{"title":"Smallholdings, Livelihood Strategies and Public Policies in Europe: The Issue of Self-sufficiency","authors":"Paula Escribano, Agata Hummel","doi":"10.1111/cuag.12285","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>At the time of publication of this special issue, <i>Smallholdings, livelihood strategies and public policies in Europe: the issue of self-sufficiency</i>, it has become increasingly crucial to rethink the livelihood strategies and forms of production and distribution characterizing small farms and the ways in which these farms are shaped by public policies. The outbreak of war between Russia and Ukraine comes at a time when smallholdings are attempting to recover from the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic and has affected food supplies worldwide. Europe has been forced to reorganize the supply chain and is suffering rates of inflation that have not been seen for years.</p><p>In Spain, for example, the truckers' strike has contributed to grounding fishing fleets. Dairy farms are forced to throw away milk because it is not profitable to collect, while the grain shortage leads to a lack of supply in supermarkets. During the lockdown, the Spanish State restricted the production, distribution, and consumption of goods to formal activities and channels. This led to the exclusion of forms of supply that were not oriented to the market economy (Gascón <span>2020</span>). Policies of this kind overlook “peasant economies” (Narotzky <span>2016</span>), depriving them of revenues, although demand for local and organic food is increasing in rural and urban areas for reasons relating to health and security (Batalla et al. <span>2020</span>; Escribano, Hummel, and Milano <span>2020</span>). This situation highlights the dependency of livelihood strategies on transnational flows of commodities and the lack of a regional food policy to ensure a secure supply via sustainable local systems. Policies and regulations do not always nurture life or meet people's real needs. At times, they are designed to create competitive holdings in the market with little regard for the consequences at the micro-scale.</p><p>For years, Europe has been immersed in a market economy underpinned by a system of neoliberal policies. The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), introduced in 1962, is the main European Union public policy to have shaped agro-industrial production, rural life, and landscapes and ecosystems in Europe. The policy has been detrimental to prices and harmful to ecosystems and health (FAO, UNDP, and UNEP <span>2021</span>). Rural areas have also been influenced by productivist and post-productivist paradigms based on agricultural industrialization, commercialization, intensification, and specialization, as well as increasing use of biochemical inputs and corporate involvement in the sector, among other aspects (Wilson <span>2001</span>). These paradigms changed the role of smallholdings in livelihood strategies, producing the perfect conditions for the industrial agri-food system to grow and become more concentrated.</p><p>Agricultural entrepreneurs have displaced traditional peasants, and the agrarian sector is becoming professionalized in a context of globalizing markets (Van der Ploeg <span>2010</span>, 14). The global race for development is increasing the distance between agricultural companies competing in the market economy and people engaging in agricultural practices as part of local livelihood strategies. Labyrinthine bureaucracy and limitations on traditional practices such as home slaughter of livestock or surplus sale through informal channels are just a few examples of regulations that hamper self-sufficient livelihoods. Much before the present moment Polanyi (<span>1944</span>) referred to “the silent transformation as a way describe an economic shift from striving for subsistence to searching for profit. In this contemporary scenario, smallholdings are akin to a pre-productivist agricultural regime “characterized by high environmental sustainability, low intensity and productivity, weak integration into capitalist markets and horizontally integrated rural communities” (Wilson <span>2001</span>, 92).</p><p>From a political perspective, neoliberal governmentality involves “techniques of the self” that transform the passive “objects” of state policy (i.e., farmers) into active subjects of their own subjectification (Shore <span>2012</span>). The State is withdrawing its responsibility for citizen welfare and leaving small farms' survival down to individual efforts rather than addressing structural and political factors.</p><p>Despite the supremacy of the market economy and neoliberal policies, ethnographic research has shown the importance of self-sufficiency, self-provisioning, and domestic economy for people's livelihoods, especially in rural areas. Millions of peasant households around the world produce many of the raw materials that they process and consume at home (Gudeman and Hann <span>2015</span>). In 2010, peasant households contained 1.2 billion productive units, equivalent to two-fifths of humanity (Van der Ploeg <span>2010</span>, 12).</p><p>Self-sufficiency is resistant to easy transformation for several reasons. First, subsistence can act as a buffer in times of crisis. Small farms can alleviate economic and social crises through forms of production that are not entirely market-oriented (Hilmi and Burmi <span>2016</span>). In this regard, self-sufficiency and self-provisioning may be viewed as the last refuge of the dispossessed (Leonard and Kaneff <span>2002</span>). Second, self-sufficiency intertwines with identity and social cohesion. Far from being displaced by the market economy, Gudeman and Hann (<span>2015</span>) show that self-sufficiency takes on new meanings and functions in its coexistence with the market economy and the globalized world.</p><p>This special issue aimed to explore the influence of the European Union's (EU) Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) on smallholdings' livelihood strategies and how it relates to self-sufficiency and the professionalization and commodification of the agriculture and livestock sector. Drawing on a variety of case studies, we reveal the different strategies adopted by smallholdings to survive within a particular legal framework.</p><p>Smallholdings may take the form of small family farms when kinship plays a prominent part in organizing the work. This is true of the case study presented by Patricia Homs in the Penedés (Spain), where the impact of the “aggressive intrusion of the market” on small grape production makes it impossible for small family farms to be economically profitable. Homs illustrates how the capitalist moral economy impedes “imagining real non-exploitative socioeconomic relations” and “reinforces existing patterns of capital accumulation.” A lack of protection forces farmers to constantly adapt to the demands of agribusiness.</p><p>In the case of high-altitude farms in South Tyrol (Italy), Almut Schneider shows the apparent contradiction between building an identity based on self-sufficiency and surviving on subsidies from the State, which make it possible for farmers to continue to sell their products. Despite this, the pressures of “the capitalist moral economy” push them towards mechanization, which requires major investments in machinery to increase productivity and can result in over-indebtedness.</p><p>Ieva Snikersproge retraces the historical evolution of peasantry and neorural movement in France to show how subsistence occupies a minor role for creating peasant-like livelihoods that are relatively autonomous from the capitalist market pressures. This is so because pro-modernization agricultural policy has driven down agricultural goods’ prices, making it difficult to live from agricultural production. CAP subsidies have become indispensable for agriculture-based livelihoods, but their current form tied to agricultural surface size is encouraging farm upscaling and disadvantaging small, peasant-like farmers on the agricultural goods market.</p><p>In the neo-peasant movement in Catalonia (Spain), the focus is on preserving peasant-like agriculture. Agata Hummel and Paula Escribano present a lifestyle that seeks to provide for households' basic needs within the austerity model. Neo-peasants demand a relaxation of regulations in the sector to allow for traditional practices: “all we want from the authorities is to be left alone.” They show how differences in power enable some logics to prevail over others. Public policies pressure neo-peasants to act in non-legal spheres, criminalizing their practices (<i>cf</i>. Carrier <span>2018</span>) or forcing them to disappear.</p><p>André Thiemann and Kristīne Rolle in the case of Latvia show the ability of small farmers to adapt the new EU regulations for their own purposes. Different strategies are used combining formal and informal economic practices in order to create a business-oriented export cooperative or a cultural NGO. It is of special interest how public policies undervalue local value chains and how small farmers nonetheless become “players in hegemonic struggles over reimagining Latvian nature.”</p><p>Collectively, this special issue demonstrates that the risk of disappearance facing small farms in the EU today depends largely on the specific political and economic context. Public policies may strengthen smallholdings by reinforcing self-sufficiency and food sovereignty or pressure them further by plunging them into illegality, hindering small-scale food sovereignty.</p>","PeriodicalId":54150,"journal":{"name":"Culture Agriculture Food and Environment","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2022-08-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/cuag.12285","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Culture Agriculture Food and Environment","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cuag.12285","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
At the time of publication of this special issue, Smallholdings, livelihood strategies and public policies in Europe: the issue of self-sufficiency, it has become increasingly crucial to rethink the livelihood strategies and forms of production and distribution characterizing small farms and the ways in which these farms are shaped by public policies. The outbreak of war between Russia and Ukraine comes at a time when smallholdings are attempting to recover from the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic and has affected food supplies worldwide. Europe has been forced to reorganize the supply chain and is suffering rates of inflation that have not been seen for years.
In Spain, for example, the truckers' strike has contributed to grounding fishing fleets. Dairy farms are forced to throw away milk because it is not profitable to collect, while the grain shortage leads to a lack of supply in supermarkets. During the lockdown, the Spanish State restricted the production, distribution, and consumption of goods to formal activities and channels. This led to the exclusion of forms of supply that were not oriented to the market economy (Gascón 2020). Policies of this kind overlook “peasant economies” (Narotzky 2016), depriving them of revenues, although demand for local and organic food is increasing in rural and urban areas for reasons relating to health and security (Batalla et al. 2020; Escribano, Hummel, and Milano 2020). This situation highlights the dependency of livelihood strategies on transnational flows of commodities and the lack of a regional food policy to ensure a secure supply via sustainable local systems. Policies and regulations do not always nurture life or meet people's real needs. At times, they are designed to create competitive holdings in the market with little regard for the consequences at the micro-scale.
For years, Europe has been immersed in a market economy underpinned by a system of neoliberal policies. The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), introduced in 1962, is the main European Union public policy to have shaped agro-industrial production, rural life, and landscapes and ecosystems in Europe. The policy has been detrimental to prices and harmful to ecosystems and health (FAO, UNDP, and UNEP 2021). Rural areas have also been influenced by productivist and post-productivist paradigms based on agricultural industrialization, commercialization, intensification, and specialization, as well as increasing use of biochemical inputs and corporate involvement in the sector, among other aspects (Wilson 2001). These paradigms changed the role of smallholdings in livelihood strategies, producing the perfect conditions for the industrial agri-food system to grow and become more concentrated.
Agricultural entrepreneurs have displaced traditional peasants, and the agrarian sector is becoming professionalized in a context of globalizing markets (Van der Ploeg 2010, 14). The global race for development is increasing the distance between agricultural companies competing in the market economy and people engaging in agricultural practices as part of local livelihood strategies. Labyrinthine bureaucracy and limitations on traditional practices such as home slaughter of livestock or surplus sale through informal channels are just a few examples of regulations that hamper self-sufficient livelihoods. Much before the present moment Polanyi (1944) referred to “the silent transformation as a way describe an economic shift from striving for subsistence to searching for profit. In this contemporary scenario, smallholdings are akin to a pre-productivist agricultural regime “characterized by high environmental sustainability, low intensity and productivity, weak integration into capitalist markets and horizontally integrated rural communities” (Wilson 2001, 92).
From a political perspective, neoliberal governmentality involves “techniques of the self” that transform the passive “objects” of state policy (i.e., farmers) into active subjects of their own subjectification (Shore 2012). The State is withdrawing its responsibility for citizen welfare and leaving small farms' survival down to individual efforts rather than addressing structural and political factors.
Despite the supremacy of the market economy and neoliberal policies, ethnographic research has shown the importance of self-sufficiency, self-provisioning, and domestic economy for people's livelihoods, especially in rural areas. Millions of peasant households around the world produce many of the raw materials that they process and consume at home (Gudeman and Hann 2015). In 2010, peasant households contained 1.2 billion productive units, equivalent to two-fifths of humanity (Van der Ploeg 2010, 12).
Self-sufficiency is resistant to easy transformation for several reasons. First, subsistence can act as a buffer in times of crisis. Small farms can alleviate economic and social crises through forms of production that are not entirely market-oriented (Hilmi and Burmi 2016). In this regard, self-sufficiency and self-provisioning may be viewed as the last refuge of the dispossessed (Leonard and Kaneff 2002). Second, self-sufficiency intertwines with identity and social cohesion. Far from being displaced by the market economy, Gudeman and Hann (2015) show that self-sufficiency takes on new meanings and functions in its coexistence with the market economy and the globalized world.
This special issue aimed to explore the influence of the European Union's (EU) Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) on smallholdings' livelihood strategies and how it relates to self-sufficiency and the professionalization and commodification of the agriculture and livestock sector. Drawing on a variety of case studies, we reveal the different strategies adopted by smallholdings to survive within a particular legal framework.
Smallholdings may take the form of small family farms when kinship plays a prominent part in organizing the work. This is true of the case study presented by Patricia Homs in the Penedés (Spain), where the impact of the “aggressive intrusion of the market” on small grape production makes it impossible for small family farms to be economically profitable. Homs illustrates how the capitalist moral economy impedes “imagining real non-exploitative socioeconomic relations” and “reinforces existing patterns of capital accumulation.” A lack of protection forces farmers to constantly adapt to the demands of agribusiness.
In the case of high-altitude farms in South Tyrol (Italy), Almut Schneider shows the apparent contradiction between building an identity based on self-sufficiency and surviving on subsidies from the State, which make it possible for farmers to continue to sell their products. Despite this, the pressures of “the capitalist moral economy” push them towards mechanization, which requires major investments in machinery to increase productivity and can result in over-indebtedness.
Ieva Snikersproge retraces the historical evolution of peasantry and neorural movement in France to show how subsistence occupies a minor role for creating peasant-like livelihoods that are relatively autonomous from the capitalist market pressures. This is so because pro-modernization agricultural policy has driven down agricultural goods’ prices, making it difficult to live from agricultural production. CAP subsidies have become indispensable for agriculture-based livelihoods, but their current form tied to agricultural surface size is encouraging farm upscaling and disadvantaging small, peasant-like farmers on the agricultural goods market.
