
url http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2621507
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:605232024-03-12T12:52:47ZSynergy between innovation niches and transdisciplinarity the case of coffee producer families and their organizations (Southeastern Mexico) Herrera Hernández, Obeimar Balente Doctor autor 7946 Guerrero Jiménez, Trinidad Cristina Doctora autora 14173 textengThe dominant regime in coffee growing regions has been molded by multilateral entities' policies together with transnational food corporations and national governing bodies, which in turn are driven by unsustainable production chains fed by unorganized farmers. This regime has managed to maintain low-priced commodities, thus leaving in poverty 75% of the rural population in coffee growing regions in Chiapas, Mexico. As a result, innovation "niches" have been formed-such as fair trade initiatives launched by Coordinadora Mexicana de Pequeños Productores de Comercio Justo (CMCJ, Mexican Coordinator of Fair Trade Small-Scale Farmers)-which focus on coffee growing families searching for better prices in coffee and looking to improve their quality of life. However, most often, the academic sector has implemented scientific policies that favor disciplinary research in relation to enterprises within the "regime." This situation has led to the scarce development of capacities to face complex socio-environmental problems that haunt farmer families within innovation "niches," where multidisciplinary, reliable, and socially sturdy knowledge is needed.In this regard, the present study aims to identify key elements to build this type of knowledge by means of analyzing two critical case studies, namely, the collaboration between the Research Group on Coffee-Producer Regions of ECOSUR (GIEZCA) and Fair Trade on one side, and the collaboration of GIEZCA with the Institute of Coffee of Chiapas (INCAFECH) on the other. Our results show that in the latter case study, the process of knowledge generation was of the type "mode one" or academic science which tends to be disciplinary. In contrast, results of the former case study reveal that niche integration, multidisciplinary research groups and the "quadruple helix"-in an ongoing social learning process enlivening the territory-are key components to help these farmers cope with coffee crises due to volatile prices and agricultural pests.The dominant regime in coffee growing regions has been molded by multilateral entities' policies together with transnational food corporations and national governing bodies, which in turn are driven by unsustainable production chains fed by unorganized farmers. This regime has managed to maintain low-priced commodities, thus leaving in poverty 75% of the rural population in coffee growing regions in Chiapas, Mexico. As a result, innovation "niches" have been formed-such as fair trade initiatives launched by Coordinadora Mexicana de Pequeños Productores de Comercio Justo (CMCJ, Mexican Coordinator of Fair Trade Small-Scale Farmers)-which focus on coffee growing families searching for better prices in coffee and looking to improve their quality of life. However, most often, the academic sector has implemented scientific policies that favor disciplinary research in relation to enterprises within the "regime." This situation has led to the scarce development of capacities to face complex socio-environmental problems that haunt farmer families within innovation "niches," where multidisciplinary, reliable, and socially sturdy knowledge is needed.In this regard, the present study aims to identify key elements to build this type of knowledge by means of analyzing two critical case studies, namely, the collaboration between the Research Group on Coffee-Producer Regions of ECOSUR (GIEZCA) and Fair Trade on one side, and the collaboration of GIEZCA with the Institute of Coffee of Chiapas (INCAFECH) on the other. Our results show that in the latter case study, the process of knowledge generation was of the type "mode one" or academic science which tends to be disciplinary. In contrast, results of the former case study reveal that niche integration, multidisciplinary research groups and the "quadruple helix"-in an ongoing social learning process enlivening the territory-are key components to help these farmers cope with coffee crises due to volatile prices and agricultural pests.Grupo de Investigación de ECOSUR en Zonas Cafetaleras (México)Instituto del Café en Chiapas (México)CafeticultoresAsociaciones campesinas Sistemas agroalimentariosPobrezaInnovación socioambientalSocio-environmental regimes and local visions: transdisciplinary experiences in Latin America / Minerva Arce Ibarra, Manuel Roberto Parra Vázquez, Eduardo Bello Baltazar, Luciana Gomes de Araujo, editorshttp://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2621507Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso