The emergence of certified organic agriculture in Pakistan: actor dynamics, knowledge production, and cosumer demand

Certified Organic Agriculture (COA) is a much debated alternative to conventional and industrialized farming, with recent scholarship having paid attention to different aspects of organic commodities within a global agrofood system. Organic standards link consumers in the Global North with producers...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Poerting, Julia (Author)
Format: Article (Journal)
Language:English
Published: Januar 2015
In: Asien
Year: 2015, Volume: 134, Issue: 1, Pages: 143-165
ISSN:2701-8431
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Online Access:Verlag, Volltext: http://asien.asienforschung.de/asien-134-januar-2015/
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Author Notes:Julia Poerting
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Summary:Certified Organic Agriculture (COA) is a much debated alternative to conventional and industrialized farming, with recent scholarship having paid attention to different aspects of organic commodities within a global agrofood system. Organic standards link consumers in the Global North with producers in the Global South, and transport agricultural knowledge around the global. For farmers in the Global South, knowledge therefore plays a central role in their successful conversion to COA. This paper, based on ethnographic fieldwork in Pakistan in 2013 and 2014, focuses on the country’s small but fast-growing organic agricultural sector and examines how the different actors involved in it produce and circulate knowledge about how to cultivate and market organic food crops. Producers, agricultural universities, government departments, private sector actors, and urban farmers all have to exchange knowledge so as to overcome a multitude of challenges. An analysis of the processes of knowledge production and circulation is central to understanding how knowledge travels and which practices take hold, and how.
Item Description:Gesehen am 16.06.2020
Physical Description:Online Resource
ISSN:2701-8431