Proceedings of the Frontis Workshop on Agro-food Chains and Networks for Development, Wageningen, The Netherlands, 6-7 September 2004
| Date completed | September 2004 | |
|---|---|---|
| Issues/challenges | Agro-food chains and networks play an increasingly important role in providing access to markets for producers from developing countries. In developing countries companies become integrated into geographically dispersed supply networks that link producers, traders and processors from the South with retailers and consumers in urban centres and in the North. Globalization of trade and integration of supply chains lead to new demands regarding food quality, safety and health. Companies involved in global food and agri-business chains and networks face fast changes in their market and business environment. New procedures and practices for organizing food supply networks - based on co-innovation between primary producers, processors and retailers - are emerging to cope with food grades and standards. Optimizing chain performance asks for cooperation between all agents involved in the supply chain. Agro-food companies communicate consumers' demands to smallholders to guarantee stable market access. Public and voluntary agencies may provide important contributions for reinforcing the supply-chain environment. This volume combines insights from theory with a large number of business cases to enable a better understanding of the opportunities and constraints that supply-chain integration can offer for stimulating rural development. Key stakeholders from the communities of science, public policy and the business sector shared their experience in a joint effort to overcome the barriers to trade. | |
| Country(ies) | Brazil, Costa Rica, Ghana, India, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, Thailand |
- Description
Preface (14 kB)
Introduction and Analytical Framework
1. Agro-food chains and networks for development: issues, approaches and strategies (129 kB)
Ruerd Ruben, Maja Slingerland and Hans Nijhoff (The Netherlands)
Chain Integration and Development
2. Agicultural development and trade liberalization (67 kB)
Roberto Rodriguez (Brazil)
3. Participation of smallholders in international trade (40 kB)
Leonard Nduati Kariuki (Kenya)
4. Chains and networks for development: articulating stakeholders in international trade (36 kB)
Jeroen Bordewijk (The Netherlands)
5. Vegetables sourcing in Africa: the experience of Freshmark (85 kB)
Johan van Deventer (South Africa)
6. Building partnerships for adding value: the role of agribusiness in developing trade (26 kB)
Alfons Schmid (The Netherlands)
7. The contribution of Fair trade towards market access by smallholder banana producers (58 kB)
Gonzalo La Cruz (Peru)
8. The rapid rise of supermarkets and the use of private standards in their food product procurement systems in developing countries (125 kB)
Thomas Reardon (USA)
9. Agro-food chains and sustainable livelihood: a case study of cassava marketing in Nigeria (49 kB)
Olusola Bandele Oyewole and Biola Phillip (Nigeria)
Summary of results
10. Supply-chain development for fresh fruits and vegetables in Thailand (52 kB)
Jan Buurma (The Netherlands) and Joompol Saranark (Thailand)
11. FRUITFUL: integrated supply-chain information system for fruit produce between South Africa and The Netherlands (117 kB)
Anneke Polderdijk (The Netherlands), Elsbeth Van Dyk (South Africa), Daisy Ferreira (South Africa), Egbert Guis (The Netherlands) and Sandra Keller (South Africa)
12. Brascan: how to capture value in the beef chain (79 kB)
Marcos Fava Neves and Roberto Fava Scare (Brazil)
13. Fish in Kenya: The Nile-perch chain (53 kB)
Ronald Schuurhuizen, Aad van Tilburg (The Netherlands) and Emma Kambewa (Malawi)
14. Organic cacao chain for development: the case of the Talamanca Small-Farmers Association (78 kB)
Maja Slingerland (The Netherlands) and Enrique Díaz Gonzalez (Colombia)
15. The Novella Project: developing a sustainable supply chain for Allanblackia oil (49 kB)
Lawrence Attipoe (Ghana), Annette van Andel (The Netherlands) and Samuel Kofi Nyame (Ghana)
16. Developing a sustainable medicinal-plant chain in India: linking people, markets and values (82 kB)
Petra van de Kop (The Netherlands), Ghayur Alam (India) and Bart de Steenhuijsen Piters (The Netherlands)
Summary and Conclusions
17. Sustainable agro-food chains: challenges for research and development (22 kB)
Louise O. Fresco (Italy)
18. Exclusion of small-scale farmers from coordinated supply chains: market failure, policy failure or just economies of scale? (47 kB)
Cornelis (Kees) L.J. Van Der Meer (USA)
19. Food chains and networks for development: lessons and outlook (61 kB)
Maja Slingerland, Ruerd Ruben, Hans Nijhoff and Peter J.P Zuurbier (The Netherlands)
Wageningen Declaration (11 kB)