26 research outputs found
Towards the twin transition in the agri-food sector? Framing the current debate on sustainability and digitalisation
A significant weight on the environment is created by the agricultural processes starting from the exploitation of
the soil and production to the physical distribution of goods, the retailers’ operations and consumption. Agriculture
and particularly agri-food is imperative to contribute to solving such global challenges as climate change
and food security through cleaner and greener supply chains, where the implementation of smart technologies is
one of the major ways to create an impact. The pairing between the potential of digital technologies and sustainability
inputs, called twin transition, is currently one of the EU policy’s priorities. This research focuses on
linking digitalisation and sustainability in the agri-food sector through applications of various digital technologies
and the associated contributions to sustainability through the three – environmental, economic, and social -
dimensions. To analyse the current debate on sustainability and digitalisation, we have utilised a systematic
literature review and qualitative analysis of (policy) documents. The discussion presents a conceptual framework,
which follows the process of the integration of a digital technology from its reasoning to the associated
sustainability outcomes. The research identifies uneven representation of digital technologies and the structural
imbalance of applications towards farming as the agri-food supply chain node and farmers as the major actors’
group. The scale of these applications frame the associated contributions to the sustainability dimensions. The
analysis of the sustainability outcomes brought by digitalisation through classification of their aspects can advise
not only a choice of technology but also managerial and policy directions leading to the transformation. One of
the ways to manage twin transition and support competitiveness on both firm and sector levels is development of
a strategy, which can be supported by policy making
cohesion and conflict in transnational merchant families
How do people negotiate the diversity of positionalities within kin groups? Through a diachronic approach, I investigate how Ali and Jalal, two merchants with Azeri and Gilaki ethnic identifications who came to Hamburg in the 1930s, mobilized kin to generate capital along the lines of generation, gender, and age. The reader simultaneously learns about the local history of Iranian immigration. Building on literature about historical merchant networks, the social organization of the Iranian marketplace (bazaar), the anthropology of kinship and transnational families, I question the social cohesion on which Aihwa Ong's study of flexible capital creation relies. The material suggests that the experience of family relations influences agents' positioning in the local Iranian social field