In the neo-peasant movement in Catalonia (Spain), the focus is on preserving peasant-like agriculture. Agata Hummel and Paula Escribano present a lifestyle that seeks to provide for households' basic needs within the austerity model. Neo-peasants demand a relaxation of regulations in the sector to allow for traditional practices: “all we want from the authorities is to be left alone.” They show how differences in power enable some logics to prevail over others. Public policies pressure neo-peasants to act in non-legal spheres, criminalizing their practices (cf. Carrier 2018) or forcing them to disappear.
André Thiemann and Kristīne Rolle in the case of Latvia show the ability of small farmers to adapt the new EU regulations for their own purposes. Different strategies are used combining formal and informal economic practices in order to create a business-oriented export cooperative or a cultural NGO. It is of special interest how public policies undervalue local value chains and how small farmers nonetheless become “players in hegemonic struggles over reimagining Latvian nature.”
Collectively, this special issue demonstrates that the risk of disappearance facing small farms in the EU today depends largely on the specific political and economic context. Public policies may strengthen smallholdings by reinforcing self-sufficiency and food sovereignty or pressure them further by plunging them into illegality, hindering small-scale food sovereignty.
在本期特刊《欧洲的小农、生计战略和公共政策:自给自足的问题》出版之际,重新思考小农场的生计战略、生产和分配形式以及公共政策对这些农场的影响方式变得越来越重要。俄罗斯和乌克兰之间爆发战争之际,小农正试图从COVID-19大流行的后果中恢复过来,并影响了全球的粮食供应。欧洲被迫重组供应链,并承受着多年未见的通货膨胀率。例如,在西班牙,卡车司机的罢工导致渔船搁浅。奶牛场被迫扔掉牛奶,因为收集牛奶无利可图,而粮食短缺导致超市供应不足。在封锁期间,西班牙政府将商品的生产、分销和消费限制在正式活动和渠道。这导致不以市场经济为导向的供应形式被排除在外(Gascón 2020)。这种政策忽视了“农民经济”(Narotzky 2016),剥夺了他们的收入,尽管由于与健康和安全有关的原因,农村和城市地区对当地和有机食品的需求正在增加(Batalla et al. 2020;Escribano, Hummel, and Milano 2020)。这种情况突出了生计战略对商品跨国流动的依赖,以及缺乏通过可持续的地方系统确保安全供应的区域粮食政策。政策和法规并不总是培育生活,也不总是满足人们的实际需求。有时,它们的目的是在市场上创造竞争性持股,而很少考虑微观层面的后果。多年来,欧洲一直沉浸在以新自由主义政策体系为基础的市场经济中。共同农业政策(CAP)于1962年推出,是欧盟主要的公共政策,它塑造了欧洲的农业工业生产、农村生活、景观和生态系统。该政策对价格不利,对生态系统和健康有害(粮农组织、开发计划署和环境规划署,2021年)。农村地区也受到基于农业工业化、商业化、集约化和专业化的生产主义和后生产主义范式的影响,以及越来越多地使用生化投入和企业参与该部门,以及其他方面(Wilson 2001)。这些模式改变了小农在生计战略中的作用,为工业化农业食品系统的发展和更加集中创造了完美的条件。农业企业家已经取代了传统的农民,在全球化市场的背景下,农业部门正在变得专业化(Van der Ploeg 2010, 14)。全球发展竞赛拉大了在市场经济中竞争的农业公司与作为当地生计战略一部分从事农业实践的人们之间的距离。错综复杂的官僚机构和对传统做法的限制,如家庭屠宰牲畜或通过非正式渠道出售剩余牲畜,只是阻碍自给自足生计的法规的几个例子。早在现在这个时刻之前,波兰尼(1944)就提到了“无声的转变”,作为一种描述经济从为生存而奋斗到追求利润的转变的方式。在这种情况下,小农场类似于前生产主义农业制度,“其特点是高环境可持续性,低强度和生产率,与资本主义市场的整合程度较低,横向整合农村社区”(Wilson 2001, 92)。从政治角度来看,新自由主义治理涉及“自我技术”,将国家政策的被动“对象”(即农民)转变为自己主体化的主动主体(Shore 2012)。国家正在撤回对公民福利的责任,把小农场的生存留给个人努力,而不是解决结构和政治因素。尽管市场经济和新自由主义政策占据主导地位,但民族志研究表明,自给自足、自给自足和国内经济对人们的生计至关重要,尤其是在农村地区。世界各地数以百万计的农民家庭生产他们在家中加工和消费的许多原材料(Gudeman和Hann 2015)。2010年,农户拥有12亿个生产单位,相当于人类的五分之二(Van der Ploeg 2010, 12)。自给自足不容易转变,原因有几个。首先,生计可以在危机时期起到缓冲作用。