Map and description of the LINSA

SwitzerlandNetherlandLatviaItalyHungaryGermanyEnglandFrance
The LINSA Documents

Brighton and Hove Food Partnership, England (E B&H)

This is a ‘network of networks’ concerned to improve the patterns of both food consumption and production in a large urban area. There are strong links between voluntary organisations (concerned with school food, organic food and over 60 community food growing projects) and the local state. It now embraces over 200 organisations in the state, private and voluntary sectors concerned with all stages of the food chain.

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Permaculture Community (Permaculture Association and the Land Project), England (E Perm)

The LINSA studied comprises: the project Leaning And Network Demonstration (LAND), its parent body The Permaculture Association (PA), and the wider community of Permaculture practitioners in England. The Permaculture community has originated outside of mainstream agriculture and is operating outside public funding and established policy and knowledge frameworks. It is a diffuse network of individuals, projects and groups all interested in, or practicing, Permaculture (defined broadly as a design system for creating sustainable human environments).

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The European Organic Data network (EU Organ)

This organic market data network emerged in response to problems concerning access to relevant organic market data. It includes members of a diffuse unstructured network linked by individual connections and partners in the EU FP7 research project OrganicDataNetwork. The aims of the OrganicDataNetwork project include establishment of a self-sustaining network of stakeholders with an interest in organic market data.

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Réseau Agriculture Durable– Network for a Sustainable Agriculture, France (F RAD)

The Sustainable Agriculture Network is a non institutional network of farmers groups, created and developed outside the AKS. The main objective of the RAD is improving the effectiveness of the systems regarding ecological, social and economical issues. It emerged as an alternative way of thinking about agriculture in response to gaps in AKS knowledge and practice. The RAD involves 3000 farmers (from 2000 farms), mainly from the west of France, gathered in 32 groups. Learning is a top priority of the RAD who gives value to bottom-up view of innovation and participatory learning processes I farmer groups  The RAD is facing different opportunities of development and needs to choose how to growth and expand its knowledge.

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Charter of Good Agricultural Practices in Livestock production, France (F Charter)

The Charter for Good Agricultural Practices promotes the quality of the cattle profession in France. It accompanies farmers in their practices (traceability, herd’s health, food, milk quality, animal welfare and environment), helping them to meet the expectations of both their partners and citizens. The Charter is the leading farmer quality assurance scheme in Europe and brings together 105 000 farmers: over 90% of milk and over 77% of beef produced in France come from a farm that adheres to the Charter. The Charter benefits from the expertise of engineers from the French Livestock Institute and about 2500 technicians from extension organisation and food industry. It was launched after the mad cow crisis in a context of mistrust between food production and society; after twelve years of existence, the Charter needs to define new actions and strategies to answer food chain’s, farmers’ and society’s needs.

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Bavarian Rural Women’s Association, Germany (G Women)

The Rural Women's Group of the Bavarian Farmers Union in South Germany has a long learning and innovation culture. The group was founded in 1948, as a subpart of the Bavarian Farmers Union. Today it numbers ~6.500 local women groups, 72 local chapters, 7 district chapters, and one State Executive Committee. An essential part of the group is a diversified educational work based on topics of direct relevance to farm women.  The LINSA has a good, acknowledged standing in society, but is considered as a small player in the AKIS. They link the farm sector with the health-, nutrition- and education-sectors.

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German Agricultural Association, Germany (G DLG)

The German Agricultural Association (DLG) is a LINSA with a very long history of learning and innovation around agriculture. It was founded in 1839 and very soon became the most important knowledge broker in the German AKIS. Today membership is ~25.000, these are mainly farmers but also researchers or representatives from agribusinesss. Its main tasks are to collect, discuss, and rearrange information and innovations related to agriculture and disseminate them among its members. Effective networking is considered to be the key for successful dissemination of information and innovations.

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G7 (Local Food Council of Gödöll?), Hungary (H G7)

G7 is an informal network (voluntary partnership) of local organisations, entrepreneurs and citizens in Gödöll?, a major city of the Budapest agglomeration, hosting the largest agricultural university of Hungary. The main objective to which actors in this voluntary partnership are all committed is to achieve a more sustainable and healthy food system for the town. They intend to realise this through: (1) acting as information brokers – organising events, disseminating information and building databases, connecting producers, customers, organisations, entrepreneurs who want to support food sovereignty and sustainability; (2) acting in the political domain, building social support and negotiating with local authorities for a local sustainable food strategy.

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The NATURAMA Alliance, Hungary (H Nat)

NATURAMA Alliance is a loose, informal network of networks of 9 Hungarian LEADER Local Action Groups (LAGs). Created through a transdisciplinary action research project in 2009, - NATURAMA soon became a self-maintaining domestic network, with a strong transnational interest. Its main aim – creating knowledge, learning from each other and from best practices in the EU – is in line with the LEADER approach, however, Hungarian AKS dids not support such activities. NATURAMA keeps regular meetings, organised study tours, ran shared development projects, organised big events and provided expertise on various levels of rural policy making and implementation.

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Consorzio Vacche Rosse, Italy (I CVR)

Consorzio Vacche Rosse (CVR) is a cooperative dairy that produces Parmigiano Reggiano (P-R) cheese from milk of Reggiana breed cows delivered by its members. Like most of the local dairy farms and milk processing plants of the territory, CVR belongs to the larger Comunity of Practice (CoP) whose geographical coverage is defined by the Code of practice of the PDO cheese “Parmigiano Reggiano”. The community is strongly aligned with membership to the “Consorzio di tutela del formaggio Parmigiano Reggiano” (CFP R) that is the depositary of the PDO collective brand.

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Association for Solidary Economy Crisoperla, Italy (I Crisop)

Crisoperla is a cultural non-profit organization which emerged in 2006 to promote organic farming and organic production, encouraging synergies between producers, consumers and technicians. It operates mainly in the Tuscan Province of Massa Carrara and, partly, in the Province of La Spezia, in adjacent Liguria Region. The actors of the network belong to different social groups: organic farmers (producers of vegetables, honey, wine, oil, beef), two fishing cooperatives, a cooperative for social farming, two agronomists (initiators of the network), consumers organized in GAS, a consumers’ association (ACU). In addition it increasingly interacts with local institutions and other networks. The association was formalised in 2009

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Biogas Production Network, Latvia

The Latvian Biogas network was formed about six years ago to develop production of biogas, in response to renewable energy policy goals and availability of generous public funding. The network is small (about 50 participants) and dispersed, interactions are motivated by the need of technological, economic, agricultural learning to localise the use of borrowed biogas technologies. Actors are biogas producers, scientists, service providers, suppliers, policy makers, investors, consultants, municipalities, banks, environmental agencies, and NGOs. There are several centres of knowledge sharing, and a lot of controversy on what is acceptable practice. The development of biogas production depends on availability of public funding, which is now suspended. However, the network has difficulties to mobilise itself for a joint response.

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Fruit Growing Network, Latvia

The Latvian Fruit-growers’ LINSA is a network formed more than a decade ago around the goal of developing integrated fruit-growing in Latvia. This includes objectives on production, marketing, research, advisory, policy making, consumer education, environmental management. There are about 400 members, both individuals and organizations: producers and their cooperatives, research, business companies, NGOs, etc. The network is nation-wide, with several centres of closer connections around research institutes, the Fruit-growers’ Association, regional cooperatives. The network is strong on peer-learning among farmers as well as inter-institutional learning and collaboration between researchers and practitioners. There is a shared set of norms on proper fruit-growing. Innovation is oriented towards private and public good.

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Cooperative Boer en Zorg: Care Farmers in the Netherlands (N Care)

The LINSA ‘Boer en Zorg’ (Farmers and Care) is a cooperative that currently connects over 130 care farmers in the Mid-Eastern part of the Netherlands. Care farms use their animals, plants, gardens, forests and the landscape to create recreational or work related activities for people in need of care. Work on farms delivers evident results, focusing on the capabilities of each individual patient, resulting in an alternative vision of health care and therapy. The LINSA operates on the intersection of two existing policy fields; the agricultural sector and the health care sector. These two sectors provide both opportunities and constraints for innovation.

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Sustainable Dairy Farming, Netherlands (N Dairy)

This LINSA is formed by the regional low external input dairy farming network formed in the Dutch province of Drenthe. Managing and closing nutrient cycles can be an important mechanism for dairy farmers to improve the environmental impacts of their operations. Over a period of 10 years different projects were organised that applied the concept of low external input farming using farmer study clubs. The study club method facilitated by a number of expert consultants and in Drenthe has proved to be a very good way to get farmers involved, transfer knowledge and facilitate learning processes among dairy farmers.

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Association for the development of fodder production, Switzerland (S ACDF)

The LINSA is an association gathering some institutions of the Agricultural Knowledge and Innovation System (AKIS), seeds firms and farmers with the objective to foster fodder production and conservation based on the natural resources of Swiss farms. The board of its technical commission “CT-ADCF” enables experts with different interests (research, education, extension, seeds sale) to exchange knowledge and to develop practical solutions (based on scientific evidences and field experiences) to address the needs of farmers. Solutions are then shared inside LINSA through so-called boundary objects, such as labelled seeds-mix for pastures and grasslands, technical datasheets on fodder production, training for extensionists and visits dedicated to farmers.

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Naturli Co-operative Cheese marketing platform, Switzerland (S Naturli)

The LINSA natürli has evolved around the regional trademark “natürli us de Region Zürcher Berggebiet”. The initiative has been started 20 years ago (1993) by a regional entrepreneur-cheese maker and the regional development manager of the Zürcher Berggebiet, a mountainous region in the vicinity of Zurich, Winterthur and St. Gallen. The main aim – to collect, bundle, distribute and promote high quality regional dairy products in order to keep alive the regional dairy structures – only could be achieved through multifaceted collaboration. The 15 municipalities of the region own the trademark “natürli” but the members of the LINSA today also comprise private entrepreneurs, cheese dairies and milk producers, the regional development center as well as sales shops. “natürli” accesses sporadically public funding and grants of private foundations for specific sub-projects but it also tries to work economically successful on its own.

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The Show Cases Documents

LINSA emergence around the Neretva Mandarine Geographical Indication (GI), Croatia

About 1,600 of growers mostly smallholders supply fruits to 13 packers.The protection of the Geographical Indication (GI) Neretva Mandarine initiated is 2008 is close to become effective in 2013. The GI process led by Agrofructus (50% of the marketed mandarines) has favoured number of new partnerships within the value chain (VC).
The Association of the Neretva Fruit Growers, who submitted the application will be in charge of the GI management and shall become catalytic element of the emerging LINSA and replacing Agrofructus in its leading role.

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LINSA and pesticide reduction in the French vine production, France

72 LINSAs, with different levels of innovation and governance:
- Top down incremental innovation : evolving conventional, integrated viticulture.
- Bottom up radical innovations : organic, biodynamic, agroforestry.
Focus on “Perrier spring LINSA” (Languedoc): 400 hectares of organic vine:
- Alliance between Perrier Company and local wine cooperative, against AKS.
- Progressively involving actors of the AKS towards a more global project.

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Allmende Kontor at the former Tempelhof airport: urban gardening in Berlin, Germany

Berlin as capital of urban gardens (growth from 8 in Germany in 2002 to 100 in Berlin alone 2013):
Divers motivations for individuals to participate (social, environmental, economic).
Allmende Kontor :
– particularly big initiative (900 members/ gardeners on 5000 m²).
– temporary project (2011- max. 2016).
– participatory governance approach.
– particularly well connected / founded by Berlins pioneers of urban gardens.
– strong focus on environmental and social aspects, aims to be a knowledge hub.

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South Tyrol Apple Production, Italy

South Tyrol has the biggest single producing area of apple trees in Europe. The various stakeholders involved have organised themselves in an efficient and effective Learning and Innovation Network for Sustainable Agriculture (LINSA). It is a highly sophisticated and adaptive network of linkages that functions due to the high level of understanding and cooperation amongst all stakeholders. The most important component of the Network is the promotion of members and strict adhesion to the basic principles of self-help, self-administration, and self-responsibility. The apple producers in South Tyrol have created a LINSA, guided by human relationships, trust, common vision and interest, allowing for information and knowledge to be transferred rapidly and efficiently. Collective action is a rule for innovation.

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Plant health clinics in Kenya

Plant health clinics were introduced to Kenya in 2010 by CABI. Working closely with existing public extension services, clinic clusters have enabled steady learning and have been a shop window for local innovation. This study examined progress in building a plant health system approach to close gaps in access to information and technical support through steady engagement with research, regulation and input supply.

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Networks in animal husbandry in the Netherlands

- More then 100 networks of enterpreneurs working on sustainable animal husbandry during 4 years.
- Facilitated by a CoP of knowledge workers and advisors.
- Co creation of knowledge between farmers and researchers.
- More insight in the facilitation of different type of networks.

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Knowledge and innovation networks in raisin production: Kapanci Village, Turkey

- The villagers believe that local information is not enough any more.
- Learning usually answers to specifi c needs of farmers. This is also most sustainable learning in the village.
- Knowledge learned elsewhere is mainly transferred verbally between the farmers in the village.

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Création : Agridea