Nicaragua’s agroecological transition: Transformation or reconfiguration of the agri-food regime?

Katharina Schiller*, Wendy Godek, Laurens Klerkx, P.M. Poortvliet

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

32 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Agroecology started to amplify agroecology in Nicaragua in the 1980s and was translated into national policy in 2011. Using the Multi-Level Perspective on sustainability transitions (MLP), this paper explores whether the rise of agroecology has fundamentally transformed Nicaragua’s agri-food system. Drawing on the findings of a qualitative study including a range of agroecological actors and organizations, we create a rich innovation history timeline of Nicaragua’s agroecology development at different levels–the agroecological niche (space in which heterogenous actors nurture innovations) and the regime (dominant agri-food system paradigm). MLP analysis is used to explore the extent to which agroecology’s growth has transformed the national agri-food regime. We find that although the term ‘agroecology’ is used widely by government, incentives for transitions to agroecology are only weakly implemented. This stems partly from the co-optation of the agroecological niche’s discourse by regime actors. Currently, it seems the transition process is not a reconfiguration of the agri-food system, but rather that agroecology has been added to the regime without deeper changes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)611-628
JournalAgroecology and Sustainable Food Systems
Volume44
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2020

Keywords

  • Latin America
  • niche-regime interactions
  • socio-technical transitions
  • Sustainability transitions
  • sustainable agri-food systems

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