Official organic regulation in Europe is based on the third-party certification system to guarantee organic products. Many critics and dissatisfactions have motivated the emergence of other guarantee systems, based on an intense implication of producers and, in some cases, consumers and other local actors, involved in localised agri-food systems. They are called Participatory Guarantee Systems (PGS), and are not recognised as valid guarantee systems by the official organic regulation. In the present paper, we analyse the main differences between the PGS and the third party certification system, deepening on their differentiated social and political implications. We conclude that the procedures behind PGS generate numerous positive im...
Over the past two decades, the rapid growth of the organic sector has resulted in an increasing inte...
Justification/Motivation In recent years, parallel to the growth of the organic sector, we witnessed...
Expectations and interest are high in participatory guarantee systems (PGS) as a context-specific al...
Official organic regulation in Europe is based on the third-party certification system to guarantee ...
Participatory guarantee systems (PGSs) have emerged as a response to exclusion and intermediation pr...
There are many initiatives of short food supply chains in Spain that have been implementing particip...
The primary tool for assuring quality of organic products and preventing fraud, and also for promoti...
Regulatory standards and certification models are essential tools guaranteeing the authenticity of o...
The increasing number of producers and consumers of organic products means that there is an increasi...
In recent years, parallel to the growth of the organic sector, we have witnessed an increasing inter...
Organic standards are conceived of as a governance mechanism that not only aims to ensure that consu...
The use of voluntary policies with the form of certifications or guarantee systems together with Sho...
Over the past two decades, the rapid growth of the organic sector has resulted in an increasing inte...
Justification/Motivation In recent years, parallel to the growth of the organic sector, we witnessed...
Expectations and interest are high in participatory guarantee systems (PGS) as a context-specific al...
Official organic regulation in Europe is based on the third-party certification system to guarantee ...
Participatory guarantee systems (PGSs) have emerged as a response to exclusion and intermediation pr...
There are many initiatives of short food supply chains in Spain that have been implementing particip...
The primary tool for assuring quality of organic products and preventing fraud, and also for promoti...
Regulatory standards and certification models are essential tools guaranteeing the authenticity of o...
The increasing number of producers and consumers of organic products means that there is an increasi...
In recent years, parallel to the growth of the organic sector, we have witnessed an increasing inter...
Organic standards are conceived of as a governance mechanism that not only aims to ensure that consu...
The use of voluntary policies with the form of certifications or guarantee systems together with Sho...
Over the past two decades, the rapid growth of the organic sector has resulted in an increasing inte...
Justification/Motivation In recent years, parallel to the growth of the organic sector, we witnessed...
Expectations and interest are high in participatory guarantee systems (PGS) as a context-specific al...