How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation Discourses

The food democracy discourse has emerged as a normatively grounded critique of an increasingly transnational agri-food system and its dominant co-regulatory mode of governance, where private and public norms and standards interact with public policy and regulation in complex ways. Analyzing competin...

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Main Authors: Julia Behringer, Peter H. Feindt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2019-10-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2087
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spelling doaj-c9b01e5cf1394ab080f8b218d455e0b72020-11-24T21:56:57ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632019-10-017411913010.17645/pag.v7i4.20871199How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation DiscoursesJulia Behringer0Peter H. Feindt1Thaer Institute of Agricultural and Horticultural Sciences, Humboldt University at Berlin, GermanyThaer Institute of Agricultural and Horticultural Sciences, Humboldt University at Berlin, GermanyThe food democracy discourse has emerged as a normatively grounded critique of an increasingly transnational agri-food system and its dominant co-regulatory mode of governance, where private and public norms and standards interact with public policy and regulation in complex ways. Analyzing competing agri-food discourses through a legitimacy lens can contribute to understanding how authority is transferred from traditional, hierarchical and state-centered constellations to a range of novel agri-food governance arrangements. This article reconstructs and compares the legitimacy constructions articulated in the co-regulation and the food democracy discourses, generating three key findings: first, there are two distinct articulations of food democracy discourse, which we label liberal and strong food democracy; second, while conceptualizations of legitimacy in the liberal food democracy and the co-regulatory discourse share many commonalities, legitimacy in the co-regulatory discourse relies more heavily on output, while the liberal food democracy discourse is more sensitive to issues of input and throughput legitimacy; third, the strong food democracy discourse articulates a critical counter-model that emphasizes inclusive deliberation which in turn is expected to generate a shared orientation towards the common good and countervailing power.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2087agri-food governanceco-regulationdiscoursefood democracygovernancelegitimacyparticipation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia Behringer
Peter H. Feindt
spellingShingle Julia Behringer
Peter H. Feindt
How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation Discourses
Politics and Governance
agri-food governance
co-regulation
discourse
food democracy
governance
legitimacy
participation
author_facet Julia Behringer
Peter H. Feindt
author_sort Julia Behringer
title How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation Discourses
title_short How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation Discourses
title_full How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation Discourses
title_fullStr How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation Discourses
title_full_unstemmed How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation Discourses
title_sort how shall we judge agri-food governance? legitimacy constructions in food democracy and co-regulation discourses
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The food democracy discourse has emerged as a normatively grounded critique of an increasingly transnational agri-food system and its dominant co-regulatory mode of governance, where private and public norms and standards interact with public policy and regulation in complex ways. Analyzing competing agri-food discourses through a legitimacy lens can contribute to understanding how authority is transferred from traditional, hierarchical and state-centered constellations to a range of novel agri-food governance arrangements. This article reconstructs and compares the legitimacy constructions articulated in the co-regulation and the food democracy discourses, generating three key findings: first, there are two distinct articulations of food democracy discourse, which we label liberal and strong food democracy; second, while conceptualizations of legitimacy in the liberal food democracy and the co-regulatory discourse share many commonalities, legitimacy in the co-regulatory discourse relies more heavily on output, while the liberal food democracy discourse is more sensitive to issues of input and throughput legitimacy; third, the strong food democracy discourse articulates a critical counter-model that emphasizes inclusive deliberation which in turn is expected to generate a shared orientation towards the common good and countervailing power.
topic agri-food governance
co-regulation
discourse
food democracy
governance
legitimacy
participation
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/2087
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