Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) has undergone both a rapid increase in growth and interest over the last two decades. As such, the amount of literature on the subject has also increased. However, there are few, if any, theoretical models of supply for CSA memberships (shares) that have been developed from CSA farm data. This paper uses both survey and anecdotal data from the Roxbury Biodynamic Farm, one of the largest CSA in the United States, to present a theory of supply for CSA membership. Included in the discussion is the consideration that CSA farms are not profit maximizing and that the farmers (i.e. the suppliers) knowingly take on the responsibilities and earnings associated with a CSA
Community supported agriculture (CSA) is one response to major ecological and social problems in the...
Community-supported agriculture (CSA) is a widely-used approach for farmers to sell directly to cons...
Article on the model of community-supported agriculture (CSA) in which people help cover a farm\u27s...
Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) has undergone both a rapid increase in growth and interest ove...
The current landscape of small farms is approaching a major shift as more and more small farms are p...
CSA farms establish a loyal customer base and, potentially, market power. A new empirical industrial...
Purpose: Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs allow consumers to buy a share of a farm’s p...
Community Supported Agriculture operations (CSAs) have grown rapidly in recent years. The original m...
This study reconsiders the purported benefits of community found in Community Supported Agriculture ...
Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) is a direct partnership between producer(s) and a group of co...
This NebGuide explains what community supported agriculture is, how it works and what producers will...
In the United States there is a tremendous amount of interest in Community Supported Agriculture (CS...
The number of farms in the United States has been in a constant decline for nearly ninety years, whi...
Community Supported Agriculture is a farming practice that provides a direct link between the commun...
This study reconsiders the purported benefits of community found in Community Supported Agriculture ...
Community supported agriculture (CSA) is one response to major ecological and social problems in the...
Community-supported agriculture (CSA) is a widely-used approach for farmers to sell directly to cons...
Article on the model of community-supported agriculture (CSA) in which people help cover a farm\u27s...
Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) has undergone both a rapid increase in growth and interest ove...
The current landscape of small farms is approaching a major shift as more and more small farms are p...
CSA farms establish a loyal customer base and, potentially, market power. A new empirical industrial...
Purpose: Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs allow consumers to buy a share of a farm’s p...
Community Supported Agriculture operations (CSAs) have grown rapidly in recent years. The original m...
This study reconsiders the purported benefits of community found in Community Supported Agriculture ...
Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) is a direct partnership between producer(s) and a group of co...
This NebGuide explains what community supported agriculture is, how it works and what producers will...
In the United States there is a tremendous amount of interest in Community Supported Agriculture (CS...
The number of farms in the United States has been in a constant decline for nearly ninety years, whi...
Community Supported Agriculture is a farming practice that provides a direct link between the commun...
This study reconsiders the purported benefits of community found in Community Supported Agriculture ...
Community supported agriculture (CSA) is one response to major ecological and social problems in the...
Community-supported agriculture (CSA) is a widely-used approach for farmers to sell directly to cons...
Article on the model of community-supported agriculture (CSA) in which people help cover a farm\u27s...