TY - JOUR
T1 - Le Quinoa au temps de la Covid-19
T2 - vers de nouvelles coordinations entre les producteurs des différents pays andins
AU - Bazile, Didier
AU - Andreotti, Federico
AU - Biaggi, Cristina
AU - Canahua Murillo, Alipio
AU - Chevarria-Lazo, Marco
AU - Chura, Ernesto
AU - Garland, Gerardo
AU - González, Juan Antonio
AU - Mujica-Sánchez, Ángel
AU - Tapia-Nuñez, Mario E.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Quinoa has been cultivated for millennia in the Andes since its domestication on the shores of Lake Titicaca, between Peru and Bolivia. As a rustic crop of the Andean highlands, it has conquered the international market for less than thirty years. Today, Peru has become the world's leading producer and the majority of its production is exported. Produced locally by small-scale farmers and consumed globally, quinoa reflects the context of the globalization of agriculture and food. The COVID-19 crisis has also affected Peru and it raises questions about the robustness and resilience of export food chains. This opinion article looks back at debates organized in May-June 2020 in Peru. After recalling the general context of the cultivation of quinoa and the link between COVID-19, agriculture and biodiversity, we highlight the links between health crisis, agricultural crisis and food crisis. This global pandemic offers us the opportunity to question the current agricultural models to draw lessons to build the future. The projection of new solidarities through a collective trademark appears to carry a transnational territorial project at Andean level. Accompanying the actors to make it an inclusive development model requires adapted participatory tools.
AB - Quinoa has been cultivated for millennia in the Andes since its domestication on the shores of Lake Titicaca, between Peru and Bolivia. As a rustic crop of the Andean highlands, it has conquered the international market for less than thirty years. Today, Peru has become the world's leading producer and the majority of its production is exported. Produced locally by small-scale farmers and consumed globally, quinoa reflects the context of the globalization of agriculture and food. The COVID-19 crisis has also affected Peru and it raises questions about the robustness and resilience of export food chains. This opinion article looks back at debates organized in May-June 2020 in Peru. After recalling the general context of the cultivation of quinoa and the link between COVID-19, agriculture and biodiversity, we highlight the links between health crisis, agricultural crisis and food crisis. This global pandemic offers us the opportunity to question the current agricultural models to draw lessons to build the future. The projection of new solidarities through a collective trademark appears to carry a transnational territorial project at Andean level. Accompanying the actors to make it an inclusive development model requires adapted participatory tools.
KW - Agricultural value chains
KW - Agroecology
KW - Chenopodium quinoa Willd
KW - Globalization
KW - Peru
U2 - 10.1051/cagri/2021016
DO - 10.1051/cagri/2021016
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85110473201
SN - 1166-7699
VL - 30
JO - Cahiers Agricultures
JF - Cahiers Agricultures
M1 - 28
ER -