What Makes a CSA a CSA? A Framework for Comparing Community Supported Agriculture with Cases of Canada and China
In different parts of the world, community supported agriculture (CSA) has taken a variety of organizational forms, drawn on different ideologies, used a variety of land tenure arrangements, and taken on varied types of market relations in terms of…
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Version 1.0 - publiée le 19 Mar 2025 doi: 10.15353/cfs-rcea.v7i1.390 - citer ceci
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In different parts of the world, community supported agriculture (CSA) has taken a variety of organizational forms, drawn on different ideologies, used a variety of land tenure arrangements, and taken on varied types of market relations in terms of how they arrange sales and memberships. Despite this, comparative studies of CSAs are sparse. Based on interviews and survey results, this paper develops a framework to compare CSAs in Canada—where this system has evolved for the last 30 years as an alternative to industrialized agriculture—with those in China, where CSAs have emerged since the late 2000s, mainly in response to food safety and health concerns. The comparison is based on their initiators’ motivations, economic characteristics, ecological practices, shareholder relations, and community building. We find that in both Canada and China CSAs are struggling to maintain the movement’s original values and be economically viable. They are moving away from the traditional ‘risk sharing’ approach underpinning the model and adopting more flexible payment mechanisms. However, other original tenets of the CSA model, such as member engagement, are strengthening. This poses a definitional challenge—what makes a CSA a CSA? We conclude that CSAs mix capitalist and other-than-capitalist economic logic, blend traditional, organic, and productivist ecological relations, and demonstrate both individualist and civic collectivist politics simultaneously. These characterizations are what make a CSA a CSA in contemporary Canada and China.
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Les chercheurs doivent citer ce travail comme suit :
- Si, Z., Schumilas, T., Chen, W., Fuller, T., Scott, S., (2025), "What Makes a CSA a CSA? A Framework for Comparing Community Supported Agriculture with Cases of Canada and China", HSSCommons: (DOI: 10.15353/cfs-rcea.v7i1.390)
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Original publication: Si, Zhenzhong; Schumilas, Theresa; Chen, Weiping; Fuller, Tony; Scott, Steffanie. "What Makes a CSA a CSA? A Framework for Comparing Community Supported Agriculture with Cases of Canada and China." Canadian Food Studies / La Revue canadienne des études sur l'alimentation, vol. 7, no. 1, 2020, pp. 64-87. DOI: 10.15353/cfs-rcea.v7i1.390. This material has been re-published in an unmodified form on the Canadian HSS Commons with the permission of Canadian Food Studies / La Revue canadienne des études sur l'alimentation. Copyright © the author(s). Work published in CFS/RCÉA prior to and including Vol. 8, No. 3 (2021) is licensed under the Creative Commons CC BY license. Work published in Vol. 8, No. 4 (2021) and after is licensed under the Creative Commons CC BY-SA license. For details, see creativecommons.org/licenses/.
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