7,049 research outputs found
Common Peopleâs Sustainability: Connectivity within a Food System Rhizome
They say that sustainable development has been around for about 20 years and not very much progress has been achieved. However, this view may refer to difficulties in identifying sustainable developments in everyday business activities without particularly visible publicity. Currently, new serious activity towards sustainable food systems, starting from retailing, processing industries and farmers as well as other food system actors seem to strive to connect the supply chains for sustainable food. This paper makes use of the notion of âsocial rhizomesâ structured as different networks to identify sustainable developments in actorsâ lived experience. Furthermore, the notion of connectivity, as the ability to activate heterogenous ideas, persons, materials and spaces for sustainability within a âsocial rhizomeâ is used to explain the progress towards sustainability within local, national and global food system. Empirically, the paper is based on two presentations given on the Finnish Organic Conference 2008. The presentations were analysed for the progress towards sustainability within social rhizomes structured as chanceworks, meshworks, strategic networks and socially overlaid networks. Results suggest, that connectivity between different networks leads to transformations between the networks towards more shared economic, environmental and socio-cultural benefits, which can be identified as common peopleâs sustainability
From catering organisations to environmental and health related public catering systems
Based on the political legitimacy for healthy food and environment by the citizens, the traditional public catering is suggested to be conceptualised as a public catering system. This Luhmann inspired systems notion conveys the boundary between the catering system and its environments, stressing the environmental communication and adaptation by catering systems. However, environmental communication needs more developed and particular environmental constructions to be implemented on the level of particular catering systems. Organisational and communication research on the shop floor is needed in order to solve particular tensions. The systems approach to catering discloses how profound a change is at hand when actors simply try to connect the aspects of health and environment to public catering
Poster: Organic milk as a sustainability strategy for Finnish milk system
Dairy farming in Finland is historically a mode of family farming, although modes like dairy farm companies and collaborative farms are increasing. Organic farmers are relatively young, well educated and their farms are modern and in the average, rather large. The use of automated milking systems (AMS) allows larger cattle sizes and makes work easier compared with previous methods. The organic cowsâ feed is mainly grown on the farm, which makes organic milk production truly local business. The feeding is based on clover-grass silage, barley, oats, pea and rape-seed, the latter being often commercial. The organic cows produce about 8 000 kg milk yearly featuring a fairly reasonable level of intensity. The relatively small cattle sizes support disease control, and salmonella prevalence is extremely low
How to integrate sustainable consumption and healthy eating in curriculum - An in-depth probing of the concept of whole school approach
This study inquired into integration of sustainable consumption and healthy eating in curriculum of three Finnish primary case schools, and carried out a preliminary in-depth probing into the working and outcomes of the 'whole school approach' in terms of teaching and learning. The whole school approach did portray as common effort by teachers and caterers to induce sustainability concept and reflective practices for pupils, and as such it presented new cross-curricular and transformative education binding reflection with knowledge and practices for every-day sustainability behaviors. As part of education for sustainable development and food education for sustainability in particular, organic food as an illustration for sustainability was used in one case school. Even though very fragmented and small-scale, the study suggests that sustainability education and sustainable food education do have chances to challenge current societal developments by today's pupils, the future citizens and consumers
The meaning of living environmental knowledge in productive activities: the case of a Finnish dairy farm
Individuals and communities need 'living' environmental knowledge as their particular resource in order to develop their environmental practices and identities. Environmental knowledge can be defined as embedded explanatory, instrumental and evaluative knowledge, offering the 'why' and 'how' for the actors
Strenthening local food systems: tracing learning of knowledge and skills by content and discourse analysis
The local food systems meet the food systems of scale on the local market, where the local and regional chains are looking for ways to survive and even to strengthen. The operations of local food systems become decided by many actors embedded in a socially complex local environment. This paper discusses some approaches to learning in the food chains and some qualitative research methods to capture learning in the chains through empirical material. The main research question, the learning of the actors in the local food chain and the effects of learning on the activities of the local chain are opened as more detailed and operative questions
Organic and conventional public food procurement for youth in Finland
Public catering in Finland has strong historical roots from the 19th century, connected with the rise of the national state, industrialisation, democracy and modern times in general. The school meal system developed hand in hand with work place meal services, and inherently the aim was to offer lateral support for workers' and pupils' activities by healthy and wholesome nutrition. The public catering had initially a strong label of welfare services and implied economical use of ingredients.
Later on, the character of public service of the welfare state was emphasised, as public catering was perceived as a way to promote equality between citizens. The public meal system, and school meal system as part of it, represented not a self-evident and 'natural' developmental path, but can be seen as a result of extensive political, economic and organisational efforts, even fights. Further on, the nutritional and cultural orientations were strengthened when the public school meal system was made a statutory free service for all pupils, first in basic education, and later in secondary education. Today the Finnish welfare state meets the challenge of greying societies and decreasing labour force, and the school meal system, as all public provision systems, in confronted with the trend for increased efficiency and economical operations, including food procurement. Even within these restrictive organisational environments, there is interest in environmentally friendly food and sustainable development by public caterers, municipal officials and politicians of all parties. While the conventional meal system is the prevailing one, there are also movements towards sustainable catering in hundreds of schools around Finland, connected to Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) program.
The report is produced within the project âinnovative Public Organic food Procurement for Youthâ, iPOPY, and will be updated and revised during the project period (2007-2010)
Catering for sustainability: building a dialogue on organic milk
To boost perspective taking on organic milk among caterers, a co-developmental dialogue in terms of organic milk was employed by researchers and practitioners
Evolution of Binary Supermassive Black Holes via Chain Regularization
A chain regularization method is combined with special purpose computer
hardware to study the evolution of massive black hole binaries at the centers
of galaxies. Preliminary results with up to N=260,000 particles are presented.
The decay rate of the binary is shown to decrease with increasing N, as
expected on the basis of theoretical arguments. The eccentricity of the binary
remains small.Comment: 8 pages. To appear in "Nonlinear Dynamics in Astronomy and Physics, A
Workshop Dedicated to the Memory of Professor Henry E. Kandrup", ed. J. R.
Buchler, S. T. Gottesman and M. E. Maho
Mapping the three-body system - decay time and reversibility
In this paper we carry out a quantitative analysis of the three-body systems
and map them as a function of decaying time and intial conguration, look at
this problem as an example of a simple deterministic system, and ask to what
extent the orbits are really predictable. We have investigated the behavior of
about 200 000 general Newtonian three body systems using the simplest initial
conditions. Within our resolution these cover all the possible states where the
objects are initially at rest and have no angular momentum. We have determined
the decay time-scales of the triple systems and show that the distribution of
this parameter is fractal in appearance. Some areas that appear stable on large
scales exhibit very narrow strips of instability and the overall pattern,
dominated by resonances, reminds us of a traditional Maasai warrior shield.
Also an attempt is made to recover the original starting conguration of the
three bodies by backward integration. We find there are instances where the
evolution to the future and to the past lead to different orbits, in spite of
time symmetric initial conditions. This implies that even in simple
deterministic systems there exists an Arrow of Time.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Includes
low-resolution figures. High-resolution figures are available as PNG
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