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Articles

Post-socialist transition as a driving force of the sustainable agriculture: a case study from the Czech Republic

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ABSTRACT

The study considers how post-socialist transition has been reflected in the newly emerging concept of sustainability of agriculture, and explains the factors that accounted for the rapid development of the Czech organic sector during the transitional period (1989–1992). The paper utilises qualitative research methods. Primary data for the study have been collected and processed with the use of document analysis. Our findings suggest that the radical shift of agriculture in early 1990s was mainly driven by negative experience of the socialist model of industrial agriculture. However, the organic sector lost momentum in the later period of economic transformation (1993–1998), due to the underdeveloped institutional framework. This historical setting resulted in a strongly competitive relationship between the conventional and organic sectors in Czech agriculture. The study undermines the general notion that organic agriculture in post-socialist countries represents an outcome of policy-based measures, rather than the activities of a social (organic) movement. The conclusions of the study confirm the thesis that the organic sector cannot achieve a breakthrough in the absence of certain elements of the institutional environment (i.e. civil society, policy, consumers).

Acknowledgments

Research for this paper was financially supported by the Czech Science Foundation as part of the project “Study on Sociotechnical Transition to Sustainability of Agri-Food Sector in the Czech Republic” (17-01019S).

Notes

1. Československý svaz vědeckotechnických společností/The Czech Association of Scientific and Technical Societies.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Grantová Agentura České Republiky [17-01019S].

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