Drawing boundaries: How Community Supported Agriculture networks can position themselves by creating, maintaining and enforcing a shared collective identity

Drawing boundaries: How Community Supported Agriculture networks can position themselves by creating, maintaining and enforcing a shared collective identity

How can members of Community-Supported Agriculture (CSA) networks collectively negotiate and define a shared identity? Why does this matter? This short document is an introduction into the idea that CSA networks have boundaries by defining their own identity. It provides reflections on how such boundaries can be created, maintained and enforced over time to position the network strategically and to support its own internal development.

Language: English
Format: Document

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About the author

The UNMAKING research programme, hosted by Utrecht University (Netherlands), uses a novel interdisciplinary theory to explain whether, when and how grassroots initiatives unmake environmentally disruptive institutions and practices that are deeply ingrained in capitalist societies.

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