Family farmers as agents of resilience in the western region of Santa Catarina (Brazil)
Abstract
This article analyses how the resilience of family farmers has contributed to the development of the western region of Santa Catarina, Brazil. Despite having largest agro-industrial complex in Latin America, the region has faced cyclical crisis and challenges in recent decades. In fact, the quality of life of the rural population – the region is the main strongholds of family farming in Brazil - has not improved. Rural exodus, an aging population and the impairment of environmental quality are some of the evidences that point to the limits of the adopted agribusiness model. Family farmers and their organizations have responded to this socioeconomic environment of uncertainty with adaptive strategies based on local resilience, such as pluriactivity, productive diversification, transformation of raw materials in the property and production for own consumption. These strategies have served not only for the social reproduction of the group but also have contributed to a renewed regional dynamism.Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors who publish in this journal agree to the following terms:
a. Authors retain their copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication of their work, which will be simultaneously subject to the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which allows third parties to share the work provided that the author and the journal's first publication are acknowledged.
b. Authors may enter into other non-exclusive licensing agreements for the distribution of the published version of the work (e.g., depositing it in an institutional repository or publishing it in a monographic volume) provided that the initial publication in this journal is acknowledged.
c. Authors are permitted and encouraged to disseminate their work via the Internet (e.g. in institutional digital archives or on their website), which may lead to interesting exchanges and increase citations of the published work. (See The effect of open access).