2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2011.11.008
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Exiting, enduring and innovating: Farm household adaptation to global zoonotic disease

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Cited by 23 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
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“…Similar to resilience of SMEs, there been studies of how farms cope with change, e.g. with the impact of BSE in Canada (Anderson and McLachlan, 2012); of dairy farmers in the UK coping with foot-andmouth disease (Glover, 2012); the resilience of farms in Australia in the face of protracted drought (Sysak, 2013) and in New Zealand in the face climate change (Kenny, 2011); strategies of Austrian family farmers to build resilience (Darnhofer, 2010); and how French beef farmers maintain their flexibility in the face of market variations and climatic fluctuations (Astigarraga and Ingrand, 2011). Of course, there is a whole body of literature on how farms cope with change over the long term, but while studying the same phenomena, they do not refer to the resilience framework (e.g.…”
Section: Resilience In Different Bodies Of Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similar to resilience of SMEs, there been studies of how farms cope with change, e.g. with the impact of BSE in Canada (Anderson and McLachlan, 2012); of dairy farmers in the UK coping with foot-andmouth disease (Glover, 2012); the resilience of farms in Australia in the face of protracted drought (Sysak, 2013) and in New Zealand in the face climate change (Kenny, 2011); strategies of Austrian family farmers to build resilience (Darnhofer, 2010); and how French beef farmers maintain their flexibility in the face of market variations and climatic fluctuations (Astigarraga and Ingrand, 2011). Of course, there is a whole body of literature on how farms cope with change over the long term, but while studying the same phenomena, they do not refer to the resilience framework (e.g.…”
Section: Resilience In Different Bodies Of Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dysfunction of the conventional grocery system is not easily overcome and alternative food supply streams constantly encounter legal, regulatory, and infrastructural barriers (Anderson and McLachlan 2012). Regardless, community members indicated that food grown closer to home was typically of higher quality by the time it arrived in Grand Rapids and MCN:…”
Section: Better Imported Foodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their analysis suggests that state support for cooperative development is being eroded as provincial and federal governments increasingly turn toward neoliberal modes of governance. In this context, grassroots innovations such as cooperative alternative food networks tend to be poorly supported by governments that narrowly couch economic progress in terms of large-scale development projects and commodity agriculture (Anderson & McLachlan, 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%