2011
DOI: 10.1017/s1751731110002478
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Involvement of small-scale dairy farms in an industrial supply chain: when production standards meet farm diversity

Abstract: In certain contexts, dairy firms are supplied by small-scale family farms. Firms provide a set of technical and economic recommendations meant to help farmers meet their requirements in terms of the quantity and quality of milk collected. This study analyzes how such recommendations may be adopted by studying six farms in Brazil. All farms are beneficiaries of the country's agrarian reforms, but they differ in terms of how they developed their activities, their resources and their milk collection objectives. F… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Milk production worldwide has been on the increase, and is stimulated by the increase in demand, dietary changes, and enterprises which supply farms with production factors, feed, modern machinery, and services [58]. Milk producers need to face the increasing competition of producers both in Poland and abroad.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Milk production worldwide has been on the increase, and is stimulated by the increase in demand, dietary changes, and enterprises which supply farms with production factors, feed, modern machinery, and services [58]. Milk producers need to face the increasing competition of producers both in Poland and abroad.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This methodology required a considerable investment of time to collect both quantitative and qualitative data and to understand the grower's decision-making processes on each farm. Combined with financial and time constraints, these elements justified the reduced sample size, which is frequently observed in such studies (Sattler and Nagel, 2010;Bernard et al, 2011;Guillaume et al, 2016). This small size was balanced by the diversity of the farms selected, independent of their weight in the total farm population concerned by the study.…”
Section: Analyzing and Formalizing Growers' Decision-making Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, it makes no sense to improve the cattle breed nor to increase the proportion of milking cows in the herd when there is not sufficient quality feed available. The third characteristic is the continuous adaptation of technologies and processes to the diversity found amongst dairy farmers and their agro-ecological conditions in a similar approach as suggested by Bernard et al (2011) in the same country. In essence, the ''Balde Cheio'' programme manipulates simultaneously many production factors, according to the local situation, step by step, resulting in more fodder per farm, with better quality, higher production/cow, reduction of the labour load, better reproductive indexes, longer lactating period/cow and modification of the herd structure aiming at proportionally more cows than heifers and calves.…”
Section: The Integrative Technology Introduction During the Balde Chementioning
confidence: 95%