Spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: An application to an Italian rural region
Organic farming is increasingly promoted and supported at several levels for its capability of producing safe food and public goods. It can give an important contribution to attenuating the environmental pressure generated by conventional agriculture. This paper analyses possible determinants of the...
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Firenze University Press
2020-11-01
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doaj-6c9c0c1365144029980ae1b6fc3368f62020-11-25T04:00:24ZengFirenze University PressBio-based and Applied Economics2280-61802280-61722020-11-018310.13128/bae-9329Spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: An application to an Italian rural regionAndrea Bonfiglio0Andrea Arzeni1Research Centre for Agricultural Policies and Bioeconomy, CREA – Council for Agricultural Research and Economics, ItalyResearch Centre for Agricultural Policies and Bioeconomy, CREA – Council for Agricultural Research and Economics, ItalyOrganic farming is increasingly promoted and supported at several levels for its capability of producing safe food and public goods. It can give an important contribution to attenuating the environmental pressure generated by conventional agriculture. This paper analyses possible determinants of the spatial distribution of organic farms in a rural region of Italy, characterised by several environmental issues. Towards this aim, a quasi-Poisson hierarchical generalised linear model with mixed effects is adopted. Results indicate that there is spatial correlation and that the distribution of organic farming is related to socio-economic, environmental and political factors. In particular, they show that public support could have favoured the spreading of organic farming where there are more problems of erosion but far from the areas where there is intensive agriculture. https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/bae/article/view/9329Organic farmingenvironmental pressuresrural development policyhierarchical generalised linear mixed model |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Andrea Bonfiglio Andrea Arzeni |
spellingShingle |
Andrea Bonfiglio Andrea Arzeni Spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: An application to an Italian rural region Bio-based and Applied Economics Organic farming environmental pressures rural development policy hierarchical generalised linear mixed model |
author_facet |
Andrea Bonfiglio Andrea Arzeni |
author_sort |
Andrea Bonfiglio |
title |
Spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: An application to an Italian rural region |
title_short |
Spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: An application to an Italian rural region |
title_full |
Spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: An application to an Italian rural region |
title_fullStr |
Spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: An application to an Italian rural region |
title_full_unstemmed |
Spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: An application to an Italian rural region |
title_sort |
spatial distribution of organic farms and territorial context: an application to an italian rural region |
publisher |
Firenze University Press |
series |
Bio-based and Applied Economics |
issn |
2280-6180 2280-6172 |
publishDate |
2020-11-01 |
description |
Organic farming is increasingly promoted and supported at several levels for its capability of producing safe food and public goods. It can give an important contribution to attenuating the environmental pressure generated by conventional agriculture. This paper analyses possible determinants of the spatial distribution of organic farms in a rural region of Italy, characterised by several environmental issues. Towards this aim, a quasi-Poisson hierarchical generalised linear model with mixed effects is adopted. Results indicate that there is spatial correlation and that the distribution of organic farming is related to socio-economic, environmental and political factors. In particular, they show that public support could have favoured the spreading of organic farming where there are more problems of erosion but far from the areas where there is intensive agriculture.
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topic |
Organic farming environmental pressures rural development policy hierarchical generalised linear mixed model |
url |
https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/bae/article/view/9329 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT andreabonfiglio spatialdistributionoforganicfarmsandterritorialcontextanapplicationtoanitalianruralregion AT andreaarzeni spatialdistributionoforganicfarmsandterritorialcontextanapplicationtoanitalianruralregion |
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1724450778256506880 |