Much of the current research on agricultural cooperatives is biased towards weaknesses of the cooperative organization form. The literature says very little about the strengths and advantages of the cooperative form and what is necessary to develop the form's uniqueness into a sustainable competitive advantage. We argue that for cooperatives to remain viable and competitive, the advantages of the form must be clearly manifested. There is now a lack of systematic theorizing in this field. Typically, the weaknesses of the cooperative form are compared to the strengths of the investor-owned firms. Our point is that the cooperative form is based on a logic which is different from that captured by the image of rationality, seemingly prevalent in...
Cooperatives represent an alternative to large-scale corporate farms as well as to independent unaff...
Agricultural producers establish and support a cooperative when it provides benefits they would not ...
Recent studies have questioned the competitiveness of agricultural cooperatives in an industrialized...
Much of the current research on agricultural cooperatives is biased towards weaknesses of the cooper...
Although cooperatives offer a viable organizational structure for many groups, economic theory sugge...
Cooperatives are the aggregates of economic units, such as farms. The cooperative is neither a horiz...
A primary reason for the organization of cooperatives by farmers has been perceived market failures....
This paper uses concepts from transaction cost economics to examine two questions: (a) Under what co...
International audienceThis paper analyses cooperatives as an efficient economic response to social e...
Farmer's cooperatives are firms of a specific type, different from capitalistic firms. This raises m...
Agricultural cooperatives (ACs) are major players in European farming, where they account for 40–60%...
Since 1980, agricultural economists have begun to reexamine fundamental issues in the theory of agri...
The core cognitive foundation of cooperative values, norms and beliefs can need updating and refurbi...
The social business model assumed to fit best into a social and solidarity economy is the cooperativ...
Cooperatives represent an alternative to large-scale corporate farms as well as to independent unaff...
Agricultural producers establish and support a cooperative when it provides benefits they would not ...
Recent studies have questioned the competitiveness of agricultural cooperatives in an industrialized...
Much of the current research on agricultural cooperatives is biased towards weaknesses of the cooper...
Although cooperatives offer a viable organizational structure for many groups, economic theory sugge...
Cooperatives are the aggregates of economic units, such as farms. The cooperative is neither a horiz...
A primary reason for the organization of cooperatives by farmers has been perceived market failures....
This paper uses concepts from transaction cost economics to examine two questions: (a) Under what co...
International audienceThis paper analyses cooperatives as an efficient economic response to social e...
Farmer's cooperatives are firms of a specific type, different from capitalistic firms. This raises m...
Agricultural cooperatives (ACs) are major players in European farming, where they account for 40–60%...
Since 1980, agricultural economists have begun to reexamine fundamental issues in the theory of agri...
The core cognitive foundation of cooperative values, norms and beliefs can need updating and refurbi...
The social business model assumed to fit best into a social and solidarity economy is the cooperativ...
Cooperatives represent an alternative to large-scale corporate farms as well as to independent unaff...
Agricultural producers establish and support a cooperative when it provides benefits they would not ...
Recent studies have questioned the competitiveness of agricultural cooperatives in an industrialized